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Jan. 25
NEW YORK:
N.Y. institute to release newly disclosed letters written by Anne Frank's
father
Newly disclosed letters written by the father of Anne Frank illuminate
his desperate attempts to get the family out of Nazi-occupied Netherlands.
The YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, a New York-based institution that
focuses on the history and culture of Eastern European Jews, said Thursday
it had discovered the file among 100,000 other Holocaust-related documents
about a year and a half ago. The institute did not immediately disclose
the find because it had to explore copyright and other legal issues, said
Cathy Callegari, a spokeswoman for YIVO.
"We have come across the file which belonged to Otto Frank, documenting
his efforts to immigrate his family and get them out of Holland," she
said.
On Feb. 14, she said, the institute will release Frank's letters and
documents and records from various agencies that helped people immigrate
from Europe.
The disclosure came as a surprise to Bernd "Buddy" Elias, Anne Frank's
cousin and the president of the Anne Frank Foundation in Basel,
Switzerland. The organization, established by Otto Frank, holds the rights
to Anne Frank's writings, according to its website.
"We would love to have them in our archive. I mean, we are the heirs of
Otto Frank," Elias told The Associated Press.
Callegari said the documents include letters that Otto Frank wrote to
relatives, friends and officials between April 30, 1941, and Dec. 11,
1941, when Germany declared war on the United States.
The Frank family's hiding place in a secret annex in an Amsterdam
canal-side warehouse has been turned into a museum.
Patricia Bosboom, of the Anne Frank House museum in Amsterdam, said
officials there had heard about the discovery of the letters but had not
seen them. But she said they would fit with the general picture that's
known about Otto Frank's many efforts to get the family out of Europe.
It also fits with Frank's other contingency planning: the family's hiding
spot. "He organized it well before the war," she said.
The letters document how Otto Frank tried to arrange for his family wife
Edith, daughters Margo and Anne and mother-in-law Rosa Hollander to go to
the United States or Cuba.
His attempts to arrange a route out of the Netherlands were unsuccessful.
The family took refuge in July 1942, hiding for more than two years before
being arrested. Anne Frank described the family's life in hiding in a
diary that has sold an estimated 75 million copies.
The letters were initially held by the New York City-based Hebrew
Immigrant Aid Society, which gradually transferred its archives to the
YIVO Institute in 1974. Callegari said that the HIAS archives consisted of
documents from various agencies so that the true origin of the Otto Frank
letters may never be known. She said a volunteer archivist at the YIVO
Institute discovered Otto Frank's letters about a year and a half ago.
Anne Frank died of typhus at age 15 in a concentration camp at
Bergen-Belsen, Germany, in 1945. Her father returned to the Netherlands to
collect his daughter's notes and published them in the Netherlands in
1947.
Time magazine first reported on the newly discovered documents on its
website Thursday.
(source: Associated Press)
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