Monday, January 31, 2011

Make It Do - Sugar Rationing in World War II

What could be more American than Hershey bars, homemade cookies, and birthday cake? During World War II these items were hard to come by.

Short on Sugar
When the Japanese conquered the Philippines in the early months of 1942, the United States lost a major source of sugar imports. In addition, shipments from Hawaii had to be curtailed 50 percent as cargo vessels were diverted for military purposes. The supply fell by one-third. To ensure adequate supplies for manufacturers, the military, and civilians, sugar became the first food item to be rationed. Manufacturers initially received supplies at 80 percent of pre-war levels, but that was reduced over time.


Registration for Rationing


On April 27, 1942, families registered for ration books at their local elementary schools. One book was issued for each family member and had to be surrendered upon death. The sale of sugar was halted for one week to prepare for the program. To discourage hoarding, each family had to report how much sugar they had in stock - over a certain amount - and the corresponding number of stamps was removed from the book.


Ration Books


On May 5, 1942, each person in the United States received a copy of War Ration Book One, good for a 56-week supply of sugar. Initially, each stamp was good for one pound of sugar and could be used over a specified two-week period. Later on, as other items such as coffee and shoes were rationed, each stamp became good for two pounds of sugar over a four-week period. The ration book bore the recipient's name and could only be used by household members. Stamps had to be torn off in the presence of the grocer.

If the book was lost, stolen, or destroyed, an application had to be submitted to the Ration Board for a new copy. When entering the hospital for greater than ten days, the ration book had to be brought along.



Canning


Home canning was encouraged during the war - however, canning requires sugar. To provide for this patriotic need, each person could apply for a 25-pound allotment of canning sugar each year. Each local ration board determined the quantity and season of availability based on the local harvest. A special canning sugar stamp in the ration book had to be attached to the application. In 1944, confusion arose when "spare canning sugar stamp 37" was called for - but many people mistakenly used the regular sugar stamp 37, invalidating it for normal household purchases.


Shortages


Just because you had a sugar stamp didn't mean sugar was available for purchase. Shortages occurred often during the war, and in early 1945 became acute. As Europe was liberated from Nazi Germany, the US took on the main responsibility for providing food to those ravaged countries. On May 1, 1945, the sugar ration was cut to 15 pounds per year for household use and 15 pounds per year for canning - a total of eight ounces per week. Sugar was the last product to be rationed after the war. The program was discontinued in June 1947.


Housewives learned to be creative, using saccharine, corn syrup, and even packets of Jell-O as sugar substitutes. Women's magazines featured recipes with reduced sugar or creative substitutes.


Do you have any stories of wartime sugar rationing?

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 31, 1941: Vichy French sign Japanese-negotiated armistice with Thailand.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 29, 1941: US and Britain begin joint discussions in Washington which will lead to ABC-1 Plan in case of America entering war against Germany. British forces from Kenya invade Italian Somaliland.

Friday, January 28, 2011

How's Your Heart-Soil?

We have a lot of dirt in our house. Both my daughter and my youngest son recently completed science experiments involving soil, water or nutrients, and plant growth.

So dirt’s on my mind.

In the parable of the sower, Jesus compared the condition of our hearts to soil types. The hard path represents the heart hardened to God’s Word. The rocky soil represents a shallow heart unable to withstand trouble or persecution. The soil choked with weeds represents a heart distracted by worries and prosperity. And the fertile soil represents a heart that produces a fruitful life.

We want hearts that produce great works for God’s Kingdom. However, just as farming is hard work, so is the Christian life.


Plow

Soil and hearts both need plowing to allow seed to settle deep enough to grow and to create paths for roots. Sometimes God plows our lives with trials and tough times that turn our life—our soil upside-down. We can also plow with prayer, asking the Lord to break up our hard parts, turning our lives over for examination, and letting His Holy Spirit aerate our hearts. The act of plowing is painful and sweaty—but worth it.

Weed

Soil and hearts need careful maintenance to remove rocks and weeds. “The worries of this life, the deceitfulness of wealth and the desire for other things” act just like weeds. By stealing our resources of time, energy, money, and focus, they inhibit our growth. They block the view of the Son and His empowering light. We need to be vigilant for weeds and brutal about removing them.




Fertilize

Soil and hearts also need proper fertilizing. For plants, the proper balance of water and nutrients leads to the greatest growth and highest yield. Likewise, our hearts need a constant and balanced diet of prayer and Bible study, fellowship and worship. Then we can yield the fruit of service and giving, ministry and outreach.


