Corrie ten Boom museum in Haarlem, Holland The Hiding Place.
The Ten Boom family were devoted Christians who dedicated their lives in service to their fellow man. Their home was always an open house for anyone in need. Through the decades the Ten Booms were very active in social work in Haarlem, and their faith inspired them to serve the religious community and society at large.
During the Second World War, the Ten Boom home became a refuge, a hiding place, for fugitives and those hunted by the Nazis. By protecting these people, Casper and his daughters, Corrie and Betsie, risked their lives. This non-violent resistance against the Nazi-oppressors was the Ten Booms' way of living out their Christian faith. This faith led them to hide Jews, students who refused to cooperate with the Nazis, and members of the Dutch underground resistance movement.
During 1943 and into 1944, there were usually 6-7 people illegally living in this home: 4 Jews and 2 or 3 members of the Dutch underground. Additional refugees would stay with the Ten Booms for a few hours or a few days until another safe house could be located for them. Corrie became a ringleader within the network of the Haarlem underground. Corrie and the Beje group would search for courageous Dutch families who would take in refugees, and much of Corrie's time was spent caring for these people once they were in hiding. Through these activities, the Ten Boom family and their many friends saved the lives of an estimated 800 Jews, and protected many Dutch underground workers.
On February 28, 1944, this family was betrayed and the Gestapo (the Nazi secret police) raided their home. The Gestapo set a trap and waited throughout the day, seizing everyone who came to the house. By evening about 30 people had been taken into custody! Casper, Corrie and Betsie were all arrested. Corrie's brother Willem, sister Nollie, and nephew Peter were at the house that day, and were also taken to prison.
Although the Gestapo systematically searched the house, they could not find what they sought most. They suspected Jews were in the house, but the Jews were safely hidden behind a false wall in Corrie's bedroom. In this hiding place were two Jewish men, two Jewish women and two members of the Dutch underground. Although the house remained under guard, the Resistance was able to liberate the refugees 47 hours later. The six people had managed to stay quiet in their cramped, dark hiding place for all that time, even though they had no water and very little food. The four Jews were taken to new safe houses, and three survived the war. One of the underground workers was killed during the war years, but the other survived.
Corrie ten Boom Museum - Haarlem, Netherlands
Corrie ten Boom Museum - Haarlem, Netherlands
Corrie ten Boom, eigentlich Cornelia Johanna Arnolda ten Boom (* 15. April 1892 in Amsterdam; † 15. April 1983 in Placentia, Kalifornien[1]) war eine niederländische Christin, die während der nationalsozialistischen deutschen Besetzung der Niederlande eine Untergrundorganisation gründete, mit der zahlreiche Juden vor dem Holocaust gerettet wurden. Dafür wurde sie später von der Holocaustgedenkstätte Yad Vashem mit dem Ehrentitel Gerechte unter den Völkern ausgezeichnet.
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Exploring Haarlem & Corrie Ten Boom House (The Hiding Place)
Looking around Haarlem, the Corrie Ten Boom House and nearby Markets
Corrie Ten Boom House
This is the story of Cornelia Corrie Ten Boom (April 15, 1892 - April 15, 1983) a Dutch Christian, who along with the help of her father and other family members, helped many Jews escape the Nazi Holocaust during World War II .
Haarlem - Corrie ten Boom Huis
haarlem.nl
Monumentale Verhalen. Geproduceerd door OK_TV (oktv.nl) i.o.v. City Marketing Haarlem.
Regie en camera: Jasper Nuijt
Research, script en productie: Rene Snoeks
Presentatie: Siebe Meijer
Montage: Mark van Eden
Co-script: Yara Hannema
Productie assistentie: Ivar Waleveld, Ilse van der Veen
Ten Boom Museum
Ten Boom House and Museum. Famous from WW II.
Holland/The Netherlands: Haarlem (Corrie Ten Boom's home)
Photos - Holland/The Netherlands: Haarlem
Soundtrack: 'Closing_Hymn' by brucezim
A tribute to the Ten Boom family and their friends for their love, life and sacrifice, even to death, in WWII, in saving the lives of hundreds of Jews and others, by hiding them in their house in the Barteljorisstraat, Haarlem.
Surely the righteous will never be shaken; they will be remembered forever. Psalm 112:6
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Corrie Ten-Boom The secret Room (Full Length)
For her efforts to hide Jews from arrest and deportation during the German occupation of the Netherlands, Corrie ten Boom (1892-1983) received recognition from the Yad Vashem Remembrance Authority as one of the Righteous Among the Nations on December 12, 1967. In resisting Nazi persecution, ten Boom acted in concert with her religious beliefs, her family experience, and the Dutch resistance. Her defiance led to imprisonment, internment in a concentration camp, and loss of family members who died from maltreatment while in German custody.
