Home > Books > The Betrayal of Anne Frank: A Cold Case Investigation(131)

The Betrayal of Anne Frank: A Cold Case Investigation(131)

Author:Rosemary Sullivan

Chagall, Marc, 25

chestnut tree behind Annex, 134, 139

children’s nursery, Amsterdam, 291

Christianity, Jews converted to, 201, 220

Christians and Jews, mixed marriages between, 157, 220, 232

Cimex, 52

Cobiella, Kelly, 132

Cohen, David, 219, 223, 227, 228, 229, 267–68

cold case investigation, 14–22, 97–105; archival files, searching, 99–101, 106–9; Bookcase (cold case investigation information system), 110–12; conclusion and aftermath of, 283–84; FOT (feet on the table) sessions, 18; funding for, 17; historical research and cold case methodology, combining, 98; investigative techniques, 99–104; “knowledge, motive, and opportunity” axiom, 118; length of, 105; location and description of office of, 14–15; media interest in, 132, 137; multiple scenarios, simultaneous work on, 224; Pankoke on, 297–98; plenary research sessions, 111; population under enemy occupation, understanding response of, xii, xiii, 13, 32–34; previous investigations, 98–99, 164–69; reasons for pursuing, xi–xv, 13; team of investigators, 15–22, 299–301; theories developed and pursued by, 104–5; timeline of raid on Prinsengracht 263, 68–72; visitors to, 112. See also specific suspects Cold Cases and Missing Persons Department, National Police Force, 17

Cold Mist: The Dutch Notaries and the Heritage of the War (Schütz), 231

collaborators, 86, 87–89, 111–12, 150, 170–71, 176–78, 188, 267–68

La Colombe d’Or (hotel, south of France), 25

Committee for Jewish Refugees (Comité voor Joodsche Vluchtelingen; CJV), 124, 226, 228, 317

Communist Party, Amsterdam, 33–34, 43, 45

Concertgebouw, Jewish musicians purged from, 43–44

Contact Committee, Westerbork, 266–67, 277, 355n3

Cool, Frederick, 151

Criminal Investigation Department (Rijksrecherche), 99, 100, 192, 195, 239–40, 282

crowdsourcing, use of, 103–4

Cuban visa, Otto Frank’s application for, 47

Cut, The, 199

Dachau, 30, 117, 317

“daisy chain” arrests, 209

Dalí, Salvador, 31

D-Day, 5

de Bruin, Circe, 21, 178

de Bruyn, Jeroen, 99, 171, 175, 197, 344n26

De Gaulle, Charles, 8

de Groot, Israel, 160–61

de Groot, Louis, 160–61

de Groot, Meijer, 160, 161

de Groot, Rachel, 160, 161

de Groot, Sophia, 161

de Jong, Annie. See van Dijk, Anna “Ans”

de Jong, Leopold, 151, 213–16, 267

de Jong, Loe, 247–48

de Kok, Johannes, 203

de Leeuw, Elisa Greta (Beppie), 150

de Regt, Johanna Maria “Mies,” 158, 161, 162, 272

de Vries, Clara, 43

de Vries-Harschel, Eva, 155

de Winter, Rosa “Rootje,” 76–77, 80

Dear Cara: Letters from Otto Frank (Wilson-Granat), 242

Decree no. 6/1941, 42

Decree on Hostile Property, 86

Dekker (collaborator), 132

Dekker, Eduard Douwes, xiv

Demnig, Gunter, 294–95

den Boef, Cornelis, 65

den Ouden, Joop, 149

Depue, Roger, 98

Dettman, Julius, 3, 68, 119, 150, 165, 171, 186, 187, 193, 197, 252, 277

diary of Anne Frank, 9–13; accusations of making money off of, 27, 93–94; authenticity of, 94, 190–91, 241, 280–81; on break-ins at Prinsengracht 263, 11, 65; on chestnut tree behind Annex, 134, 139; copyright and royalties from, 286–87; Critical Edition, 174–75; Definitive Edition, 174; discovered after raid, by Miep Gies and Bep Voskuijl, 74–75; on illness of Johannes Voskuijl, 64; “Kitty” in, 10, 11; as means of passing time in hiding, 5; “M.K.” passages referring to Nelly Voskuijl in, 174–76; NIOD, physical ownership of diaries by, 287; ownership of different versions, 25; publication of (1947), 91, 280; raid on Prinsengracht 263 and fate of, 6–7, 70; significance of, 290; three versions of, 24; on van Hoeve arrest, 209; on visibility from windows, 133

Diary of Anne Frank, The (play and film), 12, 190–91, 217, 242, 289

Dik, J., Sr., 262

Dolle Dinsdag (Mad Tuesday; Sept. 5, 1944), 215, 317

doorgangshuis, xiv

D?ring, Kurt, 125

Dubbelman, Jan Erik, 206

Dutch Children’s Committee, 294

Dutch Foundation for Literature, xi

Dutch Jews: anti-Semitism against, 17, