Apology over Dutch book that claimed to identify
Anne Frank’s betrayer
Ambo Anthos says it will stop printing The Betrayal of
Anne Frank and admits more work is needed
Anne Frank famously kept a diary while in hiding in
Amsterdam. She was taken to Bergen-Belsen and died in February 1945.
Daniel
Boffey in Brussels
Mon 31 Jan
2022 17.43 GMT
A Dutch
publisher has apologised for a book that made headlines around the world by
identifying a Jewish notary as the prime suspect for the betrayal of Anne Frank
to the Nazis.
Ambo Anthos
has said that it had decided to suspend further prints of The Betrayal of Anne
Frank until there was more work done on the book’s central claims.
In a
statement, the publishing house said it now believed it had been carried away
by “momentum” around publication of the book and that it should have take a
more “critical” stance.
HarperCollins,
the US publisher which bought the English language rights to the book, were
said by Ambo Anthos to have “determined the [book’s] content”. HarperCollins
has been contacted for comment.
AdvertisementThe
Betrayal of Anne Frank, by Canadian author Rosemary Sullivan, is based on six
years of research gathered by a team led by retired FBI detective Vince
Pankoke.
The book
was published on 18 January with some fanfare, including a CBS 60 Minutes
programme.
But within
24 hours of publication, historians and researchers had raised doubts about the
central theory that Arnold van den Bergh, who died of throat cancer in 1950,
had probably led the police to the Frank family’s hiding place above a
canal-side warehouse in the Jordaan area of Amsterdam on 4 August 1944.
Critics
specifically questioned the evidence behind the claim that as a member of the
Jewish council in Amsterdam, an administrative body the German authorities
forced Jews to establish, Van den Bergh would probably have had access to the
places in which Jewish people were hiding.
Pieter van
Twisk, who was part of the investigating team behind the book, said the claims
made in the book had been appropriately caveated and that he was perplexed by
the publisher’s statement.
The book, a
result of a six-year investigation, suggests that Van den Bergh, who acted as
notary in the forced sale of works of art to prominent Nazis such as Hermann
Göring, had been forced by risks to his own life to use addresses of hiding
places as a form of life insurance for his family. Neither he nor his daughter
were deported to the Nazi camps.
Following
the arrest of the family, Anne was sent to Westerbork transit camp, and on to
Auschwitz concentration camp before finally ending up in Bergen-Belsen, where
she died in February 1945 at the age of 15, possibly from typhus. Her published
diary spans the period in hiding between 1942 and her last entry on 1 August
1944.
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