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The Roommate of Anne Frank

Product ID : 41947120


Galleon Product ID 41947120
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About The Roommate Of Anne Frank

In the autumn of 1987, a small bundle containing photographs and newspaper clippings, which used to belong to Charlotte Kaletta, was found by an employee of the Anne Frank Foundation on the Amsterdam flea market. This sensational discovery led her to another set of photographs and letters among Kaletta’s belongings. Charlotte Kaletta had been the lover of Fritz Pfeffer, a German born Jewish dentist, who under the name of ‘Dussel’ - which means ‘day-dreamer’ or even ‘dullard’ - prominently appears in the diary of Anne Frank. In Het Achterhuis (The Secret Annex), probably the most famous book after the Bible, as it has been translated into 58 languages, Anne Frank describes this man, who was her roommate in hiding for almost two years, as a narrow minded, irritating and gloomy figure. This material, including Pfeffer’s last letter to Kaletta dated November 15, 1942, came into the hands of the well-known Dutch historian Nanda van der Zee. With the help of Pfeffer’s son, who gave her a wealth of unpublished photographs, as well as friends and acquaintances of Kaletta and Pfeffer from Germany, Holland, Belgium and South Africa and the Pfeffer archives of the Anne Frank Foundation, she re-created the story of his life. This book, De Kamergenoot van Anne Frank , which was published in The Netherlands in 1990, received goods reviews, such as the one in ‘Holocaust and Genocide Studies’ (Vol. 7. Nr. 2. 1993 Oxford University Press). It is now also available in an English translation. It is the merit of Nanda van der Zee that she corrects the image that Anne Frank gave of Pfeffer and in essence rehabilitates him. She does so in a fictionalised interview with Charlotte Kaletta, which is based on her reappeared belongings, a style that at best can be described as ‘documented fiction’.In this setting, the Dussel/Pfeffer image undergoes major revision. He emerges in the ‘interview’ and his letters, which have been fully included, as an affectionate man and a caring, warm lover.Thi