What Did Anne Frank Have
Against Americans?
The book I had been reading was so interesting
that I had finished it ahead of schedule, and the book I had ordered had not
yet arrived. I began searching our
empty nest for something to tide me over. What caught my eye in one of my sonsÕ
vacated bedroom was the small volume, Anne
Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl. Later
I discovered that it had been assigned reading in the eighth grade, and the
class was even shown the movie based on the book.
Perfect.
ItÕs relatively short, I had never read even one page of it, and here
was the chance for me to catch up with the millions of other people who have
read it. With my interests and
experiences I thought I might pick up on a thing or two that those who are
reading it in school, and even those who are assigning it, might not have
noticed. I think, maybe, I did.
Where Are the Americans?
Call me chauvinistic, but it struck me that Miss
Frank gives us Americans extraordinarily short shrift for all that we did to
liberate the people of Western Europe from the clutches of the Nazis. My sensitivity on this issue might have been
heightened by the fact that this spring I had my first opportunity to visit Omaha
Beach in France and hear a French guide at the huge American cemetery tell the
life stories of some of our young people who were buried there.
Now I know that Frank was young and can be
excused for not knowing a whole lot—her diary begins when she was 13 and
ends when she was 15—but otherwise the writing in AnneÕs diary seems to
be that of one far advanced over a girl in her early teens, especially in
matters of politics. The problem,
to get right down to it, is that she gives the reader the impression that the
British are doing all the fighting against the Germans and that her big hope
for being liberated is with those British.
One would think that after Dunkirk even the most poorly informed Dutch
schoolgirl would know that any hope for their rescue from the Germans lay not
with the British, but with the far more powerful Americans, but not,
apparently, Miss Frank.
I have gone through the book and noted every
mention of the Americans and the British in the war effort. The United States officially entered the
war in December of 1941 in the wake of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, but
we did not get into actual land fighting on the Western front when we landed
troops in North Africa in support of the British on November 8, 1942. The diary begins on June 14, 1942. `
October 9, 1942
Just recentlyÉa poor old crippled Jewess was
sitting on her doorstep; she had been told to wait there by the Gestapo, who
had gone to fetch a car to take her away.
The poor old thing was terrified by the guns that were shooting at English planes overhead, and by the
glaring beams of the searchlights.
November 9, 1942
The biggest surprise came from Mr. Van Daan
when, at one oÕclock, he announced that the British had landed in Tunis,
Algiers, Casablanca, and Oran.
ÒThis is the beginning of the end,Ó everyone was saying, but Churchill,
the British Prime Minister, who had
probably heard that same thing in England
said: ÒThis is not the end. It is
not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the
beginning.Ó Do you see the
difference? There is certainly
reason for optimism. Stalingrad,
the Russian town which theyÕve already been defending
for three months, still hasnÕt fallen into German handsÉ
P.S.
The news has just come over the radio that Algiers has fallen. Morocco, Casablanca, and Oran have been
in British hands for several
days. Now weÕre waiting for Tunis.
January 13, 1943
And every night thousands of planes fly over Holland
and go to German towns, where the earth is so plowed up by their bombs, and
every hour hundreds of thousands of people are killed in Russia and
Africa. No one is able to keep out
of it, the whole globe is waging war and although it is going better for the Allies, the end is not yet in
sight.
April 27, 1943
The Carlton Hotel is smashed to bits. Two British
planes loaded with incendiary bombs fell right on top of the ÒOffiziersheimÓ
(officersÕ club). The whole
Vijzelstraat-Singel corner is burned down.
The air raids on German towns are growing in strength every day. We donÕt have a single quiet night.
May 18, 1943
I witnessed a terrific air battle between German
and British planes. Unfortunately a couple of the Allies had
to jump from burning machines. Our milkman,
who lives in Halfweg, saw four Canadians sitting by the roadside,
one of them spoke fluent Dutch. He
asked the milkman to give him a light for his cigarette and told him that the
crew had consisted of six men. The
pilot was burned to death, and their fifth man had hidden himself
somewhere. The German police came
and fetched the four perfectly fit men.
I wonder how they happened to have such clear brains after that
terrifying parachute trip.
