Feel Again One Republic Ten Feel Tall

Dutch concentration camp victim

Betsie ten Boom

Betsie ten Boom TB low res.tif
Born (1885-08-xix)nineteen August 1885

Amsterdam, Netherlands

Died 16 December 1944(1944-12-sixteen) (aged 59)

Ravensbrück concentration camp, Federal republic of germany

Resting place Ravensbrück concentration camp, Federal republic of germany
Nationality Dutch
Teaching Through local secondary school
Occupation Bookkeeper, homemaker
Employer Casper x Blast
Known for Righteous Among the Nations, The Hiding Identify past Corrie ten Boom
Parent(southward) Casper ten Boom
Cornelia Luitingh
Relatives Corrie ten Boom (sister)
Website ten Boom Museum

Elisabeth ten Boom (19 August 1885 – 16 December 1944) was a Dutch adult female, the daughter of a watchmaker, who suffered persecution under the Nazi regime in World War II, including incarceration in Ravensbrück concentration camp, where she died aged 59. The daughter of Casper ten Boom, she is one of the leading characters in The Hiding Place, a volume written by her sister Corrie ten Blast virtually the family′south experiences during World War Two. Nicknamed Betsie, she suffered from pernicious anemia from her nascency.[ane] The oldest of v 10 Boom children, she did not get out the family and marry, but remained at dwelling until World War II.[2] She is a Righteous Among the Nations.

Built pernicious anemia [edit]

Betsie x Nail suffered from a example of pernicious anemia. This example is believed to exist caused past a malfunction of the gastric juices of intrinsic cistron during the nine weeks before birth. Her illness prevented her from begetting children, so she chose, at a immature historic period, not to ally.[iii]

Career and education [edit]

Betsie 10 Boom was educated in the local primary and secondary school until the age of 15. She remained at home to work with her father in his watch shop, where she served as the bookkeeper. She also cooked for their family.

Her younger sister Corrie later took over the bookkeeping role when Betsie caught influenza. Betsie and then began housekeeping and continued to practice then until her Nazi detention.

1940-1944 [edit]

The 10 Boom family belonged to the Dutch Reformed Church and believed strongly in the equality of all people before God. Betsie's brother Willem ten Boom was a minister, and the 10 Boom sisters (Betsie, Nollie, and Corrie) had been active in charitable piece of work before the war. During the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, the family began to hide numerous Jews and resisters in their dwelling and built a secret room to protect them.

In 1944, the ten Smash family and other people at the house, well-nigh 30 in all, were arrested for their resistance activities and taken to Scheveningen prison. The six Jews in hiding at the firm were not discovered and survived, with the assistance of other Resistance workers. Casper ten Boom became sick and died ten days later at the prison. Willem, Nollie, and a nephew were released.

In June 1944, Betsie ten Boom and her sister Corrie were sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp. Her strong organized religion in God kept her from depression throughout her life and especially within the camps. Corrie told of how Betsie reached out to help others and helped Corrie to run across the best in everything, no affair what the circumstances.

Before her death, Betsie claimed she experienced 3 visions from God near what she and Corrie were to practice after their release. Her beginning vision was of a house for quondam prisoners. The second was to own a concentration camp where they could teach Germans to learn to dear again. The third was that they would be released earlier the New year's day. All three of these visions came truthful. Betsie 10 Nail died in Ravensbruck on 16 December 1944, at the historic period of 59. Her sister Corrie was released due to a clerical error and went on to set up the projects that she had seen in her visions, including traveling the earth to speak about her faith.

Betsie and her father, Casper, were honored by the State of State of israel in 2008 as Righteous Amidst the Nations. Her sister Corrie had been honored previously.

Bibliography [edit]

  • Corrie ten Nail with John and Elizabeth Sherrill, The Hiding Place, Guideposts Associates, 1971. ISBN 0-340-17930-9, ISBN 0-340-20845-7
  • Corrie 10 Boom, In My Father's House, Hodder & Stoughton Ltd, 1976. ISBN 978-0-340-86375-6

References [edit]

  1. ^ The Hiding Place. Bantam Books, New York City: 1984. 1974. ISBN0553256696.
  2. ^ "In My Father's House". Hodder & Stoughton Religious, London, England: 1976.
  3. ^ The Hiding Identify. Bantam Books, New York City: 1984. 1974. ISBN0553256696.

Corrie ten Nail, Betty Veldhuvzen van Zanten (2008). Wat Vrienden Zeggen Over Corrie 1. https://world wide web.youtube.com: tantecorrietenboom.

External links [edit]

  • ten Boom Museum
  • Corrie ten Boom Alive
  • Betsie ten Boom – her activeness to salvage Jews' lives during the Holocaust, at Yad Vashem website

ruffpallogn.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betsie_ten_Boom

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