Episode 265: Miep Gies, Part Two

We left Miep right after she decided, with zero hesitation, that she would do whatever was necessary to keep the people in the attic safe as they hid from the Nazi persecution of the Jewish population.

For the next several years Miep would risk her life daily to fulfill that promise, and her Miep’s story is quite documented. One of the most important things she did was to collect from the annex and keep safe the writing collection of a 15-year-old Anne Frank until after the war. We know how she, Jan, and the other four helpers–Bep Voskuijl, Victor Kugler, Johan Klieman, and Johan Voskuijl– kept the Frank and Van Pel’s families, and Fritz Pfeffer safe for two years in the attic. In the slightly wider world, we know how the Nazi government captured, transported to concentration camps in other countries, tortured, and slaughtered millions of mostly Jewish people but also resisters, Black, Roma, and gay people… including all the former inhabitants of the secret annex with the lone exception of Otto Frank.

The time that Miep spent caring for those in hiding was not pleasant in Amsterdam, there was severe food shortages and more and more control by the Nazi military until, in 1945, the war ended and the rebuilding began. Otto Frank returned to Amsterda and moved in with Miep and Jan for the next seven years. He edited, published, defended, protected, and made sure that his daughter Anne’s legacy, her diary, was read and understood by as many people as possible throughout the world so that atrocities like this may never happen again.

Miep did what she could to support him until he passed away in 1980, then she took up his work until her death at 100 in 2010.

@annefrankhouse

When Otto Frank, Anne Franks father, received the news that Anne and Margot had died in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, helper Miep Gies was with him in the office. In this video, she explains how she gave Otto Frank the diaries of Anne Frank. She had saved these papers from the moment the people in hiding were arrested. #annefrank #miepgies #ottofrank #diary #legacy #woii #after

♬ origineel geluid – Anne Frank House – Anne Frank House

Miep said this of her work during the war: “My story is a story of very ordinary people during extraordinary times, times the like of which I hope with all my heart will never come again. It is for all of us ordinary people, all over the world, to see to it that they do not.”

Perhaps more than any other subject, this is not an exhaustive list of materials on Miep, Anne, the Holocaust, WWII…it’s simply the ones that we used and can recommend.

Miep’s memoir
Who betrayed the family? By Rosemary Sullivan (also in audiobook narrated by Julia Whelen)
One of three versions, this is the most recent, the Definitive Version
From Bep’s perspective by her son, Joop Van Wijk-Voskuijl

By Angela Wood
By Carol Ann Lee

By Corrie Ten Boom

By Tim Brady

By Nina Siegal

Kids books:

By Meeg Pincus, Illustrated by Jordi Solano
By Barbara Lowell, illustrated by Valentina Toro

There is a lot of resources on the websites of the Anne Frank House Museum in Amsterdam, and the Frank Family Center in Frankfurt, Germany.

Who owns Anne Frank’s work?

Final Solution explained from the US Holocaust Museum

Information on the young man who stayed with Miep and Jan, from James Madison University.

Life in Amsterdam during Nazi occupation from Defining Moments Canada (it was the Canadians who liberated Amsterdam.)

Carnation Day protest against the Nazi occupiers from Traces of War.

There were many investigations aimed at revealing the person who betrayed those hiding in the attic, the first one was only a year after the war ended. Here’s an article on one from Anne Frank House website.

1995 documentary based on Miep’s memoir

from 1988 starring Mary Steenburgen

The most recent adaptation of Miep’s memoir, currently on Disney+ (It’s very good)