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Tag: Anne Frank

  • New play explores how Anne Frank’s diary reached light of day – amNewYork

    Anne Frank’s diary is about as well-known as books get, translated into dozens of languages, and selling millions of copies. It also prompted an often-performed play and a well-known movie, both adapted from the diary. 

    But now a new Anne Frank play, telling the story of the decisions, difficulties and struggles that Otto Frank faces taking the diary itself from paper to publication, has debuted at Theater for The New City.

    Written in Dutch as Het Achterhuis, Anne Frank’s diary became her father Otto’s mission – and a way of finding meaning in life after so many horrors. It would be published around much of the world, including the United States, where it would also prompt a play and a movie, but only after a struggle that amounts to a different, second Anne Frank story.

    “The Diary,” a new play by Theater for the New City playwright in residence Claude Solnik and directed by Deborah Rupy, is about Otto and Anne, and the journey of the diary to publication and renown. 

    It has been playing to full houses at Theater for the New City, 155 First Ave., since opening on Jan. 10 and runs Thurs.-Sat. at 8 and Sun. at 3 through January 25.

    We see Otto struggle about whether to seek to publish an inherently private text, even if Anne wanted it published, what to remove, whether to protect other family members from critical comments, rejection from editors who think it’s a work of little value and people who can’t believe Anne could have written this at such a young age.

    The play is the latest example of a kind of Anne Frank awakening, including Anne Frank: The Exhibition at The Center for Jewish History at 15 West 16th St., in Manhattan’s Union Square neighborhood through Feb. 1.

    Eva Schloss, Anne Frank’s stepsister as well as a Holocaust survivor, just passed away, also reminding many of a time that is at most part of the recent past.

    “She was an extraordinary person. I’m sad about her passing,” said Gabriel Sanders, director of special projects at the Center for Jewish History. “I know how exceptional she was.”

    “The Diary” brings another Anne Frank story to life, as we watch scenes in flashbacks when Otto reads the diary, and see her, her sister Margot and his wife Edith as he reads and in his thoughts as they talk.

     Charles E. Gerber portrays Otto, Eva Gozé portrays Anne, Deborah Rupy plays Edith and Gabi Schwartz plays Margot, rounding out the family.

    Hugo Persson plays Peter, Patricia Magno plays Miep, Laura Jones plays an editor and relative, Cameron Reilly-Steele plays Tomasz and an officer, Karen Freer plays Judith Jones and Rene Sambrailo plays Jan.

    “I am Dutch and I learned about Anne Frank and her story,” Eva Gozé, who is playing Anne, said of a long familiarity. “This play brings to light different parts of the story that I wasn’t really aware of.”

    Charles E. Gerber, who has appeared on Broadway and national tours, took on the role of Otto, seeking to bring him to life with words a little bit the way Anne’s words have kept her with us even today. 

    “The challenge of this play is starting with someone coming back from unimaginable horrors, coming back from the camps, feeling survivor guilt, a term most people are aware of. He’s still alive.  Like Eli Weisel, how do they just not give up?” Gerber said. “And then have the passion and another calling of resuscitating the memories of his loved one through the inspired writing of his second child who he reluctantly comes to realize was one of the most talented souls he ever encountered.”

    In the play, we see Otto searching for a publisher who will take the book, but respect it and treat it, and his daughter, well. And he struggles with the desire to make his daughter’s voice heard, but without a desire to turn her words and a tragic story into entertainment.

    “He had to find someone with the right set of affinities, with the wherewithal to publish,” Gerber said, noting Otto Frank would find Judith Jones, arguably the perfect publisher for this book. “And the sensitivity to his concerns of protecting the verity of the story.”

    Although Gozé read the book as a child in the Netherlands, where Anne Frank is not just a literary figure but someone who made her home there, said she learned another Anne Frank story from this script – about the diary’s journey.

    “I wasn’t aware of how hard he had to fight to find somebody to publish it, the negotiations he has to make with himself to make Anne’s dream come true,” Gozé said. “I see it as a father-and-daughter story. I feel like it’s very much about him fighting to make the dream of his daughter, who is no longer there, come true.”

    Gerber said daily he learns more about Otto Frank, who died in 1980, but that recreating the character on stage is complicated.