Harvest!
“Like seed sown on good soil, hear the word, accept it, and produce a crop—thirty, sixty or even a hundred times what was sown” (Mark 4:20).

How can you take care of your heart-soil today?

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Book Club Beat - All Together in One Place by Jane Kirkpatrick

Welcome to Book Club Beat, where book clubs share about their discussions.

Book club name and location: Bibliovores, northern California

Book: All Together in One Place by Jane Kirkpatrick (WaterBrook Press, 2002)

What it’s about: When Mazy Bacon and her husband head west on the Oregon Trail, Mazy finds her boundaries stretched in uncomfortable directions. Tragedy befalls the wagon train, and Mazy and eleven other women bind together for survival and companionship.

Were discussion questions available? None in the back of the book or on-line that we could find.

What we liked about the book: We loved Ms. Kirkpatrick's gorgeous prose and many deep, quotable thoughts and insights. One group member had multiple sticky tabs throughout the book with her favorites marked. We enjoyed the diverse and intriguing characters, and how they bonded in a realistic manner due to adversity. Th difficulties of life on the Oregon Trail became real to us.

Anything we would change about the book? Not really. However, please note that this is the first in a three-book series, so many of the plot questions remained unresolved at the end of the book.

Fun connections (did the story inspire food, decorations, favors, etc.?): Not this time. For some reason, none of us was terribly interested in Oregon Trail cuisine.

Deep connections (this story made us think about the following discussion topics): We did discuss women's friendships and how adversity brings people together, but this book sparked fewer discussion points than other books we've read. Most of our discussion focused on the characters and what made them tick.

Do you recommend this book for other book clubs? Yes - remembering that this is the first in a series. The theme of women supporting each other resonates well for a women's book club.

Thanks for joining me today! If you belong to a book club and would like your group to be featured here, let me know! Pictures of the book club can be included if you'd like. Christian or "clean secular" fiction/nonfiction only please. The questionnaire is short, and I'll obtain the book cover and story blurb.

If you're looking for a book club, check out the Book Club Network at http://www.bookfun.org/ , an on-line meeting place for Christian book club members and authors. Over 800 members and it's only a few months old! Join the fun!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 25, 1941: British lead forces from various African colonies to invade Italian Somaliland from Kenya.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Make It Do - Gasoline Rationing in World War II

Rationing was an important part of life in America during World War II. However, the government was apprehensive about gasoline rationing. As a symbol of freedom of movement, the automobile represented everything American, and politicians feared riots and rebellion if they curtailed that freedom.


Rubber Shortage


What tipped the balance wasn't a gasoline shortage but a rubber shortage. As discussed last week (http://sarahsundin.blogspot.com/2011/01/make-it-do-tire-rationing-in-world-war.html), the United States faced a serious shortage of rubber and didn't have enough for military needs, much less civilian needs. While tires and other rubber items were rationed, the simplest way to reduce wear and tear on tires was to restrict driving.



Drive Less



In 1942, a nationwide Victory Speed of 35 mph was instituted, since higher speeds remove tread more quickly. People were encouraged to use Victory Bicycles (except new bictycles weren't manufactured), public transportation, and their own two feet. Commuters were told to "Carry more to win the war," and to share rides or form car clubs (the term "car pool" wasn't used yet). Employers experimented with staggered shifts to reduce traffic - and therefore, gasoline use. Pleasure driving was discouraged and the "Vacation at Home" was promoted, not just to save gas and rubber, but due to the strain on the nation's train system by military transport.


Fewer Cars


Car manufacturing stopped on Jan. 1, 1942, and no new automobiles could be purchased after Feb. 22, 1942. A small stock was held in reserve for critical replacements. The auto manufacturers converted their assembly lines to produce jeeps, tanks, and bombers, while the American consumer made do. Car theft became a larger problem than ever. On July 1, 1945, automobile production was allowed again, and the first car rolled off the assembly line on Aug. 30, 1945 - a Hudson Super Six coupe.



Gasoline Rationing Begins


Voluntary programs didn't do the job. The rubber situation became critical, and on May 15, 1942, 8 million motorists in eighteen Eastern states registered for gas ration cards. Rationing began on the East Coast on July 22, 1942. These states were chosen due to better public transportation and shorter distances traveled, and because the U-boat menace off the East Coast made transport of oil and gasoline more hazardous. However, this also wasn't enough, and on Dec. 1, 1942, rationing went into effect nationwide. The program would continue until Aug. 15, 1945.


