Toronto Star

Anne Frank may not have been betrayed

Historians say investigat­ors may actually have been looking for ration fraud

- CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR. THE WASHINGTON POST

For two years, Anne Frank’s family hid in secret rooms in Amsterdam, knowing that a curtain left open by mistake, a wayward noise or a nervous conspirato­r’s phone call to the Nazis could land them all in concentrat­ion camps. The worst happened on a summer day in 1944, when investigat­ors discovered their secret world behind a movable bookcase and rounded them up.

Of the eight Jews hiding, seven died before the Holocaust was over, including Anne, whose diary was a testament to the horrors of the Nazi regime. She died of typhus at age15 at Bergen-Belsen camp in Germany.

And for decades, her father Otto tried to figure out who tipped off the Nazis — a question historians have debated for 72 years. Now, the Anne Frank House museum in Amsterdam has put forth a new theory: Maybe it was all just a coincidenc­e. For decades, the common theory has been that Anne Frank’s family was betrayed, possibly by a new employee at her father’s business or a conspirato­r’s wife unsympathe­tic to the plight of the eight Jews hiding from Nazis in secret rooms.

But, according to a research paper published this month by the museum in, “this explicit focus on betrayal, however, limits the perspectiv­e of the arrest . . . other scenarios tend to be overshadow­ed.”

Historians’ theories were based on Otto Frank’s suspicions, which centred on Willem van Maaren, a new employee who hadn’t been let in on the secret about the hiding place.

“We suspected him all along,” Frank told a Dutch newspaper in 1963.

On its website, the museum says van Maaren was an inquisitiv­e type who became suspicious and “laid a trap in the warehouse once: on the corners of the tables there are sheets of paper which fall off when you walk past.”

Still, no conclusive evidence has ever come to light of van Maaren alerting authoritie­s, the paper says.

Through the decades, others have been identified as potential betrayers, including Dutch National Socialist Tonny Ahlers, as well as the wife of an employee who helped Anne’s family hide. But no one has cast serious doubts about the betrayal theory until now.

In part, that’s because historians believed the three investigat­ors who found the Jews hiding in the Opekta building were members of the Sicherheit­sdienst, which tracked down potential enemies of Hitler’s Nazi regime.

But new informatio­n uncovered by researcher­s showed the three men Otto Frank later identified as the investigat­ors weren’t looking for enemies of Nazis, but were likely assigned to track down people committing ration card fraud or dodging service in the military — not hunting down Jews.

In her diary, Anne repeatedly wrote about the arrests of men who had been caught dealing in illegal ration cards “so we have no coupons.”

Such arrests were often reported to authoritie­s, who frequently came across hiding Jews as they tried to sniff out people with phoney ration cards.

The research paper also highlights other circumstan­tial evidence that pokes holes in the betrayal theory. Many phone lines were cut off, for example, which would make it hard for civilians to call authoritie­s about Jews in hiding.

“This creates a real possibilit­y that the call, if it actually took place, came from another government agency,” the paper says.

The paper stressed that there is no conclusive theory about how Anne’s family was discovered, including the paper’s own claims.

The interest in the betrayal of a teenage girl seven decades after her death is a testament to the universali­ty of Anne’s powerful tale.

Many have pointed out the historical similariti­es between the plight of Anne’s family and the current debate about Syrians seeking refuge. As The Washington Post’s Elahe Izadi wrote, the Franks collided with restrictiv­e policies designed to protect national security and guard against an influx of foreigners during a time of war.

And a 7-year-old Syrian girl, Bana al-Abed, has been called a modernday Anne Frank. Bana amassed 200,000 Twitter followers while documentin­g her family’s struggle to survive in war-ravaged Aleppo.

The interest in the betrayal of a teenage girl decades later is a testament to the universali­ty of Anne’s powerful tale

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Anne Frank lived in this house in Amsterdam, hiding with her parents to escape the Nazis between June 1942 and Aug. 4, 1944.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Anne Frank lived in this house in Amsterdam, hiding with her parents to escape the Nazis between June 1942 and Aug. 4, 1944.

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