    “I’m trying to understand how he survived. He was the sole survivor from the Annex, the only person who came back. Peter was alive at the liberation. He was a victim of starvation and disease,” Gerber said. “He had the constitution that forced him to survive. I don’t think he even tried to answer how. He just did.”

    Gerber sees the story as important, but also as a recognition that Otto Frank, a father, fought hard for his daughter.

    “The major reason I undertook to do it, after I read it, is that I want to breathe life into him, to make the words flesh, as Peter O’Toole would say,” Gerber said. “It was easy for me to shave my head and shave my beard. I look like him, an older version of him. Filling him up is another matter. That’s the task right now.”

    By Claude Solnik

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  • Secret Diary of Melania Trump – S. Daniel Guttman, Humor Times

    Secret Diary of Melania Trump – S. Daniel Guttman, Humor Times

    “The former first lady has mostly retreated from public view — and steered clear of the campaign trail — while her husband fights to return to the White House and faces increasing legal peril.

    “Since leaving the White House, Melania Trump’s world has gotten smaller. Just how she likes it.”

    As reported by S. Daniel Guttman

    Dear MUCKA, I am meeting with a Donald on Saturday? Oh, yeah, I remember, that Donald.

    Dear MUCKA, Not many people know that MUCKA means “Kitty” in Slovenian. Let’s keep that our little secret, just like my heroine, Anne Frank, kept hers.

    Dear MUCKA, Donald has stored many cardboard boxes at Mar-a-Lago. Some in my closet and some in the bathrooms. Cardboard clashes with my décor and my wardrobe. I wonder what is in them?

    Dear MUCKA, I saw some boxes being moved around sneakily. Maybe that’s why I can’t find my “I really don’t care, do you?” blouse. Who would want to wear that but me? Donald?? No! I don’t think so.

    Dear MUCKA, When I was looking for my blouse, I discovered that there were some war plans in one of the document folders in a box. Fortunately, we are not planning to invade Slovenia. So I was relieved.

    Dear MUCKA, Donald was surprised my parents are living at Trump Tower. He said to me, ”Are they still alive? I haven’t seen them since we got married and maybe not even then.”

    Dear, MUCKA, I don’t believe the E. Jean Carrol accusations. Donald never offers to help me when I shop.

    Dear, MUCKA, Donald asked me to attend a campaign event. That’ll cost him as much as he now owes to E. Jean Carroll.

    Dear MUCKA, I am looking for Universities that Baron can attend. It is difficult to find any that haven’t heard of Donald Trump. I did find one school that had no access to the internet or mainstream media. But it was on a South Pacific Island. I’ll keep trying.

    Dear MUCKA, I’m still upset that Donald didn’t follow-up on my suggestion to change all USA street signs to Slovenian. It will help Americans to learn another language and help me to know where I’m going.

    Dear MUCKA, I just avoided another interview. Whew! Don’t know why the mainstream-media wants my opinions. I don’t want theirs.

    Dear MUCKA, I’m so grateful my modeling career prepared me to be First Lady. Thank God I learned how to walk down a runway sexily in Stilettos. And pout.

    Dear MUCKA, I tried cooking for Donald for the first time in years, but I forgot to take the wrappers off the Big Macs and the smoke from the oven fire was terrible. But on the plus side, he does like them well done.

    Dear MUCKA, I used to be appreciative that Donald chose me from all the women he has grabbed in the Nozinca. Now, I’m less certain.

    Dear MUCKA, I got into a big fight with Donald and he threatened to have me deported. I told him his deporting days are over and reminded him that I know where the bodies are buried, and I dug some of them up.

    Dear MUCKA, I saw that Donald has kept an old basketball shoe from Shaquille O’Neal . I think I will use it as a gravy boat. I wonder what the gravy will taste like?

    Dear MUCKA, I was shocked by the events at the Capital on January 6th. The clothing the well-behaved crowd wore was terrible. No designer labels. No style at all. No wonder they are in trouble.

    Dear MUCKA, I will never wear a MAGA hat. It messes up my hair. Besides, what does it mean anyway? Never heard of the word when I learned English in Modeling School.