July 11, 1943
I am really curious to know what will come of it
all, but I donÕt think the plan will come off because the British have landed in Sicily now and Daddy is once again hoping
for a Òquick finish.Ó
August 3, 1943
Political news
excellent. In Italy the Fascist party has been
banned. The people are fighting the
Fascists in many places—even the army is actually taking part in the
battle. Can a country like that
wage war against England?
August 18, 1943
Mrs. Van Daan searches for another subject. ÒI say, Putti, why arenÕt there any English air raids now?Ó
ÒBecause the weather is bad, Kerli.
ÒBut it was lovely yesterday, and they didnÕt
fly then either.Ó
ÒLetÕs not talk about it.Ó
September 10, 1943 (First mention of
Americans)
Last Wednesday evening, 8 September, we sat
around listening to the seven oÕclock news and the first thing we heard was:
ÒHere follows the best news of the whole war. Italy has capitulated!Ó ItalyÕs
unconditional surrender! The Dutch
program from England began at quarter past eight. ÒListeners, an hour ago, I had just
finished writing the chronicle of the day when the wonderful news of ItalyÕs
capitulation came in. I can tell
you that I have never deposited my notes in the wastepaper basket with such
joy!Ó ÒGod Save the King,Ó the American national anthem, and the
ÒInternationaleÓ were played. As
always, the Dutch program was uplifting, but not too optimistic.
February 3, 1944
All the newspapers are full of the invasion and
are driving people mad by saying that ÒIn the event of the English landing in Holland, the Germans will do all they can to
defend the country; if necessary they will resort to flooding.Ó With this, maps
have been published, on which the parts of Holland that will be under water are
marked. As this applies to large
parts of Amsterdam, the first question was, what shall
we do if the water in the streets rises to one meter? The answers given by different people
vary considerably.
(Also on this date, a debate between men in the
Frank Òsecret annexÓ and a contact outside the annex, Henk Van Santen):
S.A.: ÒWe have all been through it ourselves,
first in Germany, and then here.
And what is going on in Russia?Ó
H: ÒYou mustnÕt include the Jews. I donÕt think anyone knows what is going
on in Russia. The English and the Russians are sure to
exaggerate things for propaganda purposes, just like the Germans.Ó
S.A.: ÒOut of the question. The English
have always told the truth over the wireless. And I suppose they do exaggerate the
news, the facts are bad enough anyway, because you canÕt deny that many
millions of peace-loving people were just simply murdered or gassed in Poland
and Russia.Ó
March 27, 1944
Just as if the German Wehrmacht news bulletins
and the English B.B.C. were not
enough, they have now introduced ÒSpecial Air-Raid Announcements.Ó In one word, magnificent; but on the other hand often
disappointing, too. The British are making a non-stop business
of their air attacks, with the same kind of zest as the Germans make a business
of lying. The radio therefore goes
on early in the morning and is listened to at all hours of the day, until nine,
ten, and often eleven oÕclock in the eveningÉ
Ugh!
It gets so boring, and itÕs quite a job not to become a dull old stick
oneself. Politics canÕt do much
more harm to the parents!
I must mention one shining exception—a
speech by our beloved Winston Churchill
is quite perfect.
March 29, 1944
How scared the ladies are during the air
raids. For
instance, on Sunday, when 350 British
planes dropped half a million kilos of bombs on Ijmuiden, how the houses
trembled like a wisp of grass in the wind, and who knows how many epidemics now
rage.
May 16, 1944
Just for a change, as we havenÕt talked about
them for so long, I want to tell you a little discussion that went on between
Mr. and Mrs. Van Daan yesterday.
Mrs. Van Daan: ÒThe Germans are sure to have
made the Atlantic Wall very strong indeed, they will certainly do all in their
power to hold back the English. ItÕs amazing how strong the Germans
are!Ó
Mr. Van Daan: ÒOh, yes, incredibly.Ó
Mrs. Van Daan: ÒYe-es.Ó
Mr. Van Daan: ÒThe Germans are so strong theyÕre
sure to win the war in the end, in spite of everything!Ó
Mrs. Van Daan: ÒItÕs quite possible, IÕm not
convinced of the opposite yet.Ó (Why not, if you leave the Americans out of the
mix? ed.)
