Welcome to SomaliNet Forums, a friendly and gigantic Somali centric active community. Login to hide this block

You are currently viewing this page as a guest. By joining our community you will have the ability to post topics, ask questions, educate others, use the advanced search, subscribe to threads and access many, many other features. Registration is quick, simple and absolutely free. Join SomaliNet forums today! Please note that registered members with over 50 posts see no ads whatsoever! Are you new to SomaliNet? These forums with millions of posts are just one section of a much larger site. Just visit the front page and use the top links to explore deep into SomaliNet oasis, Somali singles, Somali business directory, Somali job bank and much more. Click here to login. If you need to reset your password, click here. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Letters From Anne Frank's Father Released !!!!!!

Daily chitchat.

Moderators: Moderators, Junior Moderators

Forum rules
This General Forum is for general discussions from daily chitchat to more serious discussions among Somalinet Forums members. Please do not use it as your Personal Message center (PM). If you want to contact a particular person or a group of people, please use the PM feature. If you want to contact the moderators, pls PM them. If you insist leaving a public message for the mods or other members, it will be deleted.
OUR SPONSOR: LOGIN TO HIDE
Daanyeer
SomaliNet Super
SomaliNet Super
Posts: 15781
Joined: Tue Aug 12, 2003 7:00 pm
Location: Beer moos ku yaallo .biyuhuna u muuqdaan

Letters From Anne Frank's Father Released !!!!!!

Postby Daanyeer » Thu Feb 15, 2007 3:19 pm

Source: www.cnn.com
February 14, 2007



Anne Frank's family hid in Amsterdam for more than two years before being arrested.

NEW YORK (AP) -- Anne Frank's father sent desperate letters to friends and family in the United States pleading for financial assistance to help the family escape from the Nazi-occupied Netherlands, according to papers released Wednesday.

"I would not ask if conditions here would not force me to do all I can in time to be able to avoid worse," Otto Frank wrote to his college friend Nathan Straus in April 1941. "It is for the sake of the children mainly that we have to care for. Our own fate is of less importance."

The letters, along with documents and records from various agencies that helped people immigrate from Europe, were released by the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.

The information documents how 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.

Frank wrote to relatives, friends and officials between April 30, 1941, and Dec. 11, 1941, when Germany declared war on the United States. He tried to arrange U.S. visas for his family before they went into hiding, but his efforts were hampered by restrictive immigration policies designed to protect national security, Holocaust experts said.

He referred to those problems in his letters.

"I know that it will be impossible for us all to leave even if most of the money is refundable, but Edith urges me to leave alone or with the children," he said in another letter to Straus.

Frank first applied for immigration visas to the U.S. for himself and his family in 1938, reviving his efforts in 1941 -- a move that may seem lax with what is now known about the Holocaust, but was logical to Frank at the time.

"He preferred what seemed to him like the nuisances that encumbered an otherwise comfortable life under Nazi occupation in the Netherlands to the insecurity of a life as a double refugee in a new country, even if a new country could have been found," said David Engel, a professor of Holocaust studies at New York University.

Frank was unable to secure passage to the U.S. There were nearly 300,000 names on a waiting list for an immigration visa. Also, since Frank had living relatives in Germany, he would have been unable to emigrate under strict immigration policies.

Frank's attempt to move his family mirrors thousands of German Jews, said Richard Breitman, an American University professor who focuses on German and American intelligence history.

"Frank's case was unusual only in that he tried hard very late -- and enjoyed particularly good or fortunate American connections. Still, he failed," Breitman said.

YIVO, a New York-based institution that focuses on the history and culture of Eastern European Jews, 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.

Frank's 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 Frank family's hiding place in a secret annex in an Amsterdam canal-side warehouse has been turned into a museum.

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.

The Anne Frank foundation hopes to obtain the papers, but there have been no discussions about that, said spokeswoman Teresien da Silva. "We'd like to have every original paper related to the Frank family. But we don't know what the outcome will be," she said.

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 Web site last week.

User avatar
Koronto91
SomaliNet Heavyweight
SomaliNet Heavyweight
Posts: 4191
Joined: Sat Aug 05, 2006 12:20 am
Location: Coney Island

Re: Letters From Anne Frank's Father Released !!!!!!

Postby Koronto91 » Thu Feb 15, 2007 3:23 pm

When are we going to see an end to Anne Frank's chronicles? Yes, she hid in her attic, yes it was horrible. But she is not the only victim of brutality. There are millions of slaves who built the Western hemisphere, but do you ever hear about them every year?

User avatar
Grant
SomaliNet Super
SomaliNet Super
Posts: 5845
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2005 1:43 pm
Location: Wherever you go, there you are.

Re: Letters From Anne Frank's Father Released !!!!!!

Postby Grant » Thu Feb 15, 2007 4:12 pm

So Koronto91, do you want Anne and the slaves forgotten ?

I don"t have any problem myself, remembering both. My real problem is that I know history we forget, as human beings we tend to repeat.

User avatar
Ugaas Diini
SomaliNet Heavyweight
SomaliNet Heavyweight
Posts: 4452
Joined: Mon Feb 28, 2005 1:04 am
Location: Dar Al-Islam

Re: Letters From Anne Frank's Father Released !!!!!!

Postby Ugaas Diini » Thu Feb 15, 2007 8:31 pm

Christian zionists are worse than jewish ones.

User avatar
Koronto91
SomaliNet Heavyweight
SomaliNet Heavyweight
Posts: 4191
Joined: Sat Aug 05, 2006 12:20 am
Location: Coney Island

Re: Letters From Anne Frank's Father Released !!!!!!

Postby Koronto91 » Thu Feb 15, 2007 8:45 pm

[quote="Grant"]So Koronto91, do you want Anne and the slaves forgotten ?

I don"t have any problem myself, remembering both. My real problem is that I know history we forget, as human beings we tend to repeat.[/quote]

Grant:

I want them both to be remembered equally, unfortunately Jews would like us to believe that they are the only victims of aggression in recent memory.


OUR SPONSOR: LOGIN TO HIDE

Hello, Has your question been answered on this page? We hope yes. If not, you can start a new thread and post your question(s). It is free to join. You can also search our over a million pages (just scroll up and use our site-wide search box) or browse the forums.

  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

Return to “General - General Discussions”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 60 guests