This book, The Hiding Place, is an autobiography non-fiction book, which is a remarkable true story by Corrie Ten Boom. This book portrays a woman’s life that is full of trials, suffering, and love with courage as her family risked their lives to hide Jews during the Nazi occupation. For this True Stories Project, I will identify two things that I learned from this book that I feel are important.
The main characters are Corrie, her sister Betsie, and her father. They are a kind, caring, brave, and compassionate family. They are Christians. They lived in Holland during World War II. Corrie was about 50 years old and her family ran a watch shop. Holland was occupied by Germany in 1940 and the occupation was a scary time. But, because they wanted to help the Jews, they created a hiding place for the Jews to live. After the Ten Boom family got exposed from hiding the Jews, they got sent to the German concentration camps. Unfortunately, Corries’s father dies. While they were approaching the camps, Corrie had to watch Betsie stand naked in front of a roomful of men, she felt awful. In this person vs. society conflict, they
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suffered starvation, bitter coldness, and death. Will the love of Jesus help them survive? Will they ever be set free from those harsh camps and people? Read The Hiding Place to find out. In this report, I will identify 2 things I learned that are important.
I learned to be thankful of what I get, because when Betsie told Corrie to give thanks for everything they had, Corrie didn’t want to thank the fleas. But, because there were fleas, the guards didn’t dare to enter the big room, which allowed Betsie and the other women to have freedom away from the guards. Second, I learned to have faith in Jesus, because Corrie and Betsie had faith in Jesus, which gave them strength to survive. This quote is very important, because it helps you learn to be thankful of what you get. “My mind rushed back to our first hour in this place. I remembered Betsie’s bowed head, remembered her thanks to God for creatures I could see no use for.” That quote on p.204 helped me learn that stuff you think that are not useful, may actually be
helpful. In barracks 8 “there was too much misery, too much seemingly pointless suffering... But as the rest of the world grew stranger, one thing became increasingly clear. And that was the reason the two of us were here... As for us, from morning until lights-out, whenever we were not in ranks for roll call, our bible was the center of an ever-widening circle of help and hope. Like waifs clustered around a blazing fire, we gathered about it, holding out our hearts to its warmth and light.” That quote on p.190 demonstrates to have faith in Jesus. It helped me learn to have faith in Jesus and it’s very important. Because, once you have faith in Jesus, he will give you strength for anything you need. I read a lot of books that is like The Hiding Place, and this one is the second best one I ever read. I really love it, and I really enjoyed reading it. If I were to rank this book, I would rank it with a 10 out of 10 shiny bright stars. While reading this book, I felt like I was in it too, feeling the pain, the bitter coldness, the starvation, and death. It has so many emotions that made me really enjoy it. I would recommend this book to people who can handle these heartbreaking but inspirational books.
On their way to the village they are stopped by Nazi soldiers who says they must come with them to be relocated. Hannah is the only one who knows what is actually about to happen. She tries to explain why they must not go with the soldiers but the adults explain that they have no choice. They are loaded in trucks and drove off to a train station where they are gathered into cars with barely any room to breathe. The ride on the train lasts for days and several children and infants do not live
Corrie ten Boom writes a book called The Hiding Place, and it explains how she and her family helped Jews during the Holocaust. It took a lot of bravery and courage for the ten Booms to put their lives on the line to save the lives of nearly 800 Jews. The ten Booms show that instead of disregarding the jews and not helping them, they open their home for anybody who needs help. Even through the dark times, the ten Booms always have a strong feeling that something good will happen and continue spread the love of Jesus. The ten Booms hope that Jesus can deliver the soldiers from evil and keep spirits of everyone who is suffering from the Holocaust. The ten Booms respond to their environment by providing a temporary home for Jewish people and
Have you ever wondered what it’s like to live during World War 2? Life during World War 2 was torture if you were jewish, especially if you were a kid. Felix Salingar from Then by Morris Gleitzman and Anne Frank both knew what it was like. Their stories both describe the lives of jewish children hiding from the Nazis, in fear of being taken and killed. Throughout both of their stories, many character traits were discovered about them that show how they are similarly affected by the events in their stories. Anne Frank and Felix Salingar have many similarities, some of which stand out more than others.
