Countries, Europe

Anne Frank’s legacy 80 years on

You’re reminded of the anti-Semitism still sweeping the world and Anne Frank’s legacy 80 years on when you visit Amsterdam.

There are few young women who have had quite the impact the German-born, Dutch-raised teenager has had on the world.

It is difficult to envision the life Anne lived with her family and their friends in the cramped annexe in Westermarkt.

But visitors to the Anne Frank House can get a physical sense.

When entering through the false door and treading carefully through the attic.

Until they were given up by an informer on this day 80 years ago.

And the occupants were sent to concentration camps where all but her father Otto died.

The voice of Anne Frank

Somewhere over the rainbow: The inspirational Anne Frank

Many are struck by the claustrophobia, by the torn pictures of Hollywood idols of the day and flowers ripped from magazines on the walls.

Today’s visitors can also hear an actress narrate excerpts from Anne’s diary on headphones.

Something not afforded this visitor the first time I went to Anne Frank’s House 34 years ago.

It chronicles her diary, her many thoughts and observations.

Poster girl: Anne’s bedroom

Of her cloistered life one spoke right to this journalist’s heart.

‘I finally realised that I must do my schoolwork to keep from being ignorant, to get on in life, to become a journalist, because that’s what I want!’

That Anne would have gone on to become a renowned journalist is undoubtable.

That much is clear from her writings in her diary.

In the footsteps of history’s greats

žReflections: From Amsterdam

My peers and I shared that dream at her age.

And we managed to pursue that vocation for 36 years or more.

And it is something I have never taken for granted.

It has also afforded me the opportunity to travel the world.

And retrace the footsteps of the true great figures of history, like Anne.

Giant of a little girl: Anne Frank

Anne Frank’s House will, of course, remain a time capsule.

Of a Jewish family’s incarceration in an annexe in World War II.

But it has always served as an outreach programme to warn against the recurring threat of racism.

And visitors are drawn as they exit to boards and literature.

All of which reminds us that anti-semitism and racism is on the rise.

Amsterdam revisited

A house in time: The Anne Frank House in Amsterdam

It was a message I took away from Amsterdam on that first visit in 1990.

Little knowing that come my next trip, on what would have been her 90th birthday, that the situation would have worsened.

As we mark another landmark today it is timely to consider Anne Frank’s legacy 80 years on.

An open door: To Anne’s world

And profer the view that we should all revisit her story, visit her annexe in the biggest city in the Netherlands.

And consider how far we’ve come in the past 80 years from families holed up in annexes because of their faith.

To Muslims hiding in their mosques in today’s Britain.

 

 

 

America, Europe

Democrats voted Hitler

On this National Holocaust Day lest we forget democrats voted for Hitler.

And while we rightly have the notion of the Great Dictators ruling at the point of a bayonet and a pistol.

It was at the ballot box 90 years ago, on January 30, that the Nazis officially won power.

And if that’s not a reminder for us to constantly be vigilant about who we vote for.

And what checks we put on them then we will, and do, pay the consequences.

Chilling: Auschwitz

Now if you thought that your cosy country was immune to being taken over by megalomaniacs authoritarians.

Then that’s just what the Germans thought about Adolf Hitler back in 1933.

And they believed too that he could rid them of a greater Communist threat and then they could put him back in his box.

Nor should we be blindsided by the threat from within or without as the Germans were back in the 30s.

Seduced as they were by a sense of grievance, common bogeymen enemies within the State.

And a zenophobic hatred of foreigners.

Bavarian barbarity

The first: Dachau

Sound like Germany of the Thirties… and America of the late 2010s, Brazil now, Brexiteering Britain and a fascist stream in the French Far Right.

All touchpoints for us as we travel through history and the world.

My first introduction to holocaust history was as an offshoot to a very different holiday, the Munich Beerfest in the Eighties.

But Bavaria was where Hitler had his first putsch and where he installed his first concentration camp in Dachau in March 1933.

All under the noses of Bavarians going about their daily business.

While the ‘disreputables’ were packed away to what were presented to the rest of the world as holiday camps.

It is challenging tourism but vital and rewardingly now memorials are now marked across the globe.

With permanent Holocaust centres, the biggest being the Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, the Auschwitz Concentration Camp, the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin and the Anne Frank Huis in Amsterdam.

But also in towns and cities in every civilised country.

To remind us that racism exists on our doorstep too and genocide grows from unfettered populism.

Cry Freedom

Inspiration: Anne Frank

And that was driven home to me not in Germany, Poland or any of the major arenas of the Holocaust last year.

But in one of the most liberal states in America, the Commonwealth of Massachussets, and its capital Boston .

Where the New England Holocaust Memorial  stands next to the Freedom Trail.

And that marks the key points and figures in the American Revolutionary Story.

Alas, the openness which defines our free societies means that racist zealots can broadcast their vile racism.

As happened when neo-Nazis took a selfie of themselves and put it up on social media.

Of course that should never put civilised people off paying our respects wherever we are and steel ourselves.

Because lest we forget democrats voted for Hitler… we who are still democrats.