    Dear MUCKA, I just interviewed another candidate for my scholarship charity. I was impressed that she got into cosmetology school on the first try. I believe she will have a major impact on the world of eyeliner.

    Dear MUCKA, Uh-oh. I finally got around to reading the pre-nup I signed when I married Donald. It just entitles me to all the pots and pans I can carry in my arms out of Mar-a-Lago in one exit trip. I guess I’ll have to reconsider my filing for divorce.

    Dear MUCKA, Donald was just indicted again. I’m glad he is still in the news. I’m sure he will be very happiest and Be Best.

    Humor Times

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  • Moms for Liberty Organizer Who Banned Anne Frank Graphic Novel Refuses To Apologize for Antisemitism

    Moms for Liberty Organizer Who Banned Anne Frank Graphic Novel Refuses To Apologize for Antisemitism

    Far-right extremist group Moms for Liberty has made a name for itself with organized attacks on sex education and LGBTQ-affirming curricula in public schools. But now they seem to be venturing into a new territory of hate and discrimination. Lead organizers with Moms for Liberty have tried to ban Scholastic book fairs, appeared on antisemitic talk shows, and quoted Hitler in their newsletter. It’s no surprise the group has earned a reputation as an extremist organization by the Southern Poverty Law Center and has been placed on their Hate Watch. 

    Jennifer Pippin, the chair of a Florida chapter of Moms for Liberty, succeeded in getting Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation banned from the public high school’s library. Apparently, this decision was reached with the support of the District Objection Committee which Pippen helped form. Nationwide, Moms for Liberty has gained a reputation for book banning and threatening librarians. Though they claim no connection to Moms for Liberty, the site BookLooks.org provides fodder for the organization’s mission of excluding numerous books from library circulation. Noticeably absent from the “who we are” section of the website are the actual names of the people behind these book critiques. They are not librarians, educators, or scholars, just “concerned parents” devoting time to producing pages and pages of “content warnings” on new books and classics alike. 

    The graphic novel version of Anne Frank’s diary has caused controversy across the country for its “explicit” moments. A middle school teacher in Texas was fired for assigning the book to her eighth grde class. Pippins successfully lobbied to have the book banned for being sexually explicit and inappropriate. Her charges hinged on three moments in the story, one in which Anne Frank expresses a desire to kiss her female friend, another where she suggests she and a friend show one another their breasts, and one in which she notices the beauty of the nude female body. 

    Some educators have pushed back on the categorization of any of these scenes as sexually explicit. Instead of viewing the 13-year-old hiding out from the Nazis with her family as somehow being titillated by deviant ideas, others have pointed out that these passages present Anne as a relatable teen noticing her developing body and sexuality.

    As disturbing as it is, the Anne Frank book banning is another act that speaks to an antisemitic culture within Moms of Liberty. The same woman who had Anne Frank’s diary banned from the library also appeared on TruNews, an antisemitic livestream. TruNews host Rick Wiles uses his platform to advance racist, antisemitic, and anti science narratives. Pippin, the book banner, has since refused to apologize for speaking on his show. The group did, however, apologize for quoting Hitler in their newsletter. These actions reveal a dangerous trend of aligning not just with the far right but also with Nazism. 

    According to the American Library Association (ALA), book bans are on the rise in the U.S. There has been a 20% increase since last year. Texas and Florida have the most banned books in the nation, with 438 and 357 banned books respectively. As scholars note, the term “book banning” fails to capture what happens when a book is challenged. It may be redacted (removing words or images), relocated to another section of the library, restricted with parental permission required for reading, or finally, removed from circulation.

    Ironically, book banning is addressed in Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation. As Anne describes a Germany that is becoming increasingly more hostile and frightening, she references the Nazis burning books written by Jews and books that celebrate Jewish culture.

    After Nazis discovered her family in hiding, Anne Frank and her older sister Margot where transported to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where they died. Anne’s father, Otto, survived the war. He discovered his daughter’s diary and decided to publish it to share their family’s experience with history and the world.