May 22, 1944
The invasion still hasnÕt come yet; itÕs no
exaggeration to say that all Amsterdam, all Holland, yes, the whole west coast
of Europe, right down to Spain, talks about the invasion day and night, debates
about it, and makes bets on it, andÉhopes.
The suspense is rising to a climax. By no means everyone we regarded as
ÒgoodÓ Dutch have stuck to their faith in the English; by no means everyone thinks the English bluff a masterly piece of strategy, oh no, the people want
to see deeds at last, great, heroic deeds.
Nobody sees beyond his own nose, no one thinks that the English are fighting for their own land
and their own people, everyone thinks that itÕs their duty to save Holland, as
quickly and as well as they can.
What obligations have the English towards us? How
have the Dutch earned the generous help that they seem so explicitly to
expect? Oh no, the Dutch will have
made a big mistake, the English, in
spite of all their bluff, are certainly no more to blame than all the other
countries, great and small, which are not under occupation. The English
really wonÕt offer us their apologies, for even if we do reproach them for
being asleep during the years the other countries, especially those bordering
Germany, also slept. We shanÕt get
anywhere by following an ostrich policy.
England and the whole world
have seen that only too well now, and that is why, one by one, England, no less than the rest, will
have to make heavy sacrifice.
No country is going to sacrifice its men for
nothing and certainly not in the interests of another. England
is not going to do that either. The
invasion, with liberation and freedom, will come sometime, but England and America will appoint the day, not all the occupied countries put
together.
June 6, 1944
ÒThis is D-Day,Ó came the announcement over the English news and quite rightly, Òthis
is the day.Ó The invasion has begun!
The English
gave the news at eight oÕclock this morning: Calais, Boulougne, Le Havre, and
Cherbourg, also the Pas de Calais (as usual), were heavily bombarded. Moreover, as a safety measure for all
occupied territories, all people who live within a radius of thirty-five
kilometers from the coast are warned to be prepared
for bombardments. If possible, the English will drop pamphlets one hour
beforehand.
According to German news, English parachute troops landed on the French coast, English landing craft are in battle
with the German Navy, says the B.B.C.
We discussed it over the ÒAnnexeÓ breakfast at
nine oÕclock: Is this just a trial landing like Dieppe two years ago?
English broadcast in German,
Dutch, French, and other languages at ten oÕclock: ÒThe invasion has begun!Ó
that means the ÒrealÓ invasion. English broadcast in German at eleven
oÕclock, speech by Supreme Commander, General
Dwight Eisenhower. (An Englishman? ed.)
The English
news at twelve oÕclock in English: ÒThis is D-day,Ó General Eisenhower said to the French people: ÒStiff fighting will
come now, but after this the victory.
The year 1944 is the year of complete victory; good luck.Ó
English news in English at one
oÕclock (translated): 11,000 planes stand ready, and are flying to and fro
non-stop, landing troops and attacking behind the lines; 4000 landing boats,
plus small craft, are landing troops and materiel between Cherbourg and Le
Havre incessantly. English and American troops are already engaged in hard fighting. Speeches by Gerbrandy, by the Prime
Minister of Belgium, King Haakon of Norway, De Gaulle of France, the King of England, and last, but not
least, Churchill.
June 9, 1944
Super news of the
invasion. The Allies
have taken Bayeux, a small village on the French coast, and are now fighting
for Caen. ItÕs obvious that they
intend to cut off the peninsula where Cherbourg lies. Every evening war correspondents give
news from the battle front, telling us of the difficulties, courage, and
enthusiasm of the army; they manage to get hold of the most incredible
stories. Also some of the wounded who are already back in England again came to the
microphone. The air force is up all
the time in spite of the miserable weather. We heard over the B.B.C. that Churchill wanted to land with the
troops on D-Day, however, Eisenhower
and the other generals managed to get him out of the idea. Just think of it, what pluck he has for
such an old man—he must be seventy at least.
June 13, 1944
Yesterday, Churchill,
Smuts, Eisenhower, and Arnold visited French villages
which have been conquered and liberated. The torpedo boat that Churchill was in shelled the
coast. He appears, like so many
men, not to know what fear is—makes me envious!
