Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Cautionary Tales Presents: Warfare, The Life of Anne Frank
Episode Date: October 14, 2022This week, it's an episode from Warfare, a podcast from our friends at History Hit. It's 1942. The year Anne Frank and her family went into hiding during the Second World War. It was there that Anne b...egan keeping a diary that would become one of the most recognisable testimonies of the Jewish war-time experiences. But what do we know of her life before the war? Host James Rogers explores the Franks' lives before the outbreak of war, and why this story is still so relevant today. You can find more from Warfare at https://podfollow.com/the-world-wars.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin
Hi there listeners, Tim Hartford here.
Caution me tales will be back next week, but in the meantime we're sharing an episode
from the Warfare podcast, a show from History Hit.
I'm a regular listener to Warfare.
If you haven't listened before, it's hosted by James Rogers.
James is a War Historian who works with the UN, NATO and governments around the world.
The show sometimes explores the defining wars of history, such as the First and Second
World War.
Other episodes provide context to ongoing conflicts, such as the war in Ukraine, or even how
it's related to China and Taiwan.
The episode you're about to hear isn't about some epic battle-loss,
spectacular military blunder.
It's about Anne Frank, 80 years ago in 1942,
Anne and her family went into hiding during the Second World War,
trying to avoid persecution and death in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam.
And at this time Anne began keeping a diary that she
called Kitty, a diary that became one of the most recognised testimonies of the Jewish
wartime experience. But Anne's story doesn't begin in 1942. In this episode, James explores
the life of the Franks before the war, and why their story is still so relevant today.
I hope you find this warfare episode
from our friends at History Hit as moving and as important as I did. You can hear more from
warfare wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm James Rogers and on today's warfare podcast we marked the 80th anniversary of that
fateful day on July 6th 1942 when Anne and her family went into hiding by finding
out about the people who hid the Franks and another family who lived alongside them.
To help with this, we have Dr. Gertchen Broke, who has been the senior historical researcher
at the now-preserved Anne Frank House in Amsterdam for over 15 years. He joins us to explain
the fates of those involved and to reveal the real reason why Anne and her family were eventually found by the Nazis.
Hi, Gertian. Welcome to the warfare podcast. How are you doing today? I'm fine. Thank you. Good to hear. Well, it is great to have you on the podcast, especially at this important time of the
year, because this July marks 80 years since Anne Frank and her family went into hiding in Nazi
occupied Amsterdam. And of course, we can all still visit that house today. The Anne Frank House
located just outside downtown Amsterdam.
I've been there myself and I'm always struck by the somber silence of all of those who
are walking around the building going through into each different room up into the lofts
back down and into the exhibition space. It truly is a sobering and educational experience. And I suppose that
sums up a bit more of what the Anne Frank House is, because it's not just a museum, is it?
It's not just a museum, it's also considered to be a place of remembrance. And most of the
visiting people, they big that up, I think they notice that. So yes, it's a place that a lot of
people are impressed by visiting
just when you walk around and you are pondering and thinking over what just happened there in those
years. Absolutely. And it's, it is a museum, it is a space where you can also learn a lot about this
history where talks can take place, where exhibitions can take place, but there's also research going
on within the organization and you're part of that, aren't you? Yes, that's right. For a long time,
the mission of the Anne Frank House was mainly educational and that is still an important part of it,
but since I think about 15 years, 15 to 20 years, the idea has grown that it's good for us as an
organization, as an educational organization, also as a museum and also as a center of
knowledge.
So we are supposed to know things about the life of Anfrancon and the people around her.
So the idea of forming our own body of knowledge, or rather than rely on what other people do
and think that's important.
So the head of collection set that time,
got the idea to have a research department as well.
And she managed to get at the float,
and that was about that time that I came in.
I was working there in another capacity,
but I am a researcher and I'm a historian,
so I was taking on in another capacity, but I am a researcher and I'm a historian, so I was
taking on board to actually perform the research, not on my own, but most of the past 15 years,
I think, I did the main part of the research that's been done, but there are orders as well.
