Book details
The Hiding Place: The Triumphant True Story of Corrie Ten Boom
by Corrie ten Boom
1971 · Bantam
About the book
Corrie ten Boom lived in Haarlem, the Netherlands, where she worked as a watchmaker alongside her sister Betsie and father Casper. During the Nazi occupation, the Ten Boom family converted their home into a hub for the underground resistance, constructing a secret room behind a false wall to hide Jewish refugees. Following a betrayal by a local informant, the Gestapo arrested the family, leading to Corrie and Betsie’s imprisonment in the Scheveningen prison and eventually the Ravensbrück concentration camp. The narrative documents their physical survival under brutal conditions and Betsie’s reliance on Christian scripture to maintain dignity and offer forgiveness to their captors despite starvation and abuse.
Readers interested in the history of the Holocaust or Christian devotion study this memoir to understand how faith operates under extreme persecution. It serves as a primary source for those examining the Dutch resistance and the logistical realities of hiding people during World War II. The reader gains a perspective on the psychological mechanisms of endurance and the specific theological application of grace in the face of systemic cruelty. By following Corrie’s transition from a quiet tradeswoman to a prisoner and eventual survivor, the reader observes the practical integration of religious conviction with historical crisis.
Details
- Published
- 1971
- Publisher
- Bantam
- ISBN
- 9780553256697
- Language
- EN