Anne Frank Foundation


The Anne Frank Foundation is a foundation in the Netherlands originally established to maintain the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam. This foundation also advocates the fight against antisemitism and racism and publishes the Dutch annual Monitor Racisme en Extreem-rechts, in which the activities of present-day racists and extreme rightists are studied.
Outside the Netherlands, the Anne Frank Foundation organizes expositions and information on Anne Frank.

History

When Otto Frank, the sole survivor, returned in June 1945, he tried to rebuild his companies and his life, but due to the war the property including the hiding place fell into disrepair. Otto lacked the ability to stop this until a group of prominent people of Amsterdam banded together to stop it. Thusly, the Anne Frank Stichting was founded on 3 May 1957 to prevent the tearing down of the house in Amsterdam in which Anne Frank was hidden since 1942 during the German occupation of the Netherlands in the Second World War. They intended to preserve the hiding place, open it up to the public, and promote her ideals.
In 1957, the Berghaus company which owned the building donated it to the organization. The rest of the attached building were also purchased fir at 350,000 guilders. The mayor of Amsterdam, Van Hall was involved as were the municipality and the University of Amsterdam to produce this funding. Thus the building was saved, restored, and on 3 May 1960 the Anne Frank house became a museum open to the public. Founding members included Otto Frank, Anne's father and resistance member Truus WIjsmuller-Meijer who remained on the board until 1975.
In an interview with Basler Magazin according to the Anne Frank website, Otto said about the mission of the organisation: "‘ the organisation’s work is not limited to managing the House. It was set up to increase awareness of the events of the dark years of the Second World War and the persecution of the Jews and to fight discrimination, prejudice, and oppression in the world today.’"
In 1992, the Foundation received the Geuzenpenning award and in 2022 the Cultuurfonds award of Prince Bernhard.
The director of the foundation was Hans Westra, who retired in 2011 and was followed by Ronald Leopold.

Controversies

  • Professor Arnold Heertje has repeatedly criticized the Anne Frank House in the media. In particular, he reproaches the foundation for "systematically distancing itself further and further from the historical facts of the story of the Jewish girl" - in particular by equating contemporary discrimination against non-Jews with the persecution of the Jews by using Anne Frank's name so emphatically - and that the foundation's activities "no longer have anything to do with the persecution of the Jews, but serve as food for commercial activities".
  • There is also criticism of researcher Willem Wagenaar of the Anne Frank House, who often appears in the media to explain new studies on the extreme or radical right. This is further compounded by his past as a left-wing activist. Wagenaar was sentenced to 6 months imprisonment for his role in the attack in Kedichem on members of another political party in 1986 on a political meeting in which a woman lost her leg. His squatter movement was also depicted as 'not shying away from violence'.
  • The Fond’s admission that Anne Frank’s father, Otto, was a co-author of the Diary, in furtherance of its effort to extend the duration of the copyright, raised loud protests among those who believe the decision brings with it an implication that the words on the pages of the book are not necessarily the sole thoughts of a teenaged girl. “If you follow their arguments, it means that they have lied for years about the fact that it was only written by Anne Frank,” French intellectual property attorney Agnès Tricoire told the New York Times.”