April 7
was Holocaust Remembrance Day, so I decided to focus my reading around the topic.
The words were often hard to read.
The words were often hard to read.
The Diary of a Young Girl

by Anne Frank
1947
I am sure you have at least heard the
name, Anne Frank, but have you read her diary?
I read it years ago, but this time round gave me a new perspective.
Anne Frank was a Jewish teenager in
Nazi-occupied Holland. Her family, along with the Van Daan [Van Pels] family
and Mr. Dussel [Mr. Pfeffer], went into hiding in order to escape deportation
and certain death. (Names had been changed for the book, at least
according to the Anne Frank Museum website.)
The Diary of a Young Girl is Anne’s journal.
Full of teenage angst, Anne's entries document
this time of secrecy.
This time of eight people in
close-quarters with little to do, limited food, and the constant fear of discovery.
“I want to go on living even after my
death! And therefore I am grateful to God for giving me this gift, this
possibility of developing myself and of writing, of expressing all that is in
me.”
Anne got her wish.
Making Bombs for Hitler
by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

This middle grade novel is about a
young girl, Lida, who is forced into slave labor at a munitions factory in Nazi
Germany.
The one piece of advice Lida
was given, as she was transported to the labour camp was, “make yourself useful”.
So she did.
When other children her age were
deemed useless and expendable, Lida lied to make herself older and was
permitted to put her skills, and her small steady hands, to work.
Some of this work included making bombs.
Some of this work included sabotaging
bombs.
Osterbeiter was the name.
A few facts:
Non-Jews were picked up off the street and sent to labour camps to work.Most Osterbeiter’s were Ukranian and had to wear “OST” on their sleeves.
They were regarded as subhuman and
were killed if they tried to escape.Non-Jews were picked up off the street and sent to labour camps to work.Most Osterbeiter’s were Ukranian and had to wear “OST” on their sleeves.
Others died from over-work or when the factories they were working in were bombed by the Allies.
Making Bombs for Hitler is actually a sequel to the novel, Stolen Child, which tells the story of Lida’s sister, Larissa, a
victim of the Nazi Lebensborn program.
I have yet to read it.
by Corrie Ten Boom
1971
What a story of faith.
Corrie Ten Boom was a non-Jew living in Nazi-occupied
Holland when she allowed herself to be used by God to save many of His people
– the Dutch Jews.
Corrie became very involved in “The Underground”, which involved stolen
ration cards, hiding Jews and various other clandestine activities.
Eventually the Ten Booms were
discovered and Corrie, along with her older sister, Betsie, and their elderly
father, were imprisoned.
Corrie was the only one to survive.
There are two distinct stories that
stand out to me in The Hiding Place.
The first:
Betsie was an example of true thankfulness
to all those around her.
She genuinely lived out 1
Thessalonians 5:18,
“Give thanks in all circumstances…”
She even gave thanks for the fleas in
their barracks at concentration camp, Ravensbruck.
In the end, it was these fleas that kept
the guards away so Betsie and Corrie could freely lead Bible studies.
Betsie prayed for the Nazi soldiers and guards – the enemy.
persecute you.”
It’s easy to pray for our friends and
loved ones, but how easy is it to pray for the
enemy?
Corrie Ten Boom was released from
Ravensbruck on, what she later discovered, a technical error. All women of her
age were actually assigned to be killed.
Until she was quite elderly, Corrie travelled the world sharing the Gospel and the free gift of God’s grace.

2012
Full of amazing pictures and stories
of bravery, this book was a privilege to read.
I had no idea.
I had no idea.
Reading on…
This is a wonderful list of books about WWII and thank you so much for including my book, Making Bombs for Hitler. One correction: the majority of Ostarbeiters were Ukrainians.
ReplyDeleteThank you - I'll correct that!
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