Anne Frank Would Have Been 80 - UPDATE, Hate Shooting

(Anne Frank by Werner Horvath)
Peter Wilhelm Art Center in Budapest will honor Anne Frank's 80th birthday with an original artwork exhibition this month
(The shooting by an antisemitic 88-year-old man at the Holocaust Museum in Washington is a reminder that antisemitism amd racism remain. A heroic security guard, Stephen Tyrone Johns, was killed.
As shown by an awful comment on this thread that I have left up --this kind of hate even infects OS. I deleted another comment, and that man put up a post today, denying the Holocaust.
Even discussions of Middle East politics sometimes evince borderline hate talk. I have followed it on this site and have been upset by it. I vow now to call it out if I see it, and hope that others will too. And I will do it in memory of Anne Frank.)
Anne Frank has been a lifelong obsession for many Jewish women my age. At Nautilus Junior High in Miami Beach, my English teacher, Mrs. Gelber, handed me a paperback book titled Diary of a Young Girl. It was only ten years after Anne Frank’s death in 1945. I was then 13, the age that Anne had been when she was given her diary, on her birthday.
Anne went into hiding two months after that birthday, in the secret annex where she and others hid for over two years above her father’s office in Amsterdam. She died from typhus at 15, seven months after her arrest, in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp just before it was liberated.
I took the Diary of a Young Girl home and read it through, crying along the read. I identified with the sensitive, Jewish teenager who could write openly and freely, who didn’t get along with her mother, who was feisty and flirty and curious.
I had lived through the war as a baby in Florida, and my Jewish grandmother had left Germany (where the Frank family had lived before resettling in Holland), to come to the states. I realized with a chill, perhaps for the first time, “there but for the grace of God….” This was when the world was still discovering the horrors of the Nazi death camps. Many survivors of these camps lived in South Beach, and I had by then met a lady with a tattoed number on her arm.
Anne Frank’s story was turned into a play on Broadway, and when I was 16 years old, on my first date with the man who would become my husband, we saw The Diary of Anne Frank, the film adaptation of the book.
Five years after that date, on my honeymoon, my husband and I visited the attic in Amsterdam above her father’s office, where Anne Frank and her family went into hiding. The day we visited, 20 years after Anne’s death, there were no other visitors around. We walked right up the same stairs she had climbed to hide behind the false bookcase, the same stairs she was forced down by the Gestapo, after being betrayed. We walked alone through the cramped attic hideaway, with movie star pictures from 1940s fan magazines still on the walls above her bed. I remember a little bathroom, and a stairs to a skylight.
The two-tone sirens I heard in the Amsterdam streets that day reminded me of a scene when Anne Frank heard them in the movie. In that dramatized version, when the siren sound stopped, Anne knew that the police had found their hiding place.
I’ve been back to the Anne Frank House a couple of times since that first visit in the mid 1960s, and now there is a major building with interactive displays and world viewpoints, and the line snakes around the block near the Westerkerk, where Anne heard the steeple bells through the attic skylight.
There were more connections with Anne Frank. My niece, who had an uncanny resemblance to Anne, played Margo Frank, the older sister who also perished, in a regional theatre production in Atlanta. And a few years ago I ghostwrote a holocaust story of a survivor Anne’s age, who had also hidden through much of the war, and I went to Auschwitz to see where that brave lady had survived hell on earth. (Someday I will tell that story; actually I wrote a version on the Huffington Post a couple of years ago, and it was selected to be in a book anthology.)
Anne Frank was a brilliant, budding writer. We who love the written word can only imagine what this perceptive, creative girl would have accomplished had she lived. Instead she has became a symbol of the horrors of war, and is considered the most famous child of the 20th century.
This June 12 she would have been 80 years old. All of her original diaries are on permanent display in honor of this birthday. The famous Anne Frank Diaries have been sealed in archives at the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation, but will now return to the very spot on which they were written.
Below is a sketch of what Anne Frank might have looked like, had she lived to celebrate this birthday. The image was produced for the Anne Frank Trust UK by a Michigan firm called Phojoe, which has worked with US police on dozens of missing persons cases.

as we remember her as she might have become


Salon.com
Comments
In honor of her 80th birthday, you've inspired me to reread her Diary. She was such a beautiful soul.
Thank you for posting this.
Now you keep her incredible contribution to humanity alive in the 21st century - thanks Lea
Warm Regards
Thanks for this post.
To say that visiting her house was 'moving' is not enough. It's never left me after all these years. I can still see every visitor in the room crying as theyexited after reading the final post. No doubt, by now it's more high tech, but then, it was poster after poster after poster filling every wall written in 6 or 7 languages, each.
I believe "The Diary" was divinely inspired. What insight for a sheltered 13 year old. And what gifts. Thank you for writing this.