Stickers and Coupons


The American public learned to deal with an elaborate system. Every motorist was issued a windshield sticker displaying a letter: "A" (most motorists - 3 gallons/week), "B" (for war workers to get to their jobs - 8 gal/wk), "C" (for those who used their cars on the job, such as physicians, clergy, and mail carriers), "T" (truckers - unlimited), "R" (non-highway farm vehicles - unlimited), "E" (emergency vehicles such as ambulances, police, fire - unlimited), and "X" (a controversial unlimited sticker for VIPs - unlimited). Some of these categories changed, emerged, or were eliminated during the war.


At the gas station, the attendant checked the windshield sticker and took the required number of ration book coupons - also marked with the appropriate letter. Of course, payment was also required - about 19 cents/gallon.


Gas Shortage


Despite rationing, a serious gas shortage developed early in 1944. The high military use and restricted shipping contributed to this problem. In January 1944 on the West Coast, very little gasoline was available - and none at all in Sacramento, California. On March 22, 1944, "A" class drivers were further restricted to 2 gallons/week.


Not everyone complied. The black market became quite profitable, cases of gas siphoning made the front page of small-town newspapers, and several ration book forgery rings were broken up.


How do you think modern-day Americans would deal with these restrictions?

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 24, 1941: British armored forces divide Italian forces in Libya.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 23, 1941: Before Congress, Charles Lindbergh suggests US negotiate neutrality pact with Hitler.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 22, 1941: In Libya, Australians take Tobruk—and 25,000 Italian prisoners.

Friday, January 21, 2011

What Could Be Better Than Sacrifice?

Who doesn't want to do something good for God? We love Him. We want to please Him. We want to sacrifice something for Him.

However, if we're not careful, service and sacrifice can come between us and the Lord. In my first novel, A Distant Melody, Lt. Walter Novak and Allie Miller both make sacrifices in their lives to please God - but what He really wants is for them to obey regarding certain issues. Ultimately they realize they were only out to please themselves rather than the Lord.

In 1 Samuel 15, King Saul disobeys God's command to slay all the Amalekites, including their livestock. He makes the excuse that he saved the best sheep to sacrifice to the Lord. However, that wasn't what God asked him to do. The prophet Samuel confronts Saul and reminds him, "'Does the Lord delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices as much as in obeying the voice of the Lord? To obey is better than sacrifice, and to heed is better than the fat of rams'" 1 Samuel 15:22.

Do we choose our own sacrifices as Saul did? Do we busily serve in the church while ignoring God’s call to something else, perhaps something less pleasant? Do we follow legalistic rules but not the Lord’s deeper commands? Do we give our leftover time and money, thinking God will be pleased with scraps?

Yes, God calls for sacrifice, and obedience often requires sacrifice. However, sacrifice without obedience does not please the Lord.

“For I desire mercy, not sacrifice, and acknowledgement of God rather than burnt offerings” Hosea 6:6.

Have you ever found yourself choosing sacrifice over obedience?

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 21, 1941: Fascist Iron Guard attempts to overthrow Antonescu in Romania. Finland joins Axis.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 20, 1941: President Roosevelt inaugurated for his third term. The US Senate has 28 Republicans and 72 Democrats; the House of Representatives has 162 Republicans and 268 Democrats.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Taming Time - Practical Tips to Increase Writing Productivity

Today I'm guest blogging over on Novel Journey on time management for writers: "Taming Time - Practical Tips to Increase Writing Productivity.
Herd up goals!
Corral blocks of time!
Lasso the internet!
Harness time snippets!
Yee-haw? Okay, so I shouldn't write westerns. Anyway...here's the link to the article: http://noveljourney.blogspot.com/2011/01/taming-time-by-guest-blogger-sarah.html

In a Few Years I'll...

“I’m not ready for that yet. Maybe in a few years.”

What is That Thing in your life? The one thing you long to do that you don’t feel ready for yet? You need to be older, wiser, better prepared, have more time, pass some milestone first—and then you’ll do it.

At the age of twelve, Jesus went to His Father’s house. According to Jewish tradition, He wouldn’t be part of the religious community for another year. He wouldn’t start His ministry for another eighteen years. But He wanted to be about His Father’s business, and He wouldn’t let His age stop Him.