And what sort of things were you researching, what were you diving into?
Well, that's mainly a free aspect of the life, but what we consider 14,
what we call, protagonists, main figures.
And that's on Frank and her family.
And the other four people that have been hiding with them in that building.
So there's an other family and the dentist fits Pfeffer on his own.
And then there's six people that tried to help them.
They were in on the secret and they were trying to provide them with food and protection and help them. So that's 14 people. And well, we actually
delve into their life stories, where did they come from, what did they do before, what they do
after, and how, and that is the main question. I think, how did all these lives evolve and go on
that made them all come together at one point in 1942 in that building and
doing what they did there at the time.
And then there's also a history of the corporations, the companies that were running in the building
where those people worked for.
The diary of Anna Frank itself, how did it develop, how did you write it, what does she write
about? Because I suppose most people do know that the book that you buy in the book store is, in fact,
is based on an immense pile of paper as a manuscript, various versions, also even some short stories
and novels. This girl wanted to be a writer, but she also wanted to be a journalist. And in a lot
of her approaches, and the things that she write about
herself and about her experiences, you see a journalistic or at least a proto-journalistic approach at
the least. So we also research into all that when she mentions someone the man around the corner,
the lady next door, who does she mean, who is that, what is their role? What is their part in the complete picture of their life story?
And the general idea to cut it all short is that insights, the knowledge that we get from that,
offers us basically a window, an outlook, not on particular her life and her diary,
but of the time that she was living in, and what was happening to her, what was happening? Dwarf, what was happening around her? Well, let's draw on your research, and do exactly that, because like you rightly say,
Anne Frank's story did not start in July 1942
when her family went into hiding,
or when she started writing her diary,
instead it goes back much further than that.
Because the Frank family,
although mostly associated with Amsterdam today,
they were of course Germans.
So take us through that history. What were the
Frank family doing before they arrived in the Netherlands and how did they get there?
Otto Frank's father, he was from a family that had been living in Frankfurt a mine quite
some time and his father worked his way up from just a business man,
so to speak, and he became part of the affluent society.
The family shifted into affluence, you can say,
was a banker and successful at that.
But the family business was hit pretty hard by the Great War,
so infesting in war bonds, and well, German war bonds
were the best of investment after
1919.
So, they came into a bit of trouble there and 1929 hit them hard as well.
So I'm going with a bit quickly I think, but so around 1930 a lot of reference was
gwindling and of course political developments in Germany at the time didn't make it much
better. So gradually around the early 1930s and expedited by 1933 the rise to power of Hitler and
this National Socialist Party, all the the sister and the brothers of Otto Frank, they
all left the country and his mother too.
So Otto Frank, his two brothers, they'd been fighting in the German army in the 1418 years
and his two brothers preferred to live in the capital cities of the former enemies at Paris
and London rather than staying in Germany.
I think it says a few things about the atmosphere there at the time.
Otto Frank saw the chance to come to Amsterdam after always neutral Netherlands.
He had a business opportunity there So that was his choice.
They moved to the Netherlands in 1933 at that time for a businessman with means and a solid
business plan settling there wasn't really very hard. So later in the 30s, the Netherlands became
very strict on the on immigration. There's a lot of refugees came from us to be a later and from Germany, but they were lucky to be so early.
So they lived in a Netherlands and I'm still dumb, you know, rather
if you were to do area, I think a friendly area with a lot of other
Germans, but also Spanish, Hungarians, Dutch, all sorts of people from upper
middle class, I guess.
You see, that's really interesting to know because that means that, you know,
this wasn't a last-minute decision to flee Germany. It wasn't kind of putting the Frank family
into a brand new situation where they knew absolutely nobody around. Instead, they've
been there almost a decade by the time that they had to go into hiding, which must have
most definitely helped in trying to create a situation which, well, they could try and
be kept secret, be kept safe for as long as possible. Yes, in general, you can say that people
at that time use, but there were other groups that were forced to hide as well, but for other reasons,
obviously. And if you want to go and hide, the best thing you can do in what the most people
did, that is rely on pre-existing networks on business associations, family relations, friendships, etc.
