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Women of Belgium: Turning Tragedy to Triumph

Chapter 28: XXV
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About This Book

The narrative documents how women in occupied Belgium mobilize communal relief during wartime, organizing soup kitchens, crèches, feeding rooms for vulnerable children, milk and layette distribution, and converted public spaces used for clothing, toy-making, and rehabilitation. It profiles volunteer leadership and daily operations—canteens, schools, factories, and hospitals—showing practical measures to feed, clothe, employ, and comfort civilians and mutilated veterans. Interwoven are descriptions of coordination with relief administrations and the incremental revival of morale as ordinary institutions are repurposed into systems of charity and self-help that sustain families through prolonged hardship.

XXV

“OUT”

The Rotterdam canals were choked with barges, weighted with freight; heavy trucks rattled down the streets, a whistle shrieked, telegraph wires hummed, motors flashed by—men were moving quickly, grouping themselves freely at corners; life—vivid, outspoken, free—crowded upon me, filling my eyes and ears. With a swift tremor of physical fear I huddled back in my seat. After eight months I was afraid of this thing!

And “Inside” I had thought I realized the whole of the cruel numbness. Slowly I had felt it closing in about me, closing down upon me, shutting me in with them—with terrors and anguish, with human souls that at any moment a hand might reach in to toss—where?