1 Timothy 4:12 says, “Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith, and in purity.” Look carefully at whatever is keeping you from doing That Thing now. Pray about it. Is it truly God’s will for you to wait, or is it your fear, insecurity, laziness, or perception that holds you back.

If it truly is God’s will to wait, then follow Jesus’ example and prepare to do That Thing in the future by asking questions and listening and learning.

Do you have a That Thing in your life? Do you truly need to wait or can you start right now? If you need to wait, how can you prepare while you wait?

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 19, 1941: British launch offensive in East Africa, invading Italian-occupied Eritrea & Ethiopia. Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist Chinese forces disband Mao’s Communist army.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 18, 1941: German Luftwaffe begins bombing British-occupied Malta from Italy.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Make It Do - Tire Rationing in World War II

During World War II, rationing was a large part of life on the United States Home Front. Tires were the first items to be rationed.

Rubber Shortage

The Japanese conquered the prime rubber producing nations of Malaya and the Dutch East Indies in January and March of 1942 respectively, eliminating 91% of America's rubber supply. Since cargo ships were needed for military purposes, the ability to import rubber from South America was reduced. The synthetic rubber program had just begun and didn't produce enough to meet civilian and military needs. Before the war, the US had accumulated a stockpile of crude rubber - but only enough for one year at peace.

Uses for Rubber

In civilian life, three-quarters of rubber was used for automobile tires, but rubber was also used for gloves, raincoats, boots, waterproof sheets and baby pants, girdles, hot water bottles, bathing caps, garden hoses, and toys. The military required rubber for vehicle and aircraft tires, pontoon bridges, gas and oxygen masks, medical equipment, boots, raincoats, shoes, and even erasers.

Tire Rationing

To ensure enough rubber for military and vital civilian purposes, tire rationing was instituted on December 27, 1941. The program ran through December 31, 1945. Local Tire Rationing Boards issued certificates for tires or recapping upon application. Certificates for new tires were restricted to vehicles for public health and safety (medical, fire, police, garbage, and mail services), essential trucking (food, ice, fuel), and public transportation. Recapping was allowed at the discretion of the local board for any of the above, and occasionally for taxis and defense workers who shared rides. Civilians were allowed to keep five tires per automobile, and were required to surrender any others.

Rubber Drive

From June 15-30, 1942 the United States held a nationwide rubber drive. People were encouraged to donate used or surplus rubber items. People brought in old or excess tires, raincoats, hot water bottles, boots, and floor mats. In exchange they received a penny a pound. Although 450,000 tons of scrap rubber was collected, used rubber was found to be of poor quality for military use.


Public service campaigns educated people on how to care for rubber products to make them last for the duration - protection from heat and moisture, proper cleaning, avoiding folding or crumpling, careful stretching of elastic, and speedy repair of holes or tears.

Care of Tires

Since civilians had to make five tires last the entire war, they had to be extremely careful. People were encouraged to drive less - in fact, the primary purpose of gasoline rationing was to protect tires. A "Victory Speed" of 35 mph was instituted - tires wore out half as quickly at 35 mph than at 60 mph. Slow and steady stops, starts, and turns also reduced wear on the treads. Everyone was encouraged to use public transportation, to share rides, and to avoid rough roads. Proper auto maintenance was more important than ever - brake adjustment, wheel alignment, tire inflation, tire rotation, and early repair of holes all prolonged wear. In addition, all auto racing was banned.

How would you have handled tire rationing?


Sunday, January 16, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 16, 1941: US Army activates Air Districts for national defense (Northeast, Southeast, Northwest, and Southwest).

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 15, 1941: US Labor leader Philip Randolph calls for march on Washington to protest discrimination and segregation in armed forces and defense industry.

Friday, January 14, 2011

The Key to Forgiving Others

If forgiveness were easy, Jesus wouldn’t have had to talk about it so much. When someone wrongs us, it hurts, especially if that someone is someone we trusted. A friend. A family member. And that hurt seeps into our souls. Our thoughts focus on the wrong done to us, and how very wrong it was. We justify our own actions and condemn the actions of the person who hurt us. Well meaning friends tell us we’re right, the other person wrong. Self-righteousness and bitterness take hold.

Lack of forgiveness not only is poisonous to our souls, but ruinous to relationships. How many of you have seen workplaces, classrooms, or families contaminated by one person’s actions and the other person’s unwillingness to forgive?

