Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Soft Pastels

cees-fun-foto

This week’s Fun Foto Challenge is to show some of our soft pastel pictures.Pastels make me think of gentleness. Nothing is more comforting in all the world than a gentle spirit. To that end your photos today are brought to you by St. Francis De Sales.

After you are done here take a gander at some of the other pastel posts at Cee’s photog blog! http://www.ceephotography.com/2013/09/17/cees-fun-foto-challenge-soft-pastels/

Here are my gentle pastels:

Nothing is so strong as gentleness, nothing so gentle as real strength. Saint Francis de Sales

Nothing is so strong as gentleness, nothing so gentle as real strength.
Saint Francis de Sales

 

When you encounter difficulties and contradictions, do not try to break them, but bend them with gentleness and time. Saint Francis de Sales

When you encounter difficulties and contradictions, do not try to break them, but bend them with gentleness and time.
Saint Francis de Sales

 

“It is wonderful how attractive a gentle, pleasant manner is, and how much it wins hearts.”  ― St. Francis de Sales

“It is wonderful how attractive a gentle, pleasant manner is, and how much it wins hearts.”
― St. Francis de Sales

 

 

 

A Word A Week Challenge: Square

This week our photographic word from sue is the word SQUARE!

You really need to hop on over and see her squares from the city of Seville. http://suellewellyn2011.wordpress.com/2013/09/10/a-word-a-week-challenge-square-week-45/.

Here are my squares

Sqaures above the glass nut tree. Boston MA

Sqaures above the glass nut tree. Boston MA

Sqaure graves in the floor of St. Bavos

Sqaure graves in the floor of St. Bavos

Delft  square from the rooftop of the Nieuwe Kerk

Delft square from the rooftop of the Nieuwe Kerk

Giant chessboard Keukenhof

Giant chessboard Keukenhof

Here are some other “square” posts.  Hey! “It’s hip to be square!”- Hewey Lewis

http://esengasvoice.wordpress.com/2013/09/10/a-word-a-week-photo-challenge-square/

http://nadiamerrillphotography.wordpress.com/2013/09/10/a-word-a-week-challenge-square/

http://smallbluegreenfotos.wordpress.com/2013/09/10/a-word-a-week-challenge-square/

Weekly Travel Theme: Hidden

This week’s travel theme given by Ailsa from “Where’s My Backpack?” is the word “HIDDEN”. Why don’t you sneak on over to her blog and find some other “hidden” posts! http://wheresmybackpack.com/2013/09/06/travel-theme-hidden/

Here are my thoughts on the matter

Corrie Ten Boom Museum, Haarlem The Netherlands

Corrie Ten Boom Museum, Haarlem The Netherlands

Corrie Ten Boom was taken prisoner by the Nazi's for hiding Jews in her home.

Corrie Ten Boom was taken prisoner by the Nazi’s for hiding Jews in her home.

The Hiding Place (cut out in the back wall)

The Hiding Place (cut out in the back wall)

The entrance to the Hiding Place (not even waist high) 6 people had to get in in 90 seconds

The entrance to the Hiding Place (not even waist high) 6 people had to get in in 90 seconds

 

 

Corrie ten Boom grew up in Haarlem in Amsterdam and was the youngest of four children, born to parents Casper (1859–1944) and Cornelia (died 1921 of a cerebral haemorrhage). She had two other sisters, Betsie ten Boom (died 1944 in the Ravensbrück death camp) and Nollie (died in 1953). Her brother, Willem ten Boom, was born in 1887 and died in 1946 of spinal tuberculosis. Corrie’s three maternal aunts also lived with her family. Bep died in the early 1920s, of tuberculosis; Jans died in the mid-1920s, of diabetes; and Anna, who took care of the children after the death of their mother, was the last to die, in the early 1930s.

Corrie’s father worked as a watchmaker; a profession that she followed in becoming the first licensed female watchmaker in the Netherlands in 1924. Corrie and her sister Betsie never married and had lived their entire lives (until their arrest) in their childhood home in Haarlem. Corrie ten Boom also ran a church for people with mental disabilities, raised foster children in their home, and did other charitable works.

