Corrie ten Boom survived life in a Nazi concentration camp, and her inspiring story will come to life with a dramatic presentation by Regina Black at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Wesley United Methodist Church, 302 E. Independence.
A meal will be served, and a nursery is provided. All women are invited.
Since 2006, Black has been performing the play that she researched and wrote. “Corrie ten Boom: A Time for Every Purpose” is a one-woman presentation about the compassionate deeds of Carrie ten Boom, who helped and hid many Jewish people before being imprisoned herself. Following her release from prison, she spent the rest of her life sharing with others how God had been her strength and light during those dark days of confinement under Hitler’s regime.
Now a Tecumseh resident, Black has acted and directed with the Cushing Community Theatre and directed at Cushing High School. She has performed and directed in Kansas City and Chicago before making her home in Oklahoma. She studied theater at the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kan.
Corrie ten Boom survived life in a Nazi concentration camp, and her inspiring story will come to life with a dramatic presentation by Regina Black at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Wesley United Methodist Church, 302 E. Independence.
A meal will be served, and a nursery is provided. All women are invited.
Since 2006, Black has been performing the play that she researched and wrote. “Corrie ten Boom: A Time for Every Purpose” is a one-woman presentation about the compassionate deeds of Carrie ten Boom, who helped and hid many Jewish people before being imprisoned herself. Following her release from prison, she spent the rest of her life sharing with others how God had been her strength and light during those dark days of confinement under Hitler’s regime.
Now a Tecumseh resident, Black has acted and directed with the Cushing Community Theatre and directed at Cushing High School. She has performed and directed in Kansas City and Chicago before making her home in Oklahoma. She studied theater at the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kan.