    (featured image: Pantheon)

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    Kate Delany

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  • Man Convicted Over Antisemitic Message Projected On Anne Frank House

    Man Convicted Over Antisemitic Message Projected On Anne Frank House

    A Polish-Canadian man has been convicted for projecting “Ann [sic] Frank invented the ballpoint pen” onto the Anne Frank House museum, the message alluding to an antisemitic conspiracy theory that the famed diary was a forgery. What do you think?

    “Thank god she wasn’t home to see that.”

    Greg Paduri, City Tosher

    “Finally, someone with the balls to take down Anne Frank.”

    Xavier Santerre, Unemployed

    “Maybe he got the wrong house.”

    Shelby Collins, Aspiring Conservationist

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  • Texas School District Fires Teacher Over Anne Frank Graphic Novel Reading

    Texas School District Fires Teacher Over Anne Frank Graphic Novel Reading

    A school district in Texas has fired a teacher who assigned eighth-grade students a graphic novel adaptation of Anne Frank’s diary.

    The Hamshire-Fannett Independent School District’s communication coordinator, Mike Canizales, told KFDM-TV in Beaumont, Texas, that an unnamed teacher allowed students to read a version of “The Diary of Anne Frank” in class that was “not approved” by the district.

    The school district, which is in Jefferson County, east of Houston, confirmed to HuffPost that it had hired a substitute teacher while it searches for a full-time replacement.

    “As you may be aware, following concerns regarding curricular selections in your student’s reading class, a substitute teacher has been facilitating the class since Wednesday, September 13, 2023,” read an email sent to parents on Friday, which Canizales provided to HuffPost. “The District is currently in the process of posting the position to secure a high-quality, full-time teacher as quickly as possible. During this period of transition, our administrators and curriculum team will provide heightened support and monitoring in the reading class to ensure continuity in instruction.”

    Anne Frank was a Jewish teenager who documented her thoughts and struggles during the Holocaust as she and her family hid in a secret annex in a house in Amsterdam. Her original diary, published in 1947, has been lauded by many educators, writers and scholars as essential reading.

    “Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation” was written by Ari Folman, whose parents survived the Holocaust, and it was illustrated by David Polonsky. It details an experience in which Anne Frank walked through a park that displayed nude female statues and a conversation in which she asked a friend that they each show each other their breasts, The Associated Press reported in April. It also includes a section where she discusses both male and female genitalia, according to the Post.

    The New York Times Book Review wrote that the illustrated book is “so engaging and effective that it’s easy to imagine it replacing the [original diary] in classrooms and among younger readers.” Its target audience is listed on Amazon as students from eighth through 12th grade.

    The school district claims the book was unapproved, but KDFM reported that the book was on an approved list that had been sent to parents at the start of the school year. An investigation is underway, the district’s communication coordinator told KDFM.

    Anne Frank Fonds, based in Basel, Switzerland, the organization that published the graphic novel, condemned book banning in an email to HuffPost.

    “The graphic adaptation of the diary is based on the text of a 12-year-old girl in the 1940s. Since its first publication, the diary has repeatedly come under fire from ideological groups,” the foundation wrote. “The girl, who never knew freedom in today’s sense, stood up for it in her texts and dreamed of it.”

    “The Anne Frank Fonds Basel observes with increasing concern that, in addition to bans on the text in dictatorships, idéologie-soaked bans on books of world literature are now also increasingly being implemented in the free world, threatening the achievements of enlightenment,” the publisher said.

    The district’s firing falls in line with the conservative-led nationwide push to ban books that mention race, sex education and gender identity. Texas has been at the forefront of this book-banning effort and has had the most attempts to ban books in schools when compared to other states, according to a 2022 report by the American Library Association.

    Books like Frank’s diary or “Maus: A Survivor’s Tale” by Art Spiegelman, a graphic novel about the Holocaust, have been the target of conservatives in the last several years. Parents who have complained about Holocaust literature and the school boards that have banned them have often cited foul language or nudity in such works. But historians and librarians see it as a larger attack on teaching students the truth about racial injustice and antisemitism.

    In 2021, a Texas lawmaker made a list of approximately 850 books and distributed it to school districts around the state, demanding to know whether schools had any of the listed books on its shelves. Last May, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed a law that bans books with “sexually explicit” material. Educators and other critics have said the law is vague.