And that's exactly what they did too.
Otto Frank had been working in the Netherlands, as you say, over eight years.
So he had his networks, he had a business, although we had to fake that then after the
occupation of the Netherlands, but he had loyal business associates that he worked with
and loyal staff. So how did the situation in Netherlands change over that almost decade period, and when did
Otto Frank realize that the family would have to now go into hiding? Well, basically you can say
that people leaving, let's take to Jewish Germans, they'd had to leave, it's obviously, you have
to leave Germany because there's much of a future there. There was over time that shifted, but in the early 1992, there were a lot
of people there who were obvious and things only deteriorated afterwards. So, what can you do? You
can try and migrate, you can move to another country and find safety there. A lot of people thought,
well, that other country better be on the other side of the ocean, but that was always difficult.
The United States didn't have a refugee policy, they had an immigration policy.
So if you want to go and immigrate, you've got to jump a lot of hurdles and you've got
to make sure that you don't become a liability to public means over there.
So it's not that easy.
And I think most of the people that I come across in my research, German Jews living in the Netherlands,
you can always find traces of documents that they tried to go to the US, and some of them couldn't.
And Otto Frank and his family tried that as well.
There is a document that he says in 1938, I applied for immigration to the US, so that 1938.
That's a dramatic year because we don't know when in 1938.
So early in 1938, you'd be on a waiting list with perhaps
20, 25,000 others, which is quite a lot.
But later in the year, after the onslaues of Austria
in Nazi Germany, and had particularly in November
after the pogroms, what we call the crystal night,
the number of applicants
for the US skyrocketed up to three and a half thousand or so, where the US would only allow
a bit over 20,000 German-born immigrants every year. So you see your waiting list of 10 years.
Immigration is not an option. Some people try to naturalize to another nationality into another country.
That didn't help in the anti-derbid for a lot of people in 1942.
They've been trying quite a few things to get the safety.
And then in 1942, in the summer, the choice was we go report ourselves in for a transit
camp.
And then we got to be sent off to labor.
There was the idea at the time, although there was the pretext. Or we go and hide, and it's good to consider that in the Netherlands in the summer of 1942,
almost everyone thought this thing is going to be over in what, six, eight, ten months,
a year, perhaps, because the Americans will come, the British will come, and all the allies
will come, and we're going to sort out these Germans and that was a mistake.
But that was the idea, can we go hide and sit it out or shoot, we report it in?
So the plan here then was when it was realized that they would have to go into hiding, the thoughts were perhaps that they'd only have to be there for a matter of months
until the Allied liberation. Yes, the general assumption in the Netherlands can read that in a lot of documents and a
lot of recollections of people at that time, everyone thought 1942 was already pretty long
and it all this can't last much longer.
So over optimistic perhaps, or perhaps there was really the thought of that day, that's
hard to judge, but in general people would think, well, if it's going to be for a year or so, we're going to do that. We can see that out.
But it went on for a lot, lot longer than that and a number of hell of a risked their lives
to offer the Frank's century. So one of the things that isn't often looked into as much is
who these helpers were. Could you give us an idea of the people who did help provide the
Frank's Century? Yes, four of them were office staff of the companies. There were two companies
in the building. One is that most people know that's a bektide, that's really a small product,
it's a jelling agent for home making jam, home cooking of jam. And so for a couple of years,
there was the cork on which Otto Frank and his family were a float,
but it wasn't really much of a business.
So they needed more turn-off or more turn-out to keep themselves alive.
I went a couple of business associates.
He founded a business that traded in ingredients for the food industry.
So that spices from Asia, so colonial products, in the Mon nutmeg, that sort of stuff, but also
preservants and colorants and odourants and all sorts of surrogates. And that's where Mr.
van Pels from the other family in hiding comes in, because Otto Frank knew a few things about
marketing and business, and have him on van Pels, he knew the trade, he knew the product.