BR
I've never read her diary. I can't. It's too emotional for me.
Thanks for the wonderful piece and a reminder that children were murdered as well.
As one who's been in education and worked with children for many years, the very thought freezes my soul and bleeds my heart...
I would have liked to have visited the attic as you did, before it became such a popular attraction. I cannot imagine how it must have felt in those rooms, with you alone, hearing that siren, imagining the terror.
Their is some justice in this world after all for when the name Anne Frank is uttered a chorus of respect and admiration is heard.
The name Adolf Hitler elicits loathing and the well deserved shame of an entire nation along with a litany of other thoughts and emotions, none of them good. In the end he was bested by a 15 year old Jewish girl.
Such a thoughtful post and remembrance of a girl who left a deep mark on any other girl that read her story. I am just a Catholic girl who was touched so deeply by her story, when reading her "diary."
I love that you remind us of this deeply touching real life struggle and the amazing light that burned inside of her despite all efforts to squelch every breath in her body. Makes me want to read this book again. Even the movie was incredibly well done and deeply touched the senses of this brutal time in a young girl's life.
Ablonde's comment was one of the best single paragraphs I have read that puts Anne Frank into an entirely different and well deserved light.
This was elegantly written, Lea and is reflective of you. Highly rated.
In 1965, I worked with a quiet, kind and gentle 50-something gentleman, Mr. Rosenthal. One day I noticed his number-tatooed forearm by chance. I later asked my father what it might be and dad explained that Mr. Rosenthal was a Holocaust survivor and I must respect his silence on his past. Dad went further in explaining the Nazi plan for the final solution. I was shocked at the level of man's inhumanity to man and cried for days. Dad bought me "Diary of a Young Girl," and I cried for weeks. I was 16...older than Anne at the time of her death.
Ever since my enlightenment, I avidly read Hitler biographies, view Nazi and Jewish documentaries and films and try to learn the dynamics of evil that permeated a the German culture of that day.
We MUST understand the past or we are doomed to repeat it.
Thanks for the reminder, Lea.
--rated--
You've reminded me of the recent NYT story about the girls in Afghanistan who hand acid thrown in their faces by the Taliban for daring to go to school. Isn't it sad that, even with remembering Anne and countless others like her, not much has changed in the world, especially when it comes to the oppression of women.
Thanks for posting about this remarkable young lady.
- rated
That's not to say that there was anything human about it.
My husband's grandparents were as Theo described, survivors of the pogroms and the holocaust, on his mother's father's and father's mother's side, respectively. Later I grew up to learn that in fact my birthmother's mother was Jewish.
My sons have both read this book. Yes, we should always remember.
denese
For a reason I'm unable to articulate at the moment that age-progressed photo bothers me. I understand that conjecture about what Anne Frank might have been, or done or looked like is integral to the sense of all that was lost, but still. It feels weirdly wrong to me, as though we've stepped past, epistemologically, what was. It isn't real and it bothers me to think that figment might in any way eclipse the real: Anne Frank, who died of typhus in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp when she was fifteen. Young, vibrant, observant, lyrical, beautiful Anne Frank who would never see her eighty-year-old face.
Rated
I have never had the opportunity to visit her hiding place, but I knew it from her writing and the aforementioned movie.
Thank you for bringing her back into our focus. I do hope you tell the story one day.
Rated
Not only is the “Anne Frank” diary now considered to be a fake, so also is “The Painted Bird” by Jerzy Kosinski. This book, which is a mass of pornographic and sadistic imagery which, had it not been taken so seriously by the Jewish community, would be merely the pathetic manifestation of a self-serving and very sick person.
This was duly exposed as a shabby, though much revered (by the Jewish community) and quoted, fraud. When this was exposed, Kosinski committed suicide. Later, in Kosinski’s footsteps we find the next fiction entitled “Fragments, ” by a Swiss Protestant named Bruno Dosseker who spent the war in Switzerland as a young child. Dosseker posed as a very young Baltic Jewish concentration camp inmate named Binjamin Wilkomerski. This work consists of allegedly fragmented “memories” and is very difficult to read.
Dosseker became the poster boy for the Holocaust supporters and was lionized by the international Jewish community, reaping considerable profit and many in-house awards for his wonderful and moving portrayal of German brutality and sexual sadism.
Another book, allegedly by a Hungarian doctor, concerning his deportation from Budapest in 1944 and subsequent journey by “Death Train” to Auschwitz is another fraud. There was never such a doctor in Hungary during the period involved and the alleged route of the train from Budapest to Auschwitz did not exist.
[snip]
Propaganda is wonderful thing. Did you see the color photographs of Hitler that were on the web this past week? Did you see that latest WWII movie with heroic Jewish men fighting Nazis? Did you see the WWII movie with heroic Jews before that one? The one before THAT one? Can you say "endless media manipulation"?
