{"id":86437,"date":"2024-10-24T15:09:17","date_gmt":"2024-10-24T08:09:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/echowoven.com\/?p=86437"},"modified":"2024-10-24T15:09:17","modified_gmt":"2024-10-24T08:09:17","slug":"the-inspiring-story-of-corrie-ten-boom-the-dutch-watchmaker-who-saved-800-jews-from-the-holocaust","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/echowoven.com\/the-inspiring-story-of-corrie-ten-boom-the-dutch-watchmaker-who-saved-800-jews-from-the-holocaust\/","title":{"rendered":"The Inspiring Story Of Corrie Ten Boom, The Dutch Watchmaker Who Saved 800 Jews From The Holocaust"},"content":{"rendered":"
From 1940 to 1944, Corrie ten Boom and her family used their home in the Netherlands as a hiding place for Jews who were fleeing the Nazis.
\nThe watchmakers had a secret. In their home above the family shop on Barteljorisstraat in the Dutch city of Haarlem, they had built a safe room. There, Corrie ten Boom, her sister, and their father would save the lives of some 800 Jews fleeing the Nazis.\n
The ten Boom family joined the Dutch resistance after Germany invaded the Netherlands in 1940. Guided by their religious beliefs, they quietly funneled desperate Jewish refugees to safety. But in 1944, an informer would send the Nazis straight to their door.\n
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Corrie ten Boom survived her time in concentration camps \u2014 barely \u2014 after her father and sister died.\n
Once the war ended, she set up a rehabilitation clinic for Holocaust survivors, preached the power of forgiveness, and wrote books about her experience.\n
This is her remarkable story.\n
The Early Life Of Corrie ten Boom\n
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Corrie ten Boom was born Cornelia Arnolda Johanna ten Boom on April 15, 1892. The youngest of four children, ten Boom grew up in a tight-knit religious family. They were Calvinists in the Dutch Reformed Church, which emphasized service to others.\n
The entire ten Boom family \u2014 aunts included \u2014 lived above the watch shop run by ten Boom\u2019s father, Casper. As ten Bloom grew older, she became fascinated with the mechanics of watchmaking.\n
\u201cI had always felt happy in this little shop, with its tiny voices and shelves of small shining faces,\u201d ten Bloom wrote in her postwar memoir, The Hiding Place.\n
After her mother\u2019s death and a failed romance, ten Boom decided that she wanted to follow in her father\u2019s footsteps. \u201cI was finding a joy in work I\u2019d never dreamed of,\u201d ten Boom wrote. She had long helped her father with the administration of his shop, but now decided she wanted to learn the mechanics of watch repair itself.\n
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She had no better mentor than Casper ten Boom. \u201cFather\u2019s patience, his almost mystic rapport with the harmonies of watchworks, these were things that could not be taught,\u201d ten Boom remembered.\n
Alongside work with her father, ten Boom also enrolled in school to become a watchmaker. In 1922, she became the first licensed female watchmaker in Holland.\n
\u201cAnd so was established the pattern our lives were to follow for over twenty years,\u201d she wrote. In addition to helping her father run the shop, she established a youth club for young girls which offered religious instruction and classes.\n
But the peaceful existence of the ten Bloom family was fragile. War clouds were on the horizon. Soon, visitors to the watch store came with worries about a looming invasion by Nazi Germany.\n
The Nazis Come To The Netherlands\n
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Over a stretch of seven days in May 1940, everything changed for Corrie ten Boom and her family. The Nazis invaded on May 10th. By May 17th, Germany occupied the Netherlands.\n
Before long, the country became a dangerous place for its Jewish citizens. Throughout the early 1940s, thousands and thousands of Jews were sent to concentration camps, leading Adolf Hitler acolyte Adolf Eichmann to state with satisfaction: \u201cIn the beginning you could say that the trains from the Netherlands were really rolling; it was quite wonderful.\u201d\n
Corrie ten Boom vividly recalled how the mood of the country changed. Arrests of Jewish citizens became and more and more frequent. When ten Boom had Jewish customers, she delivered their watches so that they didn\u2019t have to risk going out.\n
\u201cAt any minute there might be a rap on this door,\u201d she remembered thinking while visiting with Jewish friends. \u201cThese children, this mother and father, might be ordered to the back of a truck.\u201d\n
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As members of the Dutch Reformed Church, the entire ten Boom family believed firmly in the equality of all human beings before God. They especially respected Jews as \u201cGod\u2019s ancient people.\u201d So when a Jewish woman named Kleermaker came to their door looking for help, they opened their arms.\n
\u201cIn this household, God\u2019s people are always welcome,\u201d Casper ten Boom said. He, Corrie, and her sister Bestie agreed to shelter her.\n
Before long, word of the ten Boom\u2019s generosity spread. More and more people showed up at their doorstep looking for help. And as conditions in the Netherlands grew more dangerous, the family even built a secret room in Corrie ten Boom\u2019s bedroom..\n
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The room was no larger than a closet but could hold about six people. It had a crude ventilation system so they could get fresh air. The ten Booms also installed a buzzer in the house in order to quickly alert anyone there to hide during security sweeps. Some people stayed for an extended period; others moved on after a few days.\n