In Germany, he had a business of his own for years in the same sort of product.
So he was the expert in that respect.
So four people from the office staff and one man in the warehouse, that's a bit of a
dramatic thing as well.
There was the father of one of the office workers was a warehouse, man downstairs on the ground
floor.
And he was in on the secret too.
He was the ice and ears on the ground, basically.
And he's also the one that built the famous bookcase that the camouflage
to door into the hiding place. So he provided a lot of safety
guarding the front door and such, but he fell ill, he got seriously ill, he had stomach cancer,
he had to leave his job. So there was another man down there, he wasn't in on the secret,
and of course they were not gonna tell him because you don't know what kind of risk you run if you tell a total
stranger.
So that's when the sense of security sort of started to wane a little bit.
But on the first floor, on the office floor, four office workers and the husband, the
one of them, the husband of Mie Priz, he was a civil servant, he worked in the civil
service of the city and he also had a position as a commissioner, a supervisor of the board
of the business in the building.
So you see, they say an office building with a company, a serious company running there
where the management basically is hiding and is out of sight.
No one knows they're there.
And it's the stuff that's trying to keep things afloat and running.
And that's a mutual dependence there as well because the people behind
the bookcase would secretly do work at administrative work or packing goods and also at the thing
to lower the expenses of the business. The business was the livelihood of the staff and it was
the life insurance for the people in hiding there because if the building was rented, if the
business should fail, they had to fake it, the building and they would leave their hiding place.
So there's a mutual dependence between the corporations and the staff and the
people hiding on the other side. So you mentioned there was four people in the office and then one
person in the warehouse who sadly has taken ill and so reduces that capacity to try and help the
Frank family, but you also mentioned that there is two families that are in hiding. So, overall, how many people are being hidden in this office building?
Off to get it, there were eight. There's the Frank family, father and mother and two daughters,
and then there's the business associate, the experts from Belsa that just mentioned, who knew
about the trade, who knew about the goods, about commodities, which is wife and son. So, that's
seven. They were there since July 42. And then in
November, they took in an eighth man. There was a dentist, Fritz Pfeffer. The tragedy
with Fritz Pfeffer, that is, is that he wanted to marry a non-Jewish woman in Germany,
but he wasn't allowed because of the November 1935 laws. And he moved with her to Amsterdam and she always passed as his legal spouse in the
social surroundings. So basically everyone thought, well, he's well off, he's in a mixed marriage,
he's not in trouble as we are. So when the Frank family and the Pels were hiding, they knew him,
were hiding in their annex, in their company building, then they heard that Fritz Pfefford was in trouble,
to where that's how they learned that his marriage wasn't an actual official marriage.
So that is a tragic circumstance as well.
But then they took him in, they saw Fritz do have an eight person there in the building.
He could also, I suppose, help share expenses.
I see. So there was a kind of humanitarian decision here
to just try and help someone in need,
but there was also a practical side to this as a means to try and help cover the cost
of what is now a growing expense. At a time that the war is also getting pretty tense,
pretty severe heightened in terms of the amount of violence as being perpetrated across
the continent and the amount of pressure
that is being put on the Nazi forces. So it's even harder to get food, for example.
And so all of this must combine together to make as we move through 1953 and into 1954
a really, really difficult period. It's also must have been incredibly, incredibly difficult on the mental state
of those who were in hiding. Now, you mentioned about the adults who are helping with the
business and cover some of the extra labor there. But what about the kids? What about
people like Anne? What were they doing in their spare time?
Learning and reading, that's the word first words that come to mind. But just to be precise, also they did some of the work just packing goods and light administrative jobs. But mainly the idea
was because they were optimistic and they thought their work was going to come and end
to that and they'd be back in school one day. So they kept up with their schoolwork,
they tried to learn history, languages, and do a lot of reading against getting bored, of course.
There's a hangin' about and doin' nothing and sit that day after day.
