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Corrie ten Boom’s house is now the Corrie ten Boom Museum! It
is located at 19 Barteljorisstraat, in the center of Haarlem,
Holland. Taking a tour of the Ten Boom home is like stepping back in
time.
This is a home of love and laughter, prayer and praise, compassion and
ultimate sacrifice. Listening to Corrie's story in her own home is a
life-changing experience!

The museum
displays many rare family photographs.
From
pictures of Corrie’s grandparents to pictures spanning
Corrie’s entire life,
visitors gain new insight into this family.
Below are several of these treasured
photographs:

Left photo: Corrie's parents, Casper and Cor, wed in 1884.
Right photo: Casper ten Boom (back left) and helpers in the workroom of
his watch shop.


Left photo:
Betsie, Willem, Nollie and Corrie.
Right photo: Betsie, Corrie, Nollie and Willem.


The photo above is
the family’s dining room.
Over the years, many people have taken
their places around the
Ten Booms' oval
table. There were
nine in the
household as Corrie grew up: Corrie’s
parents, Casper and Cor; the four children, Betsie, Willem, Nollie and
Corrie;
and the three aunts, Tante Jans, Tante Bep and Tante Anna. Later, the Ten Booms cared
for a series of foster children, orphans and missionary
children. During
the Nazi occupation of Holland, the places around the table were filled
with Jews and others in
hiding.
In
the photo, Papa’s Bible is open to
Psalm 91. The
Alpina watch company
sign (the underground's signal) is in the window.
Today, many of Corrie’s books
are sold from the shelves in this room.


This
is the Ten Booms' living room, also called the "Liberation
Room." During the
occupation this
was the one place in the house large enough for everyone to
gather: Papa, Corrie
and Betsie together with those who were in hiding. They shared like a
family and
supported one another through that incredibly dangerous time.

It is
amazing that there are photographs of the Ten Booms with their
“extended
family,” Jews and underground workers--all in hiding in their
home.
Many of these pictures are on display in
the museum.
The Corrie ten Boom House Foundation is
grateful to Hans Poley for these
photographs.

Corrie is second from the left in the top row, Casper is in front of
Corrie, Betsie is on the right of the top
row, and Hans Poley is in front of Betsie.
Yes,
visitors to the Corrie ten Boom Museum are actually able to see
“the hiding
place.” It
is an area behind a
false wall in Corrie’s bedroom where Jews and others were
hidden.
On the day of the Gestapo raid, four
Jews and two Dutch underground workers rushed into this small space.
They entered through the sliding door
located in the bottom of the linen
closet (on the left of the photograph).
They remained in this small space for
47 hours, until they were
rescued by the underground! All
six
left this home safely. The
Jews
were taken to new safe houses, and three of the four Jews survived the
war.
The large hole in the brick wall allows museum visitors see inside the
hiding
place.


For their
crime of helping Jews, the Ten Boom family was sent to prison.
Papa died within ten days of his arrest.
He had said it would be a privilege to
give his life for the Jews.
Willem and his son Christiaan also died due to their
imprisonments. Corrie and Betsie spent a total of ten months
in three different
prisons. The last was Ravensbruck Concentration Camp, located
near Berlin,
Germany. Betsie
died there, but
through a clerical error (God’s miracle), Corrie was released.
Starting at age 53, she spent the next
33 years sharing what she and Betsie had learned in Ravensbruck. “There
is no pit so deep that God’s love is not deeper still" and
“God will
enable you to forgive your enemies.”

Corrie in her travels

Following
strokes, Corrie died on her birthday, April 15, 1983, when she was 91
years old.
Below is one of the last photographs
taken of her.
Today, the Ten Boom's witness still touches hearts through
Corrie’s
books, videos and through the Corrie ten Boom Museum.

The
Corrie
ten Boom Museum also includes an exhibition of the Dutch Underground
Resistance
Movement. Many photographs and
mementos of the occupation years are on display.
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