Miep Gies dies at the age of 100

haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
edited January 2010 in All Encompassing Trip
she died 2 days ago but I guess i'm behind in the news... didn't even know she had passed away until i read this in the paper this morning, glad to see she lived to a ripe old age - she deserved it... but unfortunate how she went and being so close to her 101st! :(

sorry if its a re-post, did a search retrieved nothing.

http://news.globaltv.com/search/Woman+s ... story.html
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THE HAGUE - Miep Gies, the woman who hid Dutch youngster Anne Frank from the Nazis and guarded her diary that became one of the world's most-read books, has died after a brief illness at the age of 100.


The Anne Frank Museum said that Gies, the last surviving helper of Anne and those who shared her hiding place in an Amsterdam canalside house, died in the western town of Hoorn on January 11.


It was Gies who guarded Anne's memoirs and presented it to the girl's father, Otto, when he returned from the Auschwitz concentration camp at the end of World War II — the only one of his family to survive.


In her diary, Anne Frank chronicled the details of her teenage life hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam from 1942 to 1944, when the Nazi secret police discovered her and her family's hiding place.


Anne and her sister later died at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.


The diary, first published in 1947, became one of the most renowned accounts of Jews hiding from Nazi persecution and has been translated into 70 languages.


Until she suffered a stroke a decade ago, Gies travelled around the world, giving lectures about the consequences of intolerance and anti-Semitism, according to the Anne Frank museum.


"Anne Frank expressed a great wish to live on after her death. Miep Gies saw it as her duty to help in making this happen," it said in a statement.


Born Hermine (Miep) Santruschitz in Vienna in 1909, Gies moved to the Netherlands at age 11.


In 1933, she began working for Otto Frank at his Opekta trading company.


At great risk to her own safety, she and four other helpers brought food and supplies to the Frank family and others hiding in a secret annex of Opekta's office building for more than two years.


When she turned 100 last February, Gies sought to play down her own role.


"I'm not a hero," she said. "It wasn't something I planned in advance, I simply did what I could to help."


She suffered a stroke at the age of 89 which seriously affected her speech and writing, and forced her to stop her activities.


On her 90th birthday, Gies bought a house with a garden in Hoorn, where she lived out the last years of her life. She celebrated her 100th birthday on February 15, last year.


A bad fall in mid-December left her with a severe neck injury, the Anne Frank Foundation said. She died of complications in a hospital in Hoorn on Monday night.


"Right until the end, Miep remained deeply involved with the remembrance of Anne Frank and spreading the message of her story," the museum statement said.


"Everyday she received letters from all over the world with questions about her relationship with Anne Frank and her role as a helper."


Gies received numerous honours for her role, including from the Netherlands, Germany and Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial centre.


"Of course it's nice to be appreciated. But I only did my duty to my fellow man. I helped people in need. Anyone can do that, can't they?" Gies once said.


Hundreds of people had made contributions to an online condolence register by lunchtime on Tuesday.


"Rest in peace. Your story reminds us of the nature of humanity," wrote 37-year-old Andrew Davis from London.


"She was humanity at its finest whilst surrounded by its worst," added Briton Garry Owens, 44.



Read it on Global News: Woman who saved Anne Frank's diary dead at 100
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Comments

  • Who PrincessWho Princess Posts: 7,305
    Saw this.
    She said that after finding Anne's diary and papers she put them away to give to her after the war. She never read them because she believed even teenagers were entitled to privacy. She also said that if she had read them, she would have had to destroy them because they had too many incriminating details about the people who helped the family.
    She and her husband also hid a university student in their home during the war.
    A very brave lady.
    "The stars are all connected to the brain."
  • igotid88igotid88 Posts: 27,818
    Saw this.
    She said that after finding Anne's diary and papers she put them away to give to her after the war. She never read them because she believed even teenagers were entitled to privacy. She also said that if she had read them, she would have had to destroy them because they had too many incriminating details about the people who helped the family.
    She and her husband also hid a university student in their home during the war.
    A very brave lady.

    yea she was.
    I miss igotid88
  • __ Posts: 6,651
    I heard about this a couple of days ago. I didn't even realize any of the people who helped the Frank family were still alive. She has such a powerful story as well & I'm glad to hear it. Thanks for posting. :)
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