That's my destroying, but so reading and giving themselves occupied
and for the children basically keep up with schoolwork.
So just trying to keep things as normal as possible
until the world hopefully goes back to the way it was
and also look to the future.
Is that what Anne's diary is about to you? Is it also about looking to the future and
trying to envision a world where there is some hope?
There's visions of hope, I think. Would you have to consider, or also, as I mentioned
earlier, her manuscripts, what you all wrote and scribbled. It's a large pile of paper,
it's just one volume as a book. So when
she starts out writing a diary, that's even a couple of weeks before she is hiding. She starts
on her 13th birthday, when she's still at home. And when she starts off as a just 13-year-old,
you read the writing of a 13-year-old. Jesus knows this going from this to that. And this is about
things that she likes. And you see her mature and you see your sort of intellectual development there as well.
Or as a later stage in time, she's going to rework all her writing, all her notes
into something that she wants to be a novel about her experiences in hiding. That's after,
as she hears from the Dutch government in London,
the Secretary of Education and Sciences, I think he's called, in the Axel of Government in London
from the Netherlands. On the radio, the illegal radio, and he says to the people in the Netherlands,
keep your notebooks, keep your calendars. If there's a sermon from a preacher or a priest,
just keep that so we can document how daily life, how the experiences of the populations were during the
occupations. And she hears that and she thinks that's good, I'm going to do that.
I'm going to write a novel about what I've experienced. And so she starts writing that novel at
the later stage in 1944, when she is a bit older and she has matured a bit and her writing skills
are more developed. So that's when you see that, well, the talent basically, the talent for
writing and also for a journalistic approach comes to light. And it's from those chapters
that's basically the diaries we know it from the bookstores compiled. Corscht retails will return with the Warfare podcast in just a moment.
Tim Halford here, you're listening to the Warfare podcast proudly presented by Corsion retails. And of course, as we move through 1944 and up until that infamous date in history,
August 4th, we see that Anne is still writing that diary.
But do we know, and this is of course quite a contentious and controversial question,
but do we know how they were discovered or why they were discovered, particularly on
that date, on August 4th, 1944?
There's been lots of reports recently around this traitor theory, is there much accuracy
in that, or do we just not quite know exactly what happened here?
Well, one of the research topics that I've been over the years I told you about is, in particular,
that while I was the circumstances of that arrest in my belief for the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the fall of the But I brought out the research paper in 2016 because over time, I did general idea.
Otto Frank came back in the Netherlands in 1945 and he thought we were betrayed by someone.
And we're going to find out who.
But there was an investigation. There was even a court case against the not knowing warehouse men.
You know, this is the second warehouse man that we just discussed.
He was acquitted because there was no evidence against him.
In the 1960s, it was a new investigation after recent dollars found the
SS officer who was present at the arrest.
And the general assumption is that someone made a treacherous phone call to the German authorities
at the time. And in my investigative report from 2016, I have shown that that is just an
assumption. And there's no evidence for that.
A lot of people think, well, that man said 20 years after the fact that there was a phone call
made that morning. And so that must be true. However, the man himself says in his 1963 statement,
one of the first things that he said is, if my memory serves me well, there was a phone call
coming in that morning. So he is not certain. But for a lot of people, they took that as evidence and that led to, especially of the
last 30 years, I think, a wild cruise chase who made that phone call.
And I think I've shown in my investigative report that the phone call is not certain at
all in the first place.
And it is other avenues of thinking about scenarios that have led to the visiting of a Dutch
and German policeman on that day. For instance, you also pointed out that the supply of food
was a large problem in this case. People hiding, people are cut off from the civil society.
Food supplies are overseen, supervised and distributed by the authorities and strictly regulated. So if you're off the grid,
if you don't have ties with the civic administration anymore, so you have to be fraudulent to get
food, you have to be fraudulent to be supplied. So you make yourself vulnerable to all sorts of
detection. And what this investigation of the former FBI man and his team has grossly neglected and willfully
I believe overlooked, is that earlier in 1944 already two people from the company in that
building were arrested for fraudulent trading of food coupons.