ItÕs difficult for us to judge from our secret
redoubt how people outside have reacted to the news. Undoubtedly people are pleased that the
idle (?) English have rolled up
their sleeves and are doing something at last. Any Dutch people who still look down on
the English, scoff at England and her government of old
gentlemen, call the English cowards,
and yet hate the Germans deserve a good shaking. Perhaps it would put some sense int
their wooly brains.
The Impression
Two main thoughts are likely to come to those
who have read the foregoing carefully.
One is that the primary source of information on the progress of the war
for Anne and her family was the British Broadcasting Company. She makes numerous references to its
radio broadcasts. That might
explain her heavy bias towards the British, one might think.
But think about it a bit more. To be sure, if the British are good at
anything, it is propaganda. They
are the absolute masters of it. It
would hardly have been in their interests for them to downplay the role of the
Americans in the war. To the
contrary, if anything it was in their interests to exaggerate what the
Americans were doing. As we noted
at the beginning, after Dunkirk the confidence of the occupied Western
Europeans in the British would have been at low ebb, as would German fear of
them. We can see it in some of the
passages that show the attitude of many of AnneÕs fellow Dutch toward them. The vastly stronger Americans were the
big brother with the big stick. British war interests were best served
by persuading both friend and foe that it was the Americans who were doing most
of the fighting and because of that there was no way
the Allies could lose. The British
would have been very foolish not to have played that card for all that it was
worth, and, as we suggested, when it comes to propaganda they are anything but
foolish.
The second thought that anyone with the least
bit of an open mind is certain to have had is that none of this sounds like
anything we have ever heard from a person in his or her early teens. To say that she was just an
extraordinarily precocious girl sounds to me a lot like rationalization. If she was so politically sharp and
tuned in to what was going on with the war, how did she manage to overlook the
overwhelming importance of the Americans in it?
For those who have no skepticism at all that
this was the work of a young girl, I present, in its entirety, her reaction to
the attempted assassination of Adolf Hitler, which occurred shortly after Anne
celebrated her 15th birthday:
July 21, 1944
Now I am getting really hopeful, now things are
going well at last. Yes, really,
theyÕre going well! Super
news! An attempt has been made on
HitlerÕs life and not even by Jewish communists or English capitalists this
time, but by a proud German general, and whatÕs more, heÕs a count, and still
quite young. The FuhrerÕs life was
saved by Divine Providence and, unfortunately, he managed to get off with just
a few scratches and burns. A few
officers and generals who were with him have been killed and wounded. The chief culprit was shot.
Anyway, it certainly shows that there are lots
of officers and generals who are sick of the war and would like to see Hitler
descend into a bottomless pit. When
theyÕve disposed of Hitler, their aim is to establish a military dictator, who
will make peace with the Allies, then they intend to rearm and start another
war in about twenty yearsÕ time.
Perhaps the Divine Power tarried on purpose in getting him out of the
way, because it would be much easier and more advantageous to the Allies if the
impeccable Germans kill each other off; itÕll make less work for the Russians
and the English and theyÕll be able to begin rebuilding their own towns all the
sooner.
But still, weÕre not that far yet, and I donÕt
want to anticipate the glorious events too soon. Still, you must have noticed, this is
all sober reality and that IÕm in quite a matter-of-fact mood today; for once,
IÕm not jabbering about high ideals.
And whatÕs more, Hitler has even been so kind as to announce to his faithful,
devoted people that from now on everyone in the armed forces must obey the
Gestapo, and that any soldier who knows that one of his superiors was involved
in this low, cowardly attempt may shoot the same on the spot, without
court-martial.
What a perfect shambles itÕs going to be. Little JohnnieÕs feet begin hurting him
during a long march, heÕs snapped at by his boss, the
officer. Johnnie grabs his rifle
and cries out: ÒYou wanted to murder the Fuhrer, so thereÕs your reward.Ó One
bang and the proud chief who dared to tick off little Johnnie has passed into eternal life (or is it eternal death?). In the end, whenever an officer finds
himself up against a soldier, or having to take the lead, heÕll be wetting his
pants from anxiety, because the soldiers will dare to say more than they do. Do you gather a bit what I mean, or have
I been skipping too much from one subject to another? I canÕt help it; the prospect that I may
be sitting on school benches next October makes me feel far too cheerful to be
logical! Oh, dearie me, hadnÕt I
just told you that I didnÕt want to be too hopeful? Forgive me,
they havenÕt given me the name Òlittle bundle of contradictionsÓ all for
nothing!
