Tuesday, June 26, 2007

A Woman Warrior Goes Home

Regarding Lt. Colonel Alida Bosshardt

Dutch Social Worker Dies
By TOBY STERLING
Associated Press Writer

June 25, 2007, 5:07 PM EDT

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands -- Alida Bosshardt, who spent more than 50 years working for the Salvation Army and established a center in Amsterdam's Red Light District for prostitutes and drug addicts, died Monday, the Christian organization said. She was 94.

Salvation Army spokeswoman Hella van der Schoot said Bosshardt died of old age. "She had heart troubles and kidney problems," she said.

Bosshardt joined the Salvation Army in 1934 and was instructed to work with women in the city's Red Light District shortly after the end of World War II.

She established a "Goodwill" center in the district that eventually became a place where a wide range of troubled people came for shelter and social services -- prostitutes and their children, the homeless and drug addicts.

She retired in 1978 at age 65, but continued volunteering and attending public gatherings until shortly before her death.

Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende praised Bosshardt's "wisdom, love, and compassion" on national television Monday, and the Royal House said Queen Beatrix was "moved" by her death.

Among Bosshardt's many awards were a knighthood in the Netherlands' Order of Oranje Naussau in 2004. The Israeli Holocaust museum gave her a "Righteous Among the Nations" award for helping Jewish children during the war, often riding them on her bicycle to homes where they would go into hiding.

"I'm in God's service to serve people," Bosshardt said once when receiving an award. "All honor goes to him, not me."

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