The Holocaust Project: Anne Frank’s Home
The Holocaust Project Gallery.
This webpage includes photography by Tami Rae Weiss from events and engagements of “The Holocaust Project” with survivor, Eva Schloss.
Anne Frank’s Former Home - Merwedeplein 37, Amsterdam
June 12, 2017 - The 75th Anniversary of Anne Frank’s Diary
Merwedeplein, Amsterdam (1931)
Anne Frank, age 11.
Anne and Eva met at Merwedeplein.
Anne Frank’s family and Eva Geiringer’s family were Jewish refugees living at Merwedeplein in Amsterdam during World War II. Eva Geiringer and Anne Frank were the same age (11), and they played together with a group of friends in the open courtyard between their apartments. Following the German invasion of the Netherlands in 1940, both families found they had no other option than to go into hiding. From 1942-1944, the Frank family hid in the Secret Annex of Otto Frank’s company at Prinsengracht 263. The Geiringer family split up and spent two years among seven hiding places. The Geiringers were betrayed, captured, and sent to Auschwitz in May, 1944, followed by the Frank family, captured in August, 1944. Anne’s father Otto Frank was the only member of his family to survive the Holocaust. Only Eva and her mother survived of the Geiringer family. Eva’s mother and Anne’s father returned to Amsterdam, where, over a period of time, they fell in love. Otto Frank and Elfriede Geiringer got married in 1953, making Anne and Eva step-sisters.
Eva Geiringer, age 11 .
Merwedeplein, Amsterdam (2017)
Tami Rae Weiss and her daughters, RaeLinne and Chloe, traveled to Amsterdam with their close friend and “Oma,” Eva Schloss, for the 75th anniversary of the day Anne Frank received her diary (June 12, 1942 - Anne’s 13th birthday). The media event was sponsored by The Anne Frank House organization, which granted permission to Weiss to photograph.
Thirteen young people, including Chloe and RaeLinne Weiss (Tami’s daughters), were invited to the Frank’s former home at Merwedeplein 37 with special guest, Eva Schloss, for the 75th anniversary of when Anne Frank received her diary (on her 13th birthday- June 12, 1941). The home is not open to the public.
Event: 75th anniversary of the day Anne Frank received her diary
© Photography by Tami Rae Weiss (2017). All Rights Reserved.
The film crew followed Eva Schloss to the Frank apartment, as she took Chloe and RaeLinne’s hands and walked and talked about what life was like for an 11-year-old refugee at Merwedeplein. Eva described the first time that she met Anne Frank in that open courtyard in the spring of 1940. As Eva was only just learning to speak Dutch when her family emigrated there (German was Eva’s native language), Anne escorted Eva to her house so that Eva could meet Anne’s father, Otto Frank, who would speak German with her.
Outside the Frank home (Merwedeplein 37, Amsterdam).
Inside the Frank Home.
On July 12, 2017, during the anniversary event of Anne Frank’s birthday when she received the diary, Eva spoke (in Dutch) to the Dutch children, while RaeLinne and Chloe Weiss were permitted to explore the home where Anne Frank had once lived. As they entered each room, they thought about being in the same spaces that Anne had been- the room in which Anne sat at her desk to write; the balcony from which Anne stood; the stairways she climbed; the bedroom that Anne shared with Margo, etc. Chloe and RaeLinne became much more aware that Anne Frank was a young girl just like them.
On the way out…
As everyone exited the Frank home, Eva stopped at the platform on the way down the stairs to tell RaeLinne that when she lived at Merwedeplein, she would often climb on and over the railing. RaeLinne was quick to try out the idea, were it not for her mom intervening (and snapping a photo).