Jesus has the answer—as always. Instead of focusing on the other person’s sin and our righteousness, we need to focus on our sin and God’s righteousness. When we look through God’s eyes, we gain proper perspective. No one is righteous. No one “deserves” forgiveness. Yet God forgave us our millions of sins. This allows us to look at those who hurt us with new eyes, to see them as fellow sinners in desperate need of forgiveness.

As the master says to the unforgiving servant, “’Shouldn’t you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?’” (Matthew 18:33).

Servant to servant, sinner to sinner, let’s offer mercy and forgiveness remembering the greater mercy and forgiveness shown to us.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 13, 1941: Author James Joyce dies at age 58 in Zürich, Switzerland.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Book Club Beat - Benefits of a Book Club

Book clubs are a passion of mine. I've belonged to a book club for seven years, and I love the chance to discover and discuss fantastic books - and to forge deep, lasting friendships.

This month I was interviewed by Nora St. Laurent of The Book Club Network for Christian Fiction Online Magazine about my experiences in a book club - the benefits as a reader and now as a published author. You can read the interview here: http://www.christianfictiononlinemagazine.com/biz_bookclub.html. While you're there, check out the rest of this outstanding magazine.

If you're interested in finding or starting a book club, I highly recommend The Book Club Network (http://www.bookfun.org/), an online community for book club members, leaders, and for authors too.

Do you belong to a book club? How have you benefitted from it?

Monday, January 10, 2011

Lessons from the 1940s - Freedom of Worship

During World War II, President Roosevelt declared Four Freedoms he felt were fundamental to humanity: freedom of speech and worship, and freedom from fear and want.

The freedom of worship is encoded in the Bill of Rights of the US Constitution: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." This twofold freedom has defined religious life in America for over two hundred years. No one can coerce us into any religion, and no one prevent us from following our faith.

If only this were easy to practice. The secular portion of American culture stresses the first part of the amendment - while people of faith prefer the second portion. In reality neither can exist without the other.

Many of the founders of the United States fled Europe because of state-mandated religion. For centuries Europe had been rocked by war and persecution as Catholics and Protestants battled for control of governments. The writers of the Constitution wanted none of that. They wanted a new type of country where your life did not depend on the religion of the current regime. Many people of faith, if we're honest with ourselves, think this country would be better off if everyone believed as we did. However, do we really want people to believe because they have to - or because they want to? God never forces people to come to Him...He draws with cords of love.

On the flip side, secular people must remember that people of faith have the Constitutional right to practice that faith - and that includes the right of speech. The current cry for tolerance carries a hidden message - to tolerate someone else's beliefs means to silence your own. However, the Constitution does not include a right to not be offended. In fact, the right of free speech means all of us will be offended and often. Would you have it any other way? To silence those you disagree with carries the risk that you'll be silenced yourself. To prevent someone from worshipping as they choose coerces them into the religion of no religion.

I believe freedom of religious speech should be practiced with love, respect, and intelligent debate - not with angry, strident, insulting yelling-over-the-other-person. But that's my opinion, and you're free to disagree.

What are your thoughts on freedom of worship?

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 10, 1941: Luftwaffe begins operations from Sicily, limiting British sea traffic in the Mediterranean. Thailand invades French Indo-China (under Vichy control). The play Arsenic and Old Lace premieres on Broadway.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 9, 1941: First flight of RAF Avro Lancaster bomber.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 8, 1941: President Roosevelt submits his budget, 60% of which is designated for defense. William Randolph Hearst forbids his newspapers to run ads for upcoming movie, Citizen Kane.

Friday, January 7, 2011

Seeing Red

Yesterday morning an SUV ran the stop sign in front of the elementary school and flipped off the crossing-guard. I came home to dirty socks on the family room floor—socks I told the kids at least a dozen times to pick up. After reading the front page of the newspaper, I needed the funny pages. Our dog chewed up the funny pages.

Life throws us many reasons to get angry every day. And we do get angry. Anger is a natural emotion God gave us to fight injustice and wrong. What a relief to know God doesn't consider anger a sin.

But oh boy, can we sin in our anger! When anger comes from a prideful sense of entitlement or whenever we fail to control this powerful emotion, great harm can come. Psalm 4:4 tells us, "In your anger do not sin."

So, how do we do that? In all honesty, I'm still working on it myself. I'm a people-pleaser who doesn't like conflict - so I stuff anger, but then I explode at trivial things. Ick. When that heat rises, I'm trying to teach myself to take a moment and pray.

