Stories That Teach Us What Is Possible For Ordinary People

May 30, 2022 at 9:43 am Leave a comment

Dear Friends,

We remember those heroes that made an enormous difference in saving lives by sharing this very special inspiring article. They answered the call to action and their lives became unforgettable teaching stories.

All good wishes,

Harriet and Bill

How 9 Ordinary People Became Heroes During The Holocaust — And Risked Everything To Save Jewish Lives

By Kaleena Fraga | Checked By Jaclyn Anglis
ATI    September 1, 2021

From the “Japanese Schindler” to members of the Dutch resistance, these incredible stories of Holocaust heroes prove that not everyone was just following orders.

The horrors of the Holocaust are well known. But the genocide led by Nazi Germany — which killed six million Jews and millions of other people during World War II — also contained moments of quiet bravery.

In the darkest days of the war, ordinary people across Europe bravely stepped up to save Jewish people — often risking their own lives in the process. Some of these heroes used their position of power to help people. For example, Paul Grüninger used his role as a Swiss border commander to usher thousands of Jewish refugees to safety in Switzerland.

But other heroes — such as watchmaker Corrie ten Boom or office assistant Miep Gies — worked jobs that weren’t considered nearly as powerful. And yet, they still risked being executed by the Nazis to help Jews.

These are nine stories of heroism during the Holocaust.

1. Corrie Ten Boom: The Dutch Watchmaker Who Saved 800 Jews

Yad Vashem/The World Holocaust Remembrance Center
Corrie ten Boom showing the “hiding place” that her family used to conceal Jewish refugees.

Until the outbreak of World War II, Corrie ten Boom had led a quiet life. Born into a Christian family in the Dutch city of Haarlem, ten Boom grew up in a small apartment above her father’s watch shop. As an adult, she followed in his footsteps to become the first licensed female Dutch watchmaker.

But everything changed in May 1940 when the Nazis invaded the Netherlands. Ten Boom watched in horror and disbelief as her Jewish friends, neighbors, and customers started to disappear.

“At any minute there might be a rap on this door,” she wrote in her memoir, The Hiding Place, about a visit to see Jewish friends. “These children, this mother and father, might be ordered to the back of a truck.”

As the situation grew dire, ten Boom and her family decided to help Jewish people who were fleeing the Nazis. So they constructed a secret hiding place in ten Boom’s bedroom. There, until 1944, the ten Booms sheltered some 800 Jewish refugees until they could be transported away to safety.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
The Nazis swiftly deported Dutch Jews from the Netherlands, leading high-ranking Nazi Adolf Eichmann to say: “In the beginning you could say that the trains from the Netherlands were really rolling; it was quite wonderful.”

But in February 1944, the ten Booms were found out. The Gestapo, tipped off by an informant, raided the home and arrested Corrie, her sister Betsie, and their elderly father Casper. Though the Gestapo searched the house, they did not find the last group of refugees who were hiding in the secret room.

Casper, Betsie, and Corrie ten Boom were thrown in prison. Casper, then 84 years old, died after just 10 days behind bars. And Corrie and Betsie were soon sent to concentration camps. Though Betsie fell ill at a camp and died, Corrie was released at the end of 1944 due to a clerical error. Corrie later found out that she had narrowly avoided death — as the other women in her age group were sent to the gas chambers shortly after she left.

She returned to the Netherlands, where she set up a rehabilitation center for concentration camp survivors. Ten Boom, inspired by her sister’s dying words about the power of God, spent the rest of her life preaching forgiveness.

Yad Vashem, The World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Israel, later recognized Casper, Betsie, and Corrie ten Boom as “Righteous Among the Nations,” an honor given to non-Jewish heroes of the Holocaust.

To Read About:

2. Miep Gies: The Woman Who Hid Anne Frank And Saved Her Diary, CLICK HERE

3. Paul Grüninger: The Swiss Border Commander Who Falsified Documents To Save Jews, CLICK HERE

4. Nicholas Winton: The British Stockbroker Who Saved Hundreds Of Children From The Nazis, CLICK HERE

5. Irena Sendler: The Polish Humanitarian Who Helped Save 2,500 Children, CLICK HERE

6. Oskar Schindler: The Complicated Businessman Behind Schindler’s List, CLICK HERE

7. Gustav Schröder: The German Sea Captain Of The “Voyage Of The Damned,” CLICK HERE

8. Chiune Sugihara: The Japanese Diplomat Turned Holocaust Hero, CLICK HERE

9. The Doctors At Fatebenefratelli Hospital Who Invented “Syndrome K,” CLICK HERE

Entry filed under: Uncategorized.

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