So German authorities had already sniffed on the building and sniffed on the company
in there a couple of months prior to that rate. And there's no proof at this moment that I know that there is a connection
between those two events, but I don't think it's very far-fetched to assume that. I think
it's very light-headed of the Rosemary Sullivan book, to just plainly ignore that. And I think
that's because they want to point out the culprit in a scenario where there's no culprit, but they were merely accidentally caught up in the police investigation
totally unrelated to their presence. Just don't serve that purpose.
So is it more practical than that? And of course, those who want to find a culprit don't want
to deal in the more basic, and I suppose boring practicalities of these things, but could
be go as hard to say it was it was almost
inevitable in this case because when you are trying to feed so many people and as we said as the screws are being tightened on all levels of society as rationing is getting harder as it becomes more difficult for people to live with inside the system let alone outside it there would have been something that flashed up something that would have given them away.
That's exactly it. And so my thesis is although not to be proven until yet that the company he sent or was
underscrupterly from the authorities because their salesman had been proven to be fraudulents.
One of them is even convicted for it in 1944. So it's not far-fetched.
There was a detective unit, a nationwide
working detective unit that specialized in this sort of fraud, and they've been searching places
all over the country, and it's more than once that they came across Jews hiding there as well.
They weren't looking for them. They were looking for people that were slaughtering livestock,
illegally, people that were trading in foot livestock illegally, people that were trading in
food coupons, people that were fraudulent with food rations.
So I guess there's a good chance that has happened, and not a lot of people in the
Netherlands realize that that was a big danger for hidden Jews as well.
The general idea is for you hide somewhere in an attic or in the basement or in the back
room and you hope that the neighbors won't give you away. But there's a lot of more things that are jeopardizing
your secret presence anywhere.
Well, I suppose that this is all but one side of the story because no matter how they were
discovered, it sets into action a series of tragic events from that August date in
44. So tell us what happened to the Frank family, where were they taken upon being discovered?
Yes, it's a good point that you make. For the outcome, it doesn't matter whether it be trade or found by coincidence.
The outcome is still the same. So what happened for them is that they were taken to a German bureau, where they were briefly interrogated and then brought to a
Vermont prison right in the middle of Amsterdam, there they were locked up with other Jews
that were arrested recently. So that's what they did at the time. They had a sort of a holding
facility there and they would hold the people in there and once they had a number of 70 or 80 or so
they would take them to the transit camp, West Camp Westabork in the northeast of the country.
So there was a concentration camp or a Crenzit camp as it was called where.
Where the Jewish population of the Netherlands was brought over time bit by bit and from where
the deportation strains left. And so they arrived there on August 8th, 1944, four days after
being arrested. And on September 3, just a couple of weeks later, they were taking
in a train with the Prophet, the real cattle cars, to Auschwitz. They were on the last train
to leave the Netherlands for Auschwitz. The last train to leave the Netherlands for Auschwitz.
Now, that is a powerful sentence. What happened to all of those who were found after that
train had left? They were brought to West Baborik as well and there were people left
behind in Vestaborik as well. And the next day on September 4 there was also a train leaving but
they didn't go to Auschwitz but the Tracian Stutt in what now is Chetja, the Czech Republic.
And that wasn't exactly walking the park but it was different from Auschwitz. So there were a lot
of people left behind in Vesterborg,
and it was liberated by I think the Canadians or the Poles in April 1945. So they found,
I think about eight or 900 people still alive there. So we know that the Frank family are taken off
to Auschwitz. Do we know much about their time there? What life was like for Otto, for Anum, for the rest of the family?
Well, Otto Frank is the only one who is survived through lift, tell the tale, but we do know a few things about them.
There was other people that have survived now, which have seen them there as well. I'd have met them there as well,
so they can tell quite a few things about that.
Well, at first, at the rifle at Birkenau at the Rampus, I'll just be getting a well-known
picture with a watchtower in the train's scum down.