The ten Boom family were members of the Dutch Reformed Church, which protested Nazi persecution of Jews as an injustice to fellow human beings and an affront to divine authority. In her autobiography, ten Boom repeatedly cited religious motivations for hiding Jews, particularly her family's strong belief in a basic tenet of their religion: the equality of all human beings before God. Their religious activities had also brought the family a history of personal connections to the Jewish community. Corrie's grandfather had supported efforts to improve Christian-Jewish relations in the nineteenth century. Her brother Willem, a Dutch Reformed minister assigned to convert Jews, studied antisemitism and ran a nursing home for elderly of all faiths. In the late 1930s that nursing home became a refuge for Jews fleeing from Germany.
After World War II began, members of the ten Boom family became involved in resistance efforts. Two nephews worked in resistance cells. Various family members sheltered young men sought by the Nazis for forced labor and assisted Jews in contacting persons willing to hide them. Corrie became directly involved in these efforts when, along with her father and sister Betsie, she decided to hide Jews in the family home in Haarlem, the Netherlands. Using her job as a watchmaker in her father's shop as a cover, Corrie built contacts with resistance workers, who assisted her in procuring ration books and building a hiding place in the family home.
Six people, among them both Jews and resistance workers, hid in this hiding place when the Gestapo (German secret state police) raided the house on February 28, 1944. Those in hiding remained undiscovered. Several days after the raid resistance workers transferred them to other locations. In the meantime, however, the Gestapo had arrested Corrie ten Boom, her father, her brother and two sisters, and other family members. In addition, the Gestapo arrested several resistance workers who had unwittingly entered the house during the raid, as well as many family acquaintances who had been attending a prayer meeting in the living room. Altogether, the Gestapo arrested some 30 people in the ten Boom family home that day.
After holding them briefly in the penitentiary in Scheveningen, a seaside town close to The Hague, the Gestapo released all but three of the ten Boom family members. Corrie ten Boom, her older sister Betsie, and her father Casper remained in prison. Casper ten Boom became sick in prison and died in a hospital corridor only ten days after the arrest. The sisters remained in the Scheveningen prison until June 1944, when officials transferred them to an internment camp at Vught, in the Netherlands. In September 1944, the Nazis deported Corrie and Betsie ten Boom to the Ravensbrueck concentration camp in Germany. In Ravensbrueck, the sisters managed to stay together until Betsie died that December.
The camp administration released Corrie ten Boom in late December 1944. Along with other released prisoners, she traveled by train to Berlin, where she arrived on January 1, 1945. From Berlin, ten Boom journeyed across Germany by train until she reached the Netherlands, where she reunited with surviving members of her family.
After the war, ten Boom advocated reconciliation as a means for overcoming the psychological scars left by the Nazi occupation. She later traveled the world as an evangelist, motivational speaker, and social critic, referring to her experiences in Ravensbrueck as she offered solace to prisoners and protested the Vietnam War.
Ten Boom's house and hiding place
This is the Corrie Ten Boom's and family house including the hiden place where they used to hide jews during the war.
Corrie ten Boom - Prayer in 1884
Through the ministry of Stories Come Alive, Gayle Haas brings to life the testimony of Dutch Holocaust survivor, Corrie ten Boom.
The Hiding Place - Corrie Ten Boom
Subtitrare in limba romana
Her teaching focused on the Christian Gospel, with emphasis on forgiveness. In her book Tramp for the Lord (1974), she tells the story of an encounter while she was teaching in Germany in 1947. She was approached by a former Ravensbrück camp guard, who had been known as one of the most cruel. She was reluctant to forgive him, but prayed that she would be able to. Ten Boom wrote:
For a long moment we grasped each other's hands, the former guard and the former prisoner. I had never known God's love so intensely as I did then.
She also wrote (in the same passage) that in her post-war experience with other victims of Nazi brutality, it was those who were able to forgive who were best able to rebuild their lives. She appeared on many Christian television programs discussing her ordeal during the Holocaust and the concepts of forgiveness and God's love.
She rejected the doctrine that some asserted, of Pre-Tribulation Rapture, and wrote that it was without Biblical foundation. She believed that such a doctrine left the Christian Church ill-prepared in times of great persecution, such as in China under Mao Zedong. She often quoted a favourite saying of her sister: There is no pit so deep that He [God] is not deeper still.