In 1940, the Nazis invaded the Netherlands. Among their restrictions was banning a club which ten Boom had run for young girls.In May 1942 a well-dressed woman came to the ten Boom door with a suitcase in hand. She told the ten Booms that she was a Jew and that her husband had been arrested several months before and her son had gone into hiding. As Occupation authorities had recently visited her, she was afraid to return home. Having heard that the ten Booms had helped their Jewish neighbors, the Weils, she asked if she might stay with the family. ten Boom’s father readily agreed. A devoted reader of the Old Testament, Casper believed Jews were the ‘chosen people‘, and he told the woman, “In this household, God’s people are always welcome.”The family then became very active in the Dutch underground hiding refugees They provided kosher food for the Jewish refugees who stayed with them and honored the Jewish Sabbath.

Thus the ten Booms began “the hiding place”, or “de schuilplaats”, as it was known in Dutch (also known as “de Béjé”, pronounced in Dutch as ‘bayay’, an abbreviation of the name of the street the house was in, the Barteljorisstraat). Corrie ten Boom and sister Betsie began taking in refugees — both Jews and others who were members of the resistance movement, being sought by the Gestapo and its Dutch counterpart. While they had extra rooms in the house, food was scarce for everyone, due to wartime shortages. Every non-Jewish Dutch person had received a ration card, which was required to obtain weekly coupons to buy food.

Thanks to her charitable work, ten Boom knew many people in Haarlem and remembered a couple who had a disabled daughter. The father was a civil servant, who by then was in charge of the local ration-card office. She went to his house one evening; when he asked how many ration cards she needed, “I opened my mouth to say, ‘Five,'” ten Boom wrote in The Hiding Place. “But the number that unexpectedly and astonishingly came out instead was: ‘One hundred.'”He gave them to her, and she provided cards to every Jewish person whom she met.

Secret room

Because of the number of people using their house, the family built a secret room, in case a raid took place. They decided to build it in ten Boom’s bedroom; as it was in the highest part of the house, people trying to hide would have the most time to avoid detection (as a search would start on the ground floor). A member of the Dutch resistance designed the hidden room behind a false wall. Gradually, family and supporters brought building supplies into the house, hiding them in briefcases and rolled-up newspapers. When finished, the secret room was about 30 inches (76 cm) deep, the size of a medium wardrobe. A ventilation system allowed for breathing. To enter the secret room, a person had to open a sliding panel in the plastered brick wall under a bottom bookshelf and crawl in on hands and knees. In addition, the family installed an electric buzzer for warning in a raid. When the Nazis raided the ten Boom house in 1944, six people were using the hiding place to evade detection.

Arrest, detention, and release

On February 28, 1944, a Dutch informant told the Nazis of the work the ten Booms were doing, and the Nazis arrested the entire ten Boom family at around 12:30 p.m. The family was sent first to Scheveningen prison, where their elderly father died ten days after his arrest. While there, ten Boom’s sister Nollie, brother Willem, and nephew Peter were all released. Later, ten Boom and sister Betsie were sent to the Vught political concentration camp, and finally to the Ravensbrück death camp in Germany. Betsie died there on December 16, 1944. Before she died, she told ten Boom, “There is no pit so deep that He [God] is not deeper still.”[1][page needed]

Corrie ten Boom was released on December 28, 1944. In the movie The Hiding Place, she narrates the section on her release from camp, saying that she later learned that her release had been a clerical error. She said, “God does not have problems — only plans.” The Jews whom the ten Booms had been hiding at the time of their arrests remained undiscovered and all but one, an old woman named Mary, survived.– Information courtesy of Wiki pedia

 

 

A Word A Week Challenge: Ornate

This week’s word for the week from ” A Word In Your Ear” is the word ORNATE.

Each week this fine lady plops open her dictionary and picks a word from the pages which land open. If you would like to discover more “ornate” posts go to http://suellewellyn2011.wordpress.com/2013/09/02/a-word-a-week-challenge-ornate-week-44/

Here are my pictorial thoughts on the word “ORNATE”.

All of these photos were taken on my first trip to Holland. They are inside St. Bavo’s Church in Haarlem.