    In an era when conservatives are seeking to discredit teachers, reading a book is no longer a routine part of an educator’s day but can now become a punishable offense.

    In the last year alone, a fifth-grade teacher in Georgia was terminated after reading “My Shadow Is Purple” by Scott Stuart, a children’s book that deals with gender identity, to her students. In South Carolina, students complained after a high school teacher included Ta-Nehisi Coates’ “Between the World and Me” in an Advanced Placement Language Arts class because the Republican-controlled state legislature had banned classroom discussions on systemic racism. And in Louisiana, a school librarian was threatened online after speaking out against censorship.

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  • In Florida, More Than 300 Books Have Been Removed From School Shelves

    In Florida, More Than 300 Books Have Been Removed From School Shelves

    Last month, the Florida Department of Education revealed that more than 300 books had been removed from public school shelves in the state during the 2022-2023 school year.

    Under the pretense of keeping kids safe and preserving “parental rights,” Florida officials and conservative activists have spread misinformation about teachers and school libraries, claiming that any and all books that deal with gender or sexuality are inappropriate or pornographic.

    Fueled by a surge in conservative culture wars and a package of education laws targeting instruction on gender and sexuality, there have been a deluge of book challenges from parents and residents in Florida.

    The list of books no longer available to Florida students, which according to NBC News was quietly released late last month, is broken down by county, and tallies the number of book challenges as well as the books that were ultimately removed.

    The vast majority of books are concentrated in Clay County, in the northeastern part of the state, where 177 titles were removed. There, infamous right-wing activist Bruce Freidman has led the charge in getting books pulled from the shelves.

    Behind Clay was Martin County, in southeastern Florida, which had 98 books removed.

    Within the list of hundreds of books declared no longer acceptable, there are some familiar targets, such as “This Book Is Gay” by Juno Dawson, a guidebook for young LGBTQ+ people, and “Gender Queer,” a memoir by Maia Kobabe. These have been under fire for years from conservative groups waging a campaign against the LGBTQ+ community and smearing them as child abusers and predators.

    But there were some unexpected bans as well. “Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation,” by Ari Folman, was removed from a high school in Indian River County after a parent complained about the book’s sexual content.

    In Wakulla County, the only book removed was “Little Rock Nine” by Marshall Poe. Poe’s novel is about two boys, one Black and one white, who are best friends in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957 ― the year the city was forced to desegregate its schools and President Dwight Eisenhower sent in federal troops to do so.

    Though the novel depicts an event of monumental significance in American history, a parent complained to her child’s elementary school because the book has profanity in it.

    These types of parents are actually rare. Polling has shown that parents are largely against banning books. But the challenges keep coming, and Florida shows no signs of slowing down.

    Earlier this year, Gov. Ron DeSantis ― who is seeking the Republican presidential nomination on a platform to “Make America Florida” ― signed into law HB 1069, a measure that restricts sexual and health education in the classroom and expands book ban policies even further. The law is in effect for this school year.

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  • Hannah “Hanneli” Pick-Goslar, Friend Of Anne Frank And Iconic Child-Witness To The Holocaust, Dies At 93

    Hannah “Hanneli” Pick-Goslar, Friend Of Anne Frank And Iconic Child-Witness To The Holocaust, Dies At 93

    Hannah “Hanneli” Pick-Goslar, a towering child-witness to the Holocaust whom Anne Frank described in her diary as her best friend, has died at home in Jerusalem, age 93, two weeks before her 94th birthday. Mrs. Pick-Goslar tirelessly lectured, wrote, and gave interviews about her years in exile in Amsterdam, her own time in the concentration camps and her friendship with Anne, providing an essential, intimate picture of the work and life of the young writer, the lone creator of one of the most famous journals in the world.

    Like her friend Anne, Hannah Goslar was incarcerated in Bergen-Belsen. Unlike her friend, Mrs. Pick-Goslar survived Bergen-Belsen with her sister Gabi, was re-interred by the Russians and released into US Army care before her 1947 emigration to Israel. There she studied, became a pediatric nurse, married TK Pick, and had a large family, including, today, 11 grandchildren and 33 great-grandchildren whom she with bracing wit described as “my answer to Hitler.”