On February 28, 1944, a Dutch informant told the Nazis of the work the ten Booms were doing, and the Nazis arrested the entire ten Boom family at around 12:30 p.m. The family was sent first to Scheveningen prison, where their elderly father died ten days after his arrest. While there, ten Boom's sister Nollie, brother Willem, and nephew Peter were all released. Later, ten Boom and sister Betsie were sent to the Vught political concentration camp, and finally to the Ravensbrück death camp in Germany. Betsie died there on December 16, 1944. Before she died, she told ten Boom, There is no pit so deep that He [God] is not deeper still.[
Corrie ten Boom was released on December 28, 1944. In the movie The Hiding Place, she narrates the section on her release from camp, saying that she later learned that her release had been a clerical error. She said, God does not have problems — only plans. The Jews whom the ten Booms had been hiding at the time of their arrests remained undiscovered and all but one, an old woman named Mary, survived.
Corrie si Betsie Ten Boom sunt surori de varsta mijlocie care lucreaza in magazinul orologerie al tatalui lor in al doilea razboi mondial Olanda. Vietile lor lipsite de evenimente sunt perturbate cu venirea nazistilor. Suspectati ca erau evrei , au fost prinsi si trimisi , într-un lagar de concentrare, unde credinta lor crestina ii tine departe de disperare si amaraciune. Betsie în cele din urma moare, dar Corrie supravietuieste, iar dupa razboi, trebuie sa invete sa iubeasca si sa ierte rapitorii ei anterioare.
Corrie Ten Boom
Corrie Ten Boom and her family were Christians in Holland who built a secret room in their house and hid Jews in it during World War II. They got caught, and were taken to concentration camps, where they all were killed or died except for Corrie. She then went on to travel around the world telling her story at churches and letting people know that There is no hole that is so deep, that God is not deeper still. The song is Porcelain Heart by BarlowGirl.
Corrie ten Boom: A Faith Undefeated
When Nazi forces invaded Holland in 1940 and began rounding up Jews, Corrie ten Boom, her sister Betsie, and their elderly father risked their lives to save as many as possible. A hidden room was secretly built in their home where the oppressed Jews took refuge until a Gestapo raid put an end to their operation. For their crimes, Corrie and Betsie were sent to the notorious concentration camp at Ravensbruck, where they suffered relentless cruelty. Struggling to reconcile God's goodness with the terrible realities of the camp, the sisters clung desperately to their Christian faith. Betsie died in the camp, but Corrie was miraculously released due to a clerical error. She spent the rest of her days caring for other death camp survivors and sharing her story with the world. Corrie's 1971 best-selling book, The Hiding Place, provides her account of persevering faith and forgiveness in the face of terrible evil. Featuring an interview with Pam Rosewell Moore, Corrie's longtime assistant, and scenes filmed in the ten Boom house in Holland where the actual events took place, Corrie ten Boom: A Faith Undefeated recounts this unforgettable story for a new generation.
Ten Boom the Musical - Play a Part
Here's your opportunity to help launch the production of an exciting original stage play, Ten Boom the Musical, based on Dutch Holocaust survivor Corrie ten Boom's powerful story, The Hiding Place. To learn more about this project, WATCH a short video at and donate to help bring this amazing production to new generations. SHARE with others! Thanks!! ... Susan Meredith Beyer & co-writer, Donna Marquean Griggs
New! :60 Return to the Hiding Place Trailer with Corrie ten Boom!
Corrie Ten Boom Museum visit by Ms Fink 1
Corrie Ten Boom watching the making of The Hiding Place - video
Return to the Hiding Place - Echolight Cinemas May 1
When Corrie ten Boom realizes the rising Nazi empire will swallow Holland and create the holocaust of every innocent Jew in secret death-camps, she faces the deadly threat of these Death-Skull Storm Troopers with a surprising remedy: an army comprised of untrained teenagers.
Around that same time, brilliant young physics student, Hans Poley, chooses not to join the Nazi party. To protect him, his parents force him into hiding in the home of Corrie ten Boom. While in hiding, he witnesses the atrocities toward the suffering Jews and decides he must do something.
Hans is drawn by resistance fighter, Piet Hartog, and love of Piet's life - Aty van Woerden (Corrie ten Boom's niece) into an intricate web of espionage and clandestine activities centered in the famous Hiding Place.
As part of Corrie ten Boom's army of untrained teenagers, Hans, Piet, and their friends navigate a deadly labyrinth of challenges to rescue the Jewish people in their modern-day, panicked exodus from death while embarking on a nonstop, action-packed hunt with the underground involving Gestapo hijacks, daring rescues, codes in windswept old windmills, and stunning miracles in one of history's most famous dramas. Climaxing in the true, breath-taking rescue of an entire orphanage of Jewish children marked for mass execution by Hitler's assassins, audiences will both cheer and weep at this exciting, sobering tale of Hans and the youth movement that dared to resist one of History's cruelest tyrants.
Trips & Travel RTL4 - Corrie ten Boom Museum
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Corrie ten Boom - Pray!
Through the ministry of Stories Come Alive, Gayle Haas brings to life the testimony of Dutch Holocaust survivor, Corrie ten Boom.