100_0321

100_0323

100_0334

100_0345

100_0322

 

Weekly Travel Theme: Distance

Well last week I was at a distance from my computer and could not take part in the weekly travel theme. This week I have once again drawn close to the comforting click of the keyboard and so I can participate in this week’s theme from Ailsa which is: DISTANCE. If you would like to read more posts from a distance go to http://wheresmybackpack.com/2013/08/30/travel-theme-distance/

Here is  my photographic take  on the matter:

We should not judge people by their peak of excellence; but by the distance they have traveled from the point where they started. Henry Ward Beecher

We should not judge people by their peak of excellence; but by the distance they have traveled from the point where they started.
Henry Ward Beecher

 

Life is like a landscape. You live in the midst of it but can describe it only from the vantage point of distance. Charles Lindbergh

Life is like a landscape. You live in the midst of it but can describe it only from the vantage point of distance.
Charles Lindbergh

 

I took these photos while visiting the Fruitlands Museum in Ayer MA with our artist’s group.

We talk about heaven being so far away. It is within speaking distance to those who belong there. Heaven is a prepared place for a prepared people. Dwight L. Moody

We talk about heaven being so far away. It is within speaking distance to those who belong there. Heaven is a prepared place for a prepared people.
Dwight L. Moody

This photograph was taken in the Oude Kerk in Delft, The Netherlands.

 

 

 

Netherlands 2013 A Walk To the Jagersfeld

One of the great blessings I experienced during my recent trip to the Netherlands was a visit with my sister’s friends Willem and Mirjam Jackson. The Jackson’s have been good enough to open their home to me on both of my trips to North Holland and to extend the right hand of fellowship.

On this trip we all took a three hour tour of the neighborhood including a walk through the Jagersfeld (hunter’s field).

A view of  the neighborhood

A view of the neighborhood

This neighborhood is near Willem and Mirjam's complex. It is a walk only neighborhood.

This neighborhood is near Willem and Mirjam’s complex. It is a walk only neighborhood.

 

Sheep in the "walk only" neighborhood.

Sheep in the “walk only” neighborhood.

 

One of my sister's favorite houses...only 800,000

One of my sister’s favorite houses…only 800,000

An island home

An island home

houseboats

houseboats

A Dutch farm

A Dutch farm

The Jagersfeld

The Jagersfeld

We finished the day with Witloaf

We finished the day with Witloaf

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Netherlands 2013 Crazy Keukenhof

On my recent trip to The Netherlands, I had an opportunity to tour the world-famous Keukenhof Gardens and the surrounding fields of Lisse. Unfortunately like the rest of the world the gardens were about a month behind.

While I did get some beautiful shots indoors and even a few great shots of the outer gardens the tulip beds were nowhere near peak.

Still it is an interesting place and there was plenty to photograph; So I loaded up on photos. When I brought my stuff home I began to play with it a little. Here is what I like to call “Crazy Keukenhof”.

The Netherlands 2013 Day 6

100_1960

Keukenhof Gardens

For as the soil makes the sprout come up and a garden causes seeds to grow, so the Sovereign LORD will make righteousness and praise spring up before all nations. ISa. 61: 11

100_1961

Keukenhof Gardens

 Do not be afraid, land of Judah;
    be glad and rejoice.
Surely the Lord has done great things!
22     Do not be afraid, you wild animals,
    for the pastures in the wilderness are becoming green.
The trees are bearing their fruit;
    the fig tree and the vine yield their riches.
23 Be glad, people of Zion,
    rejoice in the Lord your God,
for he has given you the autumn rains
    because he is faithful.
He sends you abundant showers,
    both autumn and spring rains, as before.
24 The threshing floors will be filled with grain;
    the vats will overflow with new wine and oil.

25 “I will repay you for the years the locusts have eaten—Joel 2: 21-25

 

100_1917

Keukenhof Gardens

26 He also said, “This is what the kingdom of God is like. A man scatters seed on the ground. 27 Night and day, whether he sleeps or gets up, the seed sprouts and grows, though he does not know how. 28 All by itself the soil produces grain—first the stalk, then the head, then the full kernel in the head. 29 As soon as the grain is ripe, he puts the sickle to it, because the harvest has come.” Mark 4:26,27

Keukenhof Gardens

Keukenhof Gardens

I hope you enjoyed these photos and Scriptures inspired by Keukenhof  Gardens!