    By 1957 she was on her first trip to the United States to lecture about the Holocaust and her friendship with Anne. Essentially, for the following 65 years , she never stopped what can only be described as her global public-speaking tour, especially in education of the young — a few short months before her death she was lecturing French and German students via Zoom. Over decades of this illuminating work, she served as the inspiration for books, articles, films and most recently, the 2021 Netflix adaptation of her life, My Best Friend Anne Frank.

    Mrs. Pick-Goslar’s was a deep relationship with the preternaturally gifted young writer. They met early in exile, at approximately four, on a shopping trip to the local grocery. It was a felicitous encounter for them both. Both were daughters of upper-middle-class German Jews whose fathers had managed, in the early going of the Thirties, to get their families out of the red-hot center of Nazism only to land in Amsterdam. Hannah “Hannali” Goslar was from Berlin. Anne was from Frankfurt.

    Hannali’s father, Hans Goslar, had been the head of the German Press Bureau and an advisor to the German interior ministry, which, as a central planning and intelligence-gathering agency of the Holocaust and the war effort in general, remains one of the many bleak ironies surrounding these two girls. Obviously, as the Nazis took power in 1933, Hans Goslar was not wanted in that post.

    Hannah Goslar happened to move into into Merwedeplein 33 with her parents, just two doors down from the Frank family residence at Merwedeplein 37. As Mrs. Pick-Goslar describes it, on the first day of classes at Montessori school, her mother was not at all sure how Hannah would take it. Anne recognized her from across the way, ran up, and embraced her. Obviously, both girls had grown up speaking German, not an especially desired language in Amsterdam of the day. Now they would be growing up together in exile, speaking Dutch.

    The friendship deepened dramatically over the school years, according to Anne’s diary and to Mrs. Pick-Goslar’s many accounts. Inevitably, the girls were separated by the Nazis — in July 1942, as Otto Frank devised the plan to create and shelter in what’s called the Secret Annex, the warrenlike suite of rooms in his office building that today is known as the Anne Frank Huis, or Anne Frank House. The legend the Franks created in the community to throw the Germans off the scent was that they had successfully escaped to Switzerland.

    And that legend is what Hanneli Goslar thought had happened to her friend Anne for years, until the fateful day in February 1945 when, by then a teenaged inmate in Bergen-Belsen herself, she discovered that there were Dutch people interred in a separate section of the camp. The inmate populations were separated by barbed wire stuffed with straw — to reduce communication, the punishment for which under the SS administrators could be death. Hanneli’s first communication through this fence was with a woman who knew the Franks and more specifically, knew the Frank sisters, Anne and Margot. Suddenly, after a couple of days of requesting contact, Hannah Goslar was speaking with Anne. Both girls burst into tears.

    Things were not going well for Anne, or her sister Margot, who had come down with typhus. Hannah Goslar laboriously put together a package of rations and socks, which she tossed over the fence to Anne the next night. It didn’t work — another inmate took the package and refused to give it to Anne. So, Hannah Goslar put together a second package, and tossed that to Anne the next evening. It worked. Mrs. Pick-Goslar relates that they saw each other three or four times, but that the Germans then moved the prisoners on the other side to another part of the camp.

    According to Dutch records, Anne Frank died sometime in March 1945, but new research by the Anne Frank Huis indicates that she died some weeks earlier, in February, shortly after her last meeting with Hannah Goslar.

    Of the several passages in her journal devoted to Hannah Goslar, arguably the most illuminating, generous, and loving one is Frank’s entry upon learning, in hiding in 1943, of Hannah Goslar’s arrest by the Germans. It goes like this:

    “Hanneli, you’re a reminder of what my fate could have been. I hope that you live to the end of the war and return to us.”

    Hannah Pick-Goslar did exactly that, and then spent a long life returning that gift of friendship to her friend Anne.

    and, after emigrating to Israel in 1947, became a pediatric nurse. She leaves behind a large family, including 11 grandchildren and 33 great-grandchildren, describing them as “my answer to Hitler.”