1) Why am I angry? Is this righteous anger or just selfish annoyance that I didn't get my way?
2) Is there an issue that needs to be addressed, or do I just need to let it go?
3) If an issue needs to be addressed, how can I do so while showing respect and mercy for the other person?

Then pray for wisdom and strength to do the right thing.

How do you handle anger in your life?

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 6, 1941: President Roosevelt makes his “Four Freedoms” speech in his State of the Union address to Congress; also proposes Lend-Lease program to aid British.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Book Beat - Paradise Valley

The cover endorsement for Paradise Valley by Dale Cramer reads, "If you like Amish fiction, you'll love this book!" I would amend this..."If you don't read Amish fiction, you'll still love this book!"


I don't read much Amish fiction (although I've enjoyed Suzanne Woods Fisher's books), but I'll read anything Dale Cramer writes. He hooked me hard with Bad Ground, then made me a fan with Sutter's Cross, Levi's Will, and Summer of Light. He is a versatile and extremely gifted writer.

Paradise Valley is based on a true incident in the author's family history. In 1921, the state of Ohio required all children to attend public schools, and five Amish men were imprisoned for refusing to comply. Faced with the choice of obeying the law of the land or obeying the law of their church, several families chose to settle in Mexico.


In Paradise Valley, the fictional family of Caleb Bender makes such a choice. They uproot from the land and the community they love and set off for Mexico, hoping others will follow. Teenage daughter Rachel is separated from the young man she loves, and her sister Miriam loses all hope of finding a husband. The Benders find fertile land - and danger. Mexico is going through birth pangs, settling down from the Revolution and the era of Pancho Villa's raids on the US. Bandits roam the land, and the government is weak. While in the States, the pacifist Amish were protected from the lawless by the law - in Mexico they have no such protection.


Paradise Valley does not disappoint. Although softer-edged than Mr. Cramer's previous works, this is no fluffy read. Deep questions are raised about standing up for what you believe in - and how to live a peaceful life in a land without law. His characters are deep and interesting - I'm particularly intrigued by Domingo, a young Mexican man employed by the Benders. The setting, the situation, the characters, and Mr. Cramer's gorgeous prose broaden this novel's appeal beyond the audience for traditional Amish fiction. I truly enjoyed it.

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 5, 1941: Australians capture Bardia in Libya, taking 45,000 Italian POWs.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 4, 1941: Free French lead Tuareg and Tibesti tribesmen from Chad to destroy Italian air base at Murzuk, Libya, having crossed 468km of desert.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Lessons from the 1940s - Freedom from Fear

Seventy years ago, the world was a fearsome place. Nazi Germany controlled most of western continental Europe and pummeled Britain with almost daily bombings, militarist Japan was brutalizing coastal China, and Fascist Italy was making dangerous progress in eastern Africa toward Britain's vital Suez Canal. The United States wasn't at war, but faced two terrifying choices - to go to war, or to let evil win.

On January 6, 1941, in his State of the Union Address, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared that everyone deserved four fundamental freedoms - freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from fear, and freedom from want. At the time, the Axis dictators stifled freedom of speech and worship, and conquered peoples lived in great fear and want.

Within five years, the governments that had caused so much fear and death were toppled. The external triggers of fear were removed - but did fear disappear?

The human mind is inclined to fear. This can benefit us as we imagine possible dangers and protect ourselves. A healthy amount of fear motivates us to do our best work on the job, to fasten our seatbelts, to vaccinate our children, to save for the future, and to brush and floss.

But fear has a tendency to worm inside, make itself at home, and spread its poison. Fear of ridicule can keep us from doing the right thing. Fear of failure - or success - can paralyze us on the job. Fear of being hurt can impede true friendship and love. Fear of whatever threat is popular on the internet this week can disrupt our lives.

This is no way to live. The most common command in the Bible is "Do not fear!" God wants us to trust Him completely, and fear is a lack of trust. 2 Timothy 1:7 says, "God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but a spirit of power, of love and of self-discipline." We should let His perfect love drive out fear (1 John 4:18) and live in the freedom God desires for us.

Only in the Lord will we ever find true freedom from fear.

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 3, 1941: Medical study shows sulfanilamide reduces death rate from pneumonia.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Jan. 2, 1941: President Roosevelt announces plan to build Liberty Ships to support Atlantic convoys. The Andrews Sisters record “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy.”