The Borneo Post

Anne Frank may have been caught ‘by chance’, not betrayed — Museum

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THE HAGUE: Anne Frank may have been discovered ‘ by chance’ and not because she was denounced to Holland’s Nazi overlords by unknown betrayers as long thought, the museum in her honour says.

New research suggests that the August 1944 police raid in which Frank was arrested may have actually been staged to investigat­e illegal activity taking place elsewhere in the building.

“The question asked has always been ‘Who betrayed Anne Frank and the people in hiding?’” the Anne Frank House said in a statement published Friday.

But at 263 Prinsengra­cht in Amsterdam, where Frank and seven others went into hiding in a secret upstairs annexe, “illegal work and fraud with ration coupons was also taking place.

“The current research study provides a different perspectiv­e: it is possible that the SD ( Sicherheit­sdienst, or German Security Service) searched the building because of this illegal work and fraud with ration coupons, and that the SD investigat­ors discovered Anne Frank and the seven others in hiding simply by chance,” said the museum, which is housed in the same building and dedicated to preserving Frank’s memory.

“The Anne Frank House’s new investigat­ion does not refute the possibilit­y that the people in hiding were betrayed, but illustrate­s that other scenarios should also be considered,” said Ronald Leopold, its executive director.

‘The Diary of a Young Girl’, which Frank penned while in hiding from June 1942 to August 1944, is one of the most famous testimonie­s of life in the Second World War and the most famous diaries of all time. It has sold more than 30 million copies in 67 languages.

The Jewish girl, who was born in Germany before her family emigrated to the Netherland­s, died in the Bergen- Belsen concentrat­ion camp in Germany in early 1945, aged 15, less than a year after her capture and just before the end of World War II.

Her father, Otto Frank, was the sole survivor of the war among the eight inhabitant­s of the secret annexe.

It was commonly assumed that Frank, her parents and sister, as well as four others, were betrayed by an acquaintan­ce to Nazi authoritie­s – with fictionali­sed accounts sometimes referring to an anonymous phone call. — AFP

 ??  ?? A series of identity photos taken in 1942 shows Anne Frank who died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentrat­ion camp in May 1945 at the age of 15. — AFP photo
A series of identity photos taken in 1942 shows Anne Frank who died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentrat­ion camp in May 1945 at the age of 15. — AFP photo

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