The first thing that happens is that men and women are separated, so Otto Frank was separated
from his wife and daughters.
Hermann Fampels and his son were separated from their wife and mother, and Fritz Pfeffer
being on his own from this little group, who was with the
other men of course. So the women remained in Birkenau and the men were marched after
being tattooed and shaving and all that, marched to what's called the Stubnlogger, Auschwitz
one, and they were set to work. They had to dig gravel from a river and make roads,
sort of that that hard labor. Everyone from Pels was the first one hiding the dye.
So he injured his hand during work and he asked to be relieved
for work for some days and he was crumpet that relieved.
But then the risk that you run then is that you're just in the barracks being useless
and after a couple of weeks, all those useless people were wound up and murdered.
And we don't know exactly how and when but somewhere
early October, he must have died and he's probably gassed with a lot of other people. His son
survived until January when the death march has started from Auschwitz, so everyone who could walk
was forced to walk and he was taken 50 kilometers or so and put on a train and ended up in Mount Haussen in Austria
and that's where he died totally exhausted and malnourished.
Around the day of liberation actually in May 1945, the Americans were already on the threshold
but not too late for him. Fritz Pfeffer was a dentist and he left Auschwitz with a bit of a mystery still, but with a group of
other medical professionals, at least 20 or so, we don't know for what purpose, but we ended up in
the Noyankamer Camp near Hamburg, and that's where he died of anthropoconitis in December 1944 already,
and then the women in Birkenau, aided from the died on the early January 1945.
There's a witness, a friend that she made there, a witness that had taught her to what
her friend laid, Ron she did survive.
And in November 1944 already she was separated from her daughters because at that point,
the Nazis started to move.
Large numbers of women, Dutch and French mainly and some Hungarians from
our switch back into Germany proper to a camp where they could just at all on this
German word, just get fixed up a little bit because they were still fit enough to work
in the war industry.
All the German men were fighting on the front at that time, And the factory should still be running because the war effort was tremendous.
So these women were to put the work in all those factories. And Edith Frank was not fit
enough to go with them. So the girls were separated from her. She stayed behind in Auschwitz.
And she, with her the way I guess there, she was here with Melnourist as well.
And died. So then Mrs. van Pels and the girls on the Mago, they were moved to Bergen-Belsen.
There was the camp where they should have been patched up a little bit and then distributed
over to the parts of Germany to set the work.
But the front lines kept shifting and shifting and one railway line after another was cut
off.
And so that whole idea didn't work out that very well in the end.
And that's why Bergen Belsen was in by early 1945 sort of warehouse overcrowded with 10,000
of people to do at no food, no health care and hanging about to die basically, lots of them.
And only Mrs. van Bels had to be complete. She was put on a train and put the work in a
little factory near Desau. And after a couple of weeks, she and a lot of other women were moved
further towards the state, the race you'd start in the now Czech Republic again. And she died on
the way, as people, as people, testimonying, yeah. She died on that train and they left her behind by the tracks during one of
the stops. Had Anna and Marko, as we well know, somewhere in February, contracted typhoid fever and
transmitted by a voice in clothing, in our wash clothing, and thousands of thousands of people in
Bergenbelsen died of bad cause and they did too. But Otto Frank in the end, he was in the sick bay in Auschwitz,
where he luckily survived being in the sick bay.
It was a bit of a, that sentence really,
but a couple of hundred that did survive that
and they were liberated by the Russians.
By the Soviet army, I should say,
there were Russians who created all sorts of
Soviet soldiers in that army and they liberated the camp
and that was...
How we were saved.
And you mentioned Bergen Belson, of course, which was liberated by the British
on the 15th of April, 45.
And like you say, I mean, the scenes there, thousands of bodies lay and buried around the camp,
what, 60, 70,000 people starving,
mortally ill, packed together without food, water, basic sanitation,
suffering from various different types of diseases, typhus, dysentery, I mean, truly a terrible,
terrible place to be, and highlights the stark reality of the end of the war and of the
Holocaust.