Let's take a moment and recall the Palestinian children burned with white phosphorous weapons by Israel, supplied by the USA. Atrocities, nay, GENOCIDE, taking place THIS VERY DAY and not sixty years ago and coated with layer after layer of propaganda, lies and falsehood.
The Diary of Anne Frank, very touching. I've visited the dwelling the story took place in. Very moving. Change your perspective and it's yet another piece in a large, organized campaign for Israel, which, at best, is a religious psychopathic state without declared borders, with an undeclared and unmonitored nuclear ARSENAL.
Where are the human skin tattoos and the human fat soap? Where are the ground-sensing radar images of mass graves at the "death camps"? Why is the US government utterly in the sway of Israel, A FOREIGN COUNTRY? Do not be afraid to ask questions. Google "USS Liberty" which is where I began questioning.
If such a thing existed, and we all know that it does not, what would "Zionist media manipulation" look like?
Gordon wrote in one of his posts:
How many things do you need (given comfy, safe shelter)? What are they?
bed
personal care items
running H2O ought to be a given
clothes and some means to clean them (inc shoes)
your "papers," like insurance, birth certificate, passport, license
cup, dish, spork, chopsticks
food box or refrigerator
heat to cook with (or not)"
it's shame Anne Frank couldn't enjoy such needs!
I'm sorry that Gordon Wagner's post defaced your beautiful tribute to Anne Frank.
I've never seen anything written by a holocaust denier before this. Chilling in its hatred and evil.
denese
I visited the attic in 1999 with my boyfriend (now husband) who is Dutch. It was...moving. Hard to describe how I felt.
...you did justice to this gifted writer and her heart rending story with your very sensitive remembrance.
None of us can be reminded too often of just how disgusting human beings can sometimes be to other human beings. Anne, via her diary, reminds us in ways that not very many other people can.
Thank you for keeping GW's comments instead of deleting it. It just shows that hatred in whatever form is still ugly, cruel, and base.
She was a wonderful writer, and her hope keeps many alive to this day, I am convinced.
Oddly enough, as an adult, I was struck anew by Anne Frank's power, when Whoopi Goldberg did a one-woman show, a series of monologues, and one of her characters was a thief and dope fiend: Fontaine. Fontaine ends up in Amsterdam, and amidst fun and boredom and silliness, lands at the AF House, where he's struck nearly dumb at Anne's statement: ''In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." And I cried.
If you hadn't heard of it, you may interested in a mid-90's indie album made by Neutral Milk Hotel (yes, actual band name) called "In the Aeroplane Over the Sea." It was inspired by Anne Frank's diary. I posted about this album a while back in one of my music posts.
Lyric, Melody, & Milk...Neutral That Is
I'm sorry Lea (I know how to spell you name, I was just sort of rattled by GW's post and lost my mind) I should let you respond to these comments in your own blog post....
I am just disgusted.
denese
I
How will the world discover the Anne Frank of this era?
Children of 13 are usually spared the horror of murder.
There is a sickness of mind I cannot begin to understand out there in the dark, frightening corners of the delusional world.
Makes me sad and sick.
denese
That's not to say that there was anything human about it.
Were that not the case...
Auschwitz is indeed a blight on humanity, a stain on our collective conscience, and the most potent symbol of the most unappealing aspects of European civilisation. But that is precisely why it is potent: because it WAS a very human affair; because it was run by humans, many like you and me, caught in the slipstream of a perverted ideological fantasy. It was very human, from the precision of its mechanisms to the peculiar (and arguably unique) barbarity of which we alone are capable. The camps might have been singular in their scale, in their mad logic and in their callous disregard for human life--but those are singularly human attributions. They epitomised the best (the regularity and precision of schedules, queues, etc.) and the worst (tyranny, oppression, genocide) of the human condition. But a part of our condition it remains. We insufficiently commemorate the atrocities of Nazi Germany without their context, nor indeed outwith its historical precedents. (The Japanese inflicted its own brand of wanton barbarity across Asia; concentration camps were pretty much invented during the Boer War; nor was the concept of extermination unknown in the Americas pre-1930s; the genocide in Rwanda was more crude, yet more efficient, killing people at a rate far faster than the Nazis ever could...)
Auschwitz is the reminder of the dark underbelly of Man--at his most vain, most cruel, most banal (in that much-abused formulation since Hannah Arendt) and most excessive...its horrors are devoid of meaning if we ignore the more troubling questions it raises about the worst side of humanity.
CNN also had a chilling note about a gov't (I think FBI) report that one of the most dangerous risks for domestic terrorism and violence were white male supremacists as they are likely to be isolated individuals rather than part of organized groups, and so it's hard to identify them and/or their plans for violence in advance and prevent the harm.
And Rene, you are eloquent.