The author of “The Hiding Place” was also the main character, Corrie Ten Boom. She was writing her own experiences through the war and documenting that section of her life. She wrote this book to show what it was honestly like for Jews and people helping Jews during the war. Some of history around what happened to the Jews was covered up, but slowly everyone has collectively uncovered it and made it known. This book was a part of uncovering the truth. It also taught many people what happened without being too gruesome. With the
“There is no pit so deep, that God’s love is not deep still.” Corrie Ten Boom once quoted. Corrie Ten Boom was a follower of God who believed God’s love was like no other, and followed his commandments at the best of her abilities. Corrie Ten Boom, the most well-known lady during the Holocaust for hiding Jews, was admirable not only because of her bravery, determination, and leadership skills, but also inspired many different people in a lot of different ways. Corrie Ten Boom breathed her first breath on April 5, 1892 in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
The Hiding Place is about a girl named Corrie goes through an experience at the time of world war two, when the Nazis were capturing the Jews, and sending them to concentration camps. The father, Casper, showed that no matter what is happening, that you can still show kindness. Cornelia, the mother, was always trying to make people happy, she also would get to know everyone. It should always be a your mind to help, serve, and to be a kind person.
There are many stories, diaries and books from the time of The Holocaust but arguably the most famous of them all is the story of Anne Frank. Anne Frank was a teenage Jewish girl who went into hiding in her fathers offices in Amsterdam, The Netherlands when the Nazis called up her older sister, Margot (Anne ??). Just before the call up, Anne had started to write a “diary” which she continued to write when she went into hiding with her family. Throughout the book Anne writes that her worst nightmare is to be discovered (Anne ??). The Franks when into hiding in 1941 in the Annex of the Opekta offices and were arrested by the Nazis in ???. After such a long period of time in hiding there are many suspects for who betraye...
Between Night and The Hiding Place, comradeship, faith, strength, and people of visions are clearly proved to be essential in order to survive in these death camps. Corrie, Elie, and other victims of these harsh brutalities who did survive had a rare quality that six million others unfortunately did not.
Hannah the main character, Hannah starts off at a dinner with her family which she thinks is very boring where Hannah who thinks she drank too much wine believing that she is daydreaming. Whilst in her mind as she was "daydreaming" Hannah had came into the kitchen to new surroundings very confused she was greeted by a girl named Eva who had greeted her by the name of Chaya. (Chaya meaning life). Hannah soon hears from Eva that it is the year 1942 and that both her parents were very ill and passed away being left for her Aunt Gitl and Uncle Shmuel to take care of her. Hannah learns that she is no longer in her home town. Hannah with Eva go to a wedding with all the family where half way through the wedding nazis come. It all makes sense to Hannah now because the nazis come and take them to a concentration camp which for some reason Hannah knew what was about to happen once the nazis got closer. The nazis came closer soon stopping right in front of them they get out of their trucks as they start pushing them all into the back of the trucks separating them. As Hannah drives off with Eva and everyone else in the trucks with bars for windows and the rest closed in left while watching helplessly as their houses and belongings burn to the ground never to be seen again.
Despite several notable contrasts between Anne Frank’s life presented in the play, “The Diary of Anne Frank,” and other accounts of Jewish people in hiding during World War II, the lives of these Jews had more similarities than differences. These people were similar in the way that they lived the same schedule every day. Anne and the other Jews relied on their helpers, who risked their lives willingly, to provide food and other human necessities for them, as well as tried to include aspects of their old lives before the Holocaust into their new lives in hiding. The Jews lived with fear of getting caught by Nazis in the back of their minds. Even though Jewish people may have had different
"Nominated for a 1998 National Book Award for Young People's Literature, No Pretty Pictures: A Child of War is Anita Lobel's gripping memoir of surviving the Holocaust. A Caldecott-winning illustrator of such delightful picture books as On Market Street, it is difficult to believe Lobel endured the horrific childhood she did. From age 5 to age 10, Lobel spent what are supposed to be carefree years hiding from the Nazis, protecting her younger brother, being captured and marched from camp to camp, and surviving completely dehumanizing conditions. A terrifying story by any measure, Lobel's memoir is all the more haunting as told from the first-person, child's-eye view. Her girlhood voice tells it like it is, without irony or even complete understanding, but with matter-of-fact honesty and astonishing attention to detail. She carves vivid, enduring images into readers' minds. On hiding in the attic of the ghetto: "We were always told to be very quiet. The whispers of the trapped grown-ups sounded like the noise of insects rubbing their legs together." On being discovered while hiding in a convent: "They lined us up facing the wall. I looked at the dark red bricks in front of me and waited for the shots. When the shouting continued and the shots didn't come, I noticed my breath hanging in thin puffs in the air." On trying not to draw the attention of the Nazis: "I wanted to shrink away. To fold into a small invisible thing that had no detectable smell. No breath. No flesh. No sound."
