Add to the mysteries of Anne Frank's death, she was betrayed by a Jewish woman

A new book has found new evidence confirming that Anne Frank and her family had been betrayed by a Jewish woman who was executed after the war ended for her cooperation with the Nazis. The mystery of how the Franks family were found in a secret annex in a [...]
The mystery of how the Franks family were found in a secret annex at a building in Amsterdam in 1944 has troubled investigators and academics.
The involvement of Ans van Dijk, who had been executed in 1948 after cooperating in the arrest of 145 Nazis Jews, including her brother with his family. But the museum of Anne Frank's house and the research centre still has no conclusion regarding the new evidence.
The new evidence is the result of a book written by the son of a Dutch resistance member named Gerard Kremer, who has known Van Dijk in Amsterdam.
According to Kremer's book, who had died in 1978, he was the steward of an office building at the back of Prinsengracht in Westermark in Amsterdam, two floors taken away by German authorities and Dutch Nazi NSB organisations during the Netherlands occupation.
She was arrested in 1943 by the Nazi intelligence service also known as Sicerheitsdienst, Van Dijk became a regular visitor to the building, though in disguise. It would also use phones in offices, reports the Guardian”, broadcast Periscopi.
The book suggests that in August 1944, Kremer had overheard Van Dijk as part of a discussion with Nazi officials about Pryrengarch, where the Franks family had been hiding. Franks had been arrested on August 4th, while Van Dijk had fled to The Hague.
Anne had been hiding for two years in the anxiety hidden in the canal depot with her father, Otto, her mother, Edith, and her sister Margot.
The 15-year-old was sent to Westborn Camp, and then to Auschwitz before she ended up in Bergen-Bessen, where she dies as a result of her typhus disease in February 1945. Her journal was written between 1942 and 1944 in secret./Periscopi/