RATED
Visiting the Anne Frank house in Amsterdam shattered me. I think her story brought home to so many little girls of our era that we could be vulnerable but that we also had the duty to fight, and talk back.
Monitoring domestic terrorist groups is undoubtedly vital, but in the end, a rogue individual is nearly impossible to defend against. Our only defense is social bravery and determination to never waiver in our commitment to protect the basic rights of man, and when tragic events happen as they did today, that we pick ourselves up, and carry forward with heavy hearts yes, but with hearts renewed with spirit that we will not allow such evil to defeat us.
Joan, I remember that incident, and was so thankful of your response then. I had flagged a comment on that misguided post as antisemitic, and also retorted. It was "subtle" but dogged with a long "subtle" thread that became not so subtle (and in few cases, overt, with no rebukes by others) and I couldn't deal with it anymore. Intelligent people sometimes go over the line and maybe without even realizing it, into the darker side. They always refute the charge. I hope they look way inside their hearts and think about it.
I can't believe people still deny the Holocaust happened. I am glad that Obama made a point of saying that those people who deny it are ignorant. That was bold and especially to say it in the Mideast.
Deniers are anti-semites, period.
She has always been our most eloquent conscience on the evil of the Holocaust. Her life was tragically cut short, her legacy of remembrance and Never Again will, I hope, live forever. Thank you for this equally eloquent reminder.
Re: Gordon's comment - The first part of his comment in which he denies the Holocaust and the authenticity of Anne Frank et al is abhorrent. The Holocaust is an undeniable historical fact and one of the great crimes in history.
When he mentions the Gaza massacre by Israel, however, he is, I'm afraid, speaking truth.
I haven't made a study of the Holocaust deniers phenomenon, but I will venture this hunch: there are those who look at the way that the state of Israel has and continues to treat Palestinians and they find it impossible to imagine that a people who were subjected to genocide could possibly do the same sort of thing to other people. Ergo, they come to believe that the Holocaust must not have happened.
It is also possible, of course, for someone to be absolutely wrong about one thing and completely right about something else. I think that Gordon's remarks fall roughly into that category.
Thank you for keeping her alive.
I can't believe you received hate comments for this Lea. I'm almost loathe to find them because then I will want to pursue it and get in a scramble with a loser. But if anymore come your way, please notify me. I don't want to see you shouldering that kind of hatred alone. Ridiculous.
In the mid 70's my sister was in Amsterdam and I was in Italy and we met at the Anne Frank house. We had read her diary many many times; seen the B'way play and yet were so shocked and moved at the remains of her hiding place that first I and then my sister started sobbing AND COULD NOT STOP.
This is not typical of us and in fact I think we abetted each other as we do when one starts laughing inaapropriately and the other catches it.
Not that our sobbing was in the least inappropriate but when we could not stop, a few of the women working there asked if we wanted to sit or even lie down. We shook our wet heads. Went on sobbing. Then we overheard quite a few lamenting our 'losses". As in: "Poor girls, they must have lost so many." or "God, obviously they lost their families." These comments were loud and so in a flash... we went from uncontrollable crying to crazy laughter which convinced those around us that our losses make us crazy. We laughed so hard at the comments, at ourselves, that we ended up out on the streets knowing we'd never go again to see where Anne Frank and family spent their last many months. Too emotional. Or not emotional enough?
I have never been to Anne's hiding place. I do wan to tell you a story about it. I have lived in Europe and been to a couple of the camps. When a friend who worked for Motorola was doing a lot of overseas traveling he had stopped at our shop to have some work done on his car. He would talk for hours to my husband about things. I worked with him at one one when I was doing adult ed at our church.
When I realized through my husband that when he was traveling he only would go to his appointments and not venture out to see any of the cities he would visit, I was amazed. My husband told me he had tried to understand this but could not. So the next time he came in he was heading out again, this time to Amsterdam. I was there at the shop and I engaged him about the upcoming trip. He told me that he usually stayed in his hotel room. I told him it was okay to venture out. He would not get lost, most people speak English, that he could arrange a tour through the concierge at the hotel. I told him that if he started getting acquainted with some of the people and places and history of the places he was visiting, it actually might make his business better, and his trips more interesting. I told him it was okay to take advantage of this kind of experience otherwise he might feel someday he wasted it a bit. So he asked me what about Amsterdam, where to visit. I told his about Anne's hiding place. He was interested. I had taught a class about Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and also brought the class to the local synagogue to hear the Rabbi speak about their worship environment and touch on some holocaust issues as well. He did visit and was forever changed. Each successive city became his history lesson and each time became the richer for it. When he finally left Motorola, he had the courage to strike out on his own with connections he made all over the world and what he learned in our tiny shop. He still comes to my husband for business advice and to me he talks non stops of all that he has seen. I had to share this with you, because for him, it started with Anne. R