    A native of Berlin whose father, Hans Goslar, was the head of the German Press Bureau and an advisor to the German interior minister until the Nazis took power in 1933, Hannah “Hanneli” Goslar was four when she and her family were forced to move to Amsterdam. Her father and mother happened to move into into Merwedeplein 33, just two doors down from the Frank family residence at Merwedeplein 37. Hanneli Goslar and Anne Frank first met as they went grocery shopping with their mothers in the neighborhood, and later at the Montessori school, where, on the first day.

    Hannah “Hanneli” Goslar

    With her father, Hans Goslar and and her sister Gabi, Hannah Goslar was interred in Bergen-BelsenShe was a towering eyewitness to the inner machinery of the Holocaust

    Mrs. Pick-Goslar met Anne and the Frank family

    Mrs. Pick-Goslar had leaves a large family behind, among them, 11 grandchildren and

    Netflix

    A native of Berlin whose father, Hans Goslar, was the head of the German Press Bureau and an advisor to the interior minister until the Nazis took power in 1933, Goslar was four when she and her family were forced to move to Amsterdam. As fate would have it, the Goslars moved just down , as fate would have it. . worked for the

    The fourth gift of socks and bread.

    Guy Martin, Senior Contributor

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  • Anne Frank’s friend Hannah Pick-Goslar dies at age 93

    Anne Frank’s friend Hannah Pick-Goslar dies at age 93

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Hannah Pick-Goslar, one of Jewish diarist Anne Frank’s best friends, has died at age 93, the foundation that runs the Anne Frank House museum said.

    The Anne Frank Foundation paid tribute to Pick-Goslar, who is mentioned in Anne’s world-famous diary about her life in hiding from the Netherlands’ Nazi occupiers, for helping to keep Anne’s memory alive with stories about their youth.

    “Hannah Pick-Goslar meant a lot to the Anne Frank House, and we could always call on her,” the foundation said in a statement. It did not give details or the cause of her death.

    Pick-Goslar grew up with Anne in Amsterdam after both their families moved there from Germany as Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party rose to power. The friends were separated as Anne’s family went into hiding in 1942 but met again briefly in February 1945, at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany, shortly before Anne died there of typhus.

    Before World War II, their families lived next door to one another in Amsterdam, and Anne and Hannah went to school together.

    Pick-Goslar recalled attending her friend’s 13th birthday party and seeing a red-and-white checkered diary that Anne’s parents gave their daughter as a gift. Anne went on to fill it with her thoughts and frustrations while hiding from the Nazis in a secret annex in Amsterdam. Anne’s father, Otto, published the diary after the war.

    Pick-Goslar recounted their friendship in a book by Alison Leslie Gold called “Memories of Anne Frank; Reflections of a Childhood Friend.” The book was turned into a film, released last year, titled “My Best Friend Anne Frank.”

    In a 1998 interview with The Associated Press, she said of Anne: “Today, everyone thinks she was someone holy. but this is not at all the case.″

    “She was a girl who wrote beautifully and matured quickly during extraordinary circumstances,” Pick-Goslar said.

    Pick-Goslar is mentioned in the diary, referred to by the name Anne called her: Hanneli.

    On June 14, 1942, Anne wrote: “Hanneli and Sanne used to be my two best friends. People who saw us together always used to say: ‘There goes Anne, Hanne and Sanne.’”

    The Anne Frank Foundation said Pick-Goslar “shared her memories of their friendship and the Holocaust into old age. She believed everyone should know what happened to her and her friend Anne after the last diary entry. No matter how terrible the story.”

    Pick-Goslar last saw her friend in early February 1945, about a month before Anne died of typhus in Bergen-Belsen and two months before the Allies liberated the camp.

    They were held in different sections, separated by a tall barbed-wire fence. From time to time, they pressed up to the fence to speak to each other.

    “I have no one,″ Anne once told her friend, weeping.

    At the time, the Nazis had shorn Anne’s dark locks. “She always loved to play with her hair,″ -Pick-Goslar told the AP. “I remember her curling her hair with her fingers. It must have killed her to lose it.”

    Pick-Goslar emigrated in 1947 to what is now Israel, where she became a nurse, married and had three children. Her family grew to include 11 grandchildren, and 31 great-grandchildren.

    She used to say of her large family: “This is my answer to Hitler,” the Anne Frank Foundation said.

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