And you mentioned that Otto is the only one to survive.
How did it come to be that we're able to talk about this today?
That we're able to hear about the Frank story
that we're able to read Anne's diary.
Yes, well, the diary was left behind at your rest
and we're scattered all over the floor of that paper.
That is a well-known story.
The German officer present that the scene, he needed something to put the valuables that
he confiscated in.
And Otto Frank kept his daughter's papers in his briefcase during the night.
So he scattered around the floor to put the valuables in and the helpers, the office staff,
the women that were not arrested
that day, they picked up all those papers in the days after and they kept it, to give
it back to Anna when she would come back.
Well, she didn't, but then Otto did, and when it was clear that Otto was the only one
and all the others had died, they handed over all the paperwork to him.
So Otto fragged to the ad and it took him a while before he could set himself to
actually reading it a couple of months actually, to the end of 1945. And when he started reading it and
he somehow found out that he, parts of that book, he had intended for publication. There was a
dream she wanted to be a writer and a journalist and she wanted to publish that book. So that gave him
the thought I think, and I think it's fair to say that it was for him
the sense of purpose again. So his family gone, his social circle gone, his daughters, his wife,
his business down on the ground and he had to rebuild. He sort of to reinvent himself and rebuild his
whole life. And having that book and the ideals that he says, I want to spread my daughter's ideals. I don't know exactly
to be honest what those ideals were, but there is something about hope and about reconciliation.
They should be good and people should be good for each other and we should build a better world
as a general idea. I think that's the ideals that he mentioned. And he worked for that. So
he found a new purpose in life into the idea of reconciliation, bring back the youth
of all corners of the world and bring them together and let them talk, let them meet each
order, let them get to know each other so we can avoid this sort of calamities and disasters
in the future.
I think we look at the world today, that wasn't very successful, but still the idea is
good.
And after the diary became success in particularly in the United States, so in the Netherlands it was quite as successful as well. The first,
it was first printed in June 1945 and the second print was already in December.
So there was a lot of public interest acting for the book, But it really took wins in the United States. And
then there was a stage play in the US. So there was a film made by George Stevens in the
US. So there was international acclaim and international interest as well. And when
the interest for his daughter's diary grew internationally, yet the idea also of maintaining
the building where it had all happened. It was a derelict building,
it was almost collapsing, so it took initiatives to preserve that building and to do it up again,
and make that all those meetings that were the youth from the world could meet,
that should be in that place in his opinion, and that's what he worked for.
And that's what he actually realized as well in the 1960s when the
Anfrancaus was just open for the public. It was every year, there was also a youth center
connected to it. And every year from 1960, 61, 62 to the 70s or so, there were annual youth
conferences, just students coming from all over the world and discussing all sorts of things,
apartheid in South Africa, civil rights moving in the US, the Vietnam War, all sorts of topics that people discuss.
They want to make the world a better place.
So I think that's why we can still visit that today.
And that's exactly where ANS message lives on that push for hope and reconciliation around
the world, although as we hear on this podcast all too often,
it's very, very difficult to achieve. In reality, it seems but we need those spaces just like the
Anne Frank House, where those discussions can take place. Gertchen, thank you so much for your time
and for coming on the podcast today. Please tell us about where people can read more of your work
and how they can engage in the
work of the Anne Frank House. The best way to go well is go to the website on a frunk.org.
You can all find all sorts of information of the activities of the Anne Frank House.
And there's also in that you can find the research, various research report that I wrote or that
some of my colleagues wrote, you can find an investigative report about the arrests, you can
find an article that I co-authored with an American colleague about the immigration
attempts into the U.S. You can find all sorts of information there and also think you can
possibly do yourself. Well Gertchen, thank you so much for your time today and for your continued research on
this topic. You're always welcome on the Warfare Podcast.
Thank you, it was my pleasure.
That was James Rogers, host of the Warfare Podcast. If you liked it, you know what to do.
And cautionary tales will return next week.
you