Frank's Pleas for Help Released

Maria Grella
Maria Grella
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Time Magazine reported last week that desperate pleas for help from Anne Frank's father have been released. Otto Frank sent notes of despair seeking financial aid for his family to flee the Netherland
s, occupied by Nazis in 1941. The letters, sent from April 30th through December 11th, 1941 as Germany declared war on America, were released by the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.

Initially, the letters were in the custody of New York City's Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society. Eventually they were transferred to the YIVO Institute, along with other archives, in 1974. Based in New York, YIVO is an institution that focuses on the history and culture of Eastern European Jews. About a year and a half ago, a volunteer archivist uncovered the letters among 100,000 other Holocaust-related documents, but they were not public. Cathy Callegari, a spokeswoman for YIVO, said that the institute did not announce the findings in order to investigate copyright issues and other legalities. The origin of Frank's letters may never be known since they were mixed in with documents from various agencies in the HIAS archives.

Included with the letters were documents and records from agencies that helped European immigrants escape. Frank attempted to have wife Edith, daughters Margo and Anne, and mother-in-law Rosa Hollander flee to safety to the United States or Cuba, but failed due to restrictive laws. According to Holocaust experts, Otto attempted to gain U.S. visas for his family before going into hiding, but he was hindered by tight immigration policies that were designed to protect national security. He first filed in 1938, but revived his efforts in 1941. He joined nearly 300,000 names on a waiting list for an immigration visa. Frank may have been denied the application because he had living relatives in Germany, which under strict immigration policies wouldn't allow him and his family to emigrate.

  • Otto Frank sought financial aid from friends to help escape Nazi occupied land.
  • The letters were discovered by a volunteer archivist.
  • The Anne Frank Foundation hopes to obtain the letters.
 
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Very interesting bit of history. Thanks for sharing. What ashame though, a 300,000 waiting list. I loved the Anne Frank diary. I just wished it had ended differently.

Posted on 09/07/2007 at 12:09:00 PM

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