I should say!
The Explanation
But what could this apparent inauthenticity of
the diary and the overplaying of the British role in the war at the expense of
the Americans have to do with one another?
See the following passage from Robert FaurissonÕs
interview
of AnneÕs father, Otto Frank, the man who brought the diary forward and had it
published in 1947:
I only once saw him lose his
temper and show himself to be uncompromising and violent; that was in regard to
the Zionist cause, which must seem sacred to him. It was in that manner that he
declared to me that he no longer even sets foot on the soil of France because,
in his opinion, France is no longer interested in anything except Arab oil and
doesn't care about Israel.
In 1947, the fate of the Zionist
cause lay completely in the hands of the British, who had been given control
over Palestine by the League of Nations in the wake of World War I. To the proper fanatic Zionist, British
public opinion meant everything at the end of World War II, when the diary was
most likely put together. There was
no obvious reason at that point to curry favor with the Americans. That currying favor was what the book
was all about is also indicated by the fact that the diary sounds almost like
it was written by a Christian instead of a Jew, much less a Jew who had
attended a Jewish school. The
Franks make a big fuss over Christmas and even Easter and Good Friday, but the
only Jewish holiday we hear about is Chanukah, and that is only because it came
so close to St. Nicholas Day on December 7, 1942. Important Jewish holidays like Passover,
Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur are never mentioned.
The first light and somewhat
equivocal plug for Zionism is in the entry for June 30, 1942, before the family
had gone to the secret annex. At
that point the notion of establishing a state just for Jews in the already
heavily populated Palestine was still a hard sell with a lot of people, not the
least of whom were the Jews themselves. It is AnneÕs crush of the moment named
Harry speaking:
From now on I shall be free on Wednesday evenings. Officially I go to wood-carving
lessons to please my grandparents, in actual fact I go to a meeting of the
Zionist Movement. IÕm not supposed
to, because my grandparents are very much against the Zionists. IÕm by no means a fanatic, but I have a
leaning that way and find it interesting.
But lately it has become such a mess there that IÕm going to quit, so
next Wednesday will be my last time.
On occasion the diary also mentions older sister
MargotÕs plan to immigrate to Palestine after the war, but the slyest Zionist
plug is in one sentence on May 11, 1944: ÒNext week I have got to read Palestine at the Crossroads and the
second part of [Galileo] Galilei.Ó
Palestine at the Crossroads is a very pro-Zionist book
written in 1937 by a Scotsman by the name of Ernest Main. * His principal argument is that Jews
would bring modernization to PalestineÕs agriculture, permitting the region to
sustain a much larger population. It is a most unlikely choice of
reading material for a 15-year-old girl.
One canÕt say that it was a case of that or nothing among the limited
books available in their hiding place because she speaks of outsiders bringing
them books from the library. One
might wonder if there was even a Dutch or German translation of the book
available, and it is highly doubtful that Anne would have been able to read it
in English.
Britain was the battleground for the Zionist
cause at the time. Jewish
terrorists had assassinated anti-Zionist Secretary of State for the Colonies Lord Moyne in 1944. Jewish extremists had bombed the King David
Hotel
and they had sent letter bombs attempting to kill Foreign Secretary
Ernest Bevin
in 1946.
Those, and the ongoing attacks on British
soldiers and officials in Palestine, were the Zionist bullets to the British
head. It looks for all the world to this writer that the Diary of a Young Girl was the soft sell aimed at the British heart.
Having served that early purpose, the diary has
since evolved into one of ZionismÕs biggest worldwide hard sells. And as I read the TeacherÕs Guide for the book, assigned
in countless classrooms around the world, it does, indeed, appear that I have
noticed some things at the very heart of the bookÕs message that have escaped
the attention of these putative experts on The
Diary of Anne Frank.