The main character Liesel, known as “the book thief” is who Death is looking over. Liesel, her mother, and brother are on a train to Munich. On the train ride her brother dies. She and her mother get off the train to bury him. The first book Liesel steals is from the gravediggers. They continue the journey to a town called Molching, where Liesel will be raised by foster parents, Hans and Rosa Hubermann. Liesel adjusts to her new home life. Hans teaches Liesel how to read. The war is escalating in Germany. The town holds a book-burning to celebrate Hitler’s birthday. That’s when Liesel steals another book from the flames. Liesel’s job is to deliver laundry to the Hermann family. The Hermanns’ have a library full of books. Liesel is allowed to read them in the study. Meanwhile, a German-Jew named Max needs help, so he seeks out the Hubermanns. Max hides in the basement, so he is safe from the Nazis. Liesel begins stealing books from the Hermanns. The Nazis parade the Jews through the town of Molching on their way to the concentration camp for everyone to see. Liesel is given a blank notebook to write her own story. One night the neighborhood is bombed. Hans, Rosa, and the rest of the neighborhood is killed. Rescue workers find Liesel under the rubble. She leaves behind her finished book, called The Book Thief. Death, who has been watching, rescues the book. Liesel ends up living with the mayor
The name “Anne Frank” is synonymous with hope, optimism, and belief in human good, even in times of relentless evil. Although she only lived to be fifteen, Anne is known and respected throughout the world for the humanistic light her work shed on an infamous time. Born June 12th, 1929, in Germany, she spent her early years in a middle-class Jewish-German family. However, the tranquility of the Frank family and 522,000 other German-Jews’ lives would be shattered by one of the most nefarious events in history, the Holocaust. Anne’s diary has become an influential resource in understanding historical and emotional aspects of the Holocaust.
On June 12, 1929, at 7:30 AM, a baby girl was born in Frankfort, Germany. No one realized that this infant, who was Jewish, was destined to become one of the worlds most famous victims of World War II. Her name was Anne Frank. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, by Anne Frank and B.M. Mooyaart, was actually the real diary of Anne Frank. Anne was a girl who lived with her family during the time while the Nazis took power over Germany. Because they were Jewish, Otto, Edith, Margot, and Anne Frank immigrated to Holland in 1933. Hitler invaded Holland on May 10, 1940, a month before Anne?s eleventh birthday. In July 1942, Anne's family went into hiding in the Prinsengracht building. Anne and her family called it the 'Secret Annex'. Life there was not easy at all. They had to wake up at 6:45 every morning. Nobody could go outside, nor turn on lights at night. Anne mostly spent her time reading books, writing stories, and of course, making daily entries in her diary. She only kept her diary while hiding from the Nazis. This diary told the story of the excitement and horror in this young girl's life during the Holocaust. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl reveals the life of a young innocent girl who is forced into hiding from the Nazis because of her religion, Judaism. This book is very informing and enlightening. It introduces a time period of discrimination, unfair judgment, and power-crazed individuals, and with this, it shows the effect on the defenseless.
The autobiography book, “The Diary of a Young Girl”, is a collection of Dutch diary entries authored by Anne Frank, a 13-year-old Jewish girl who lived through the atrocities of the Anti-Semitist German Nazi Regime. Beginning on June 14, 1942, the diary, which Anne named “Kitty”, vividly depicts fear-filled stories of the Franks and other Jews in evading racial annihilation. Besides the stories of war, the world-renown personal account narrates a teenage girl’s blossoming and her search for identity, love, and acceptance. The entries end abruptly on August 1, 1944, signifying the Gestapo’s capture of the Frank family and all the other residents of the Secret Annexe, but despite the impermanence of Anne’s life, her legacy endures