* Zionism-advocacy book
though it might be, it still has some useful insights that look quite good in
retrospect, for instance:
It is the declared
Zionist policy that the Jews and the Arabs should co-operate together in the
development of Palestine without the domination of either by the other at any
time now or in the future. Not only do the Arabs not believe this, but it is their declared policy that they must remain in the
majority and that this majority must be expressed in any Legislative Council
that may at any time in the future come into existence. (pp.
266-267)
ItÕs pretty clear which of the two groups was
seeing things, or at least telling things, straight in the 1930s. See also how this passage jibes with the
British documents on Palestine assembled by Doreen Ingrams.
David Martin
August 11, 2015
Addendum
A correspondent has informed me that the Palestine at the Crossroads mentioned in
the diary was not the one written by Ernest Main but one of the same title written by the much better known writer Ladislas
Farago. ÒIt makes a difference,Ó he
writes, Òbecause FaragoÕs book is not a Zionist diatribe like MainÕs. It is a
journalistic account of both Arab and Jewish settlements in Palestine in 1936.
It is a valuable and impartial account (perhaps as much as one could be) that
was well received at the time. If one were to want to know what it was like to
live in Palestine, it would be an excellent source, which may account for
AnneÕs interest in the book.Ó
In response, it appears that the reader is right
in that I have the wrong book. It
was the first one to come up in a Google search of the title, and it didnÕt
occur to me to continue searching to see if there were another book from the
period with the same title. In
fact, the English title of FaragoÕs book was Palestine on the Eve. Sylvia
Patterson Iskander lists it in the appendix to her article, ÒAnne FrankÕs Reading,Ó by its Dutch title,
which she translates as ÒPalestine at the Crossroads,Ó although she has
FaragoÕs first name as ÒLaszlo.Ó
Whether or not the reader has characterized the
book accurately, though, is another matter. Here is the entire brief
review at Kirkus:
A journalist's account of several
months spent in Palestine, a growing storm center, where Jew and Arab are
struggling for land which each feels to be rightfully his. The author is
content to sketch briefly what he has seen without drawing conclusions or
offering constructive views on conditions. He gives a better picture of the Jew
than of the Moslem in that it is a fuller picture and a more intimate one. The influx of hundreds of rootless families who are as yet
disintegrated in their return to the home of their forefathers. [sic] On the whole the book is flimsy. The author travels
here and there -- meets this potentate and that, but seems to lack any real
insight into either race or their respective problems.
One might also take issue with the
claim that it is Ònot a Zionist diatribe.Ó The book can be found online here. It begins:
On April 15th, 1936, revolver shots were fired
in Jaffa. Eight Jews who had unsuspectingly walked over from the
neighbouring Jewish town of Tel Aviv on the way to their places of employment,
returned to Tel Aviv lifeless on stretchers. The shots were not quite
unexpected. For years, unrest amongst the Arab population of Palestine
had been brewing; The Arabs regard the Jews as intruders and accuse England of
breaking her promises to them.
On page 121 we have this passage:
Out of the low, dark houses the men now brought
their wives. Hitherto I had seen only veiled Arab women, but on the land
the veil is not worn, and so at last I was in a position to form an opinion of
their aesthetic qualities. When I saw their unveiled faces I came to the
conclusion that the veils were, after all, an improvement! Amongst the
eighty women and girls I could hardly discover a single one with the least
claim to beauty.
And in the chapter entitled ÒThe Father of
ZionismÓ we have this passage on pp. 130-131:
ÉIn the campaign which Jews
carry on for Palestine no weapons are employed; the opportunities of
livelihood for the Jews are not created by ruthless might, but bought with
money. Here a land is being built up in the same way that hospitals in
England are maintained — by charityÉWith this money are obtained the
requisites for a Jewish colony; lands are bought and settled.
From my admittedly cursory review of the book I
canÕt help but conclude that a devoted Zionist would be more than happy for
someone to read the Farago book and that my mistaking the Ernest Main book for
it does no real damage to my point, that is, that it might have well been
thrown in gratuitously as a Zionist plug.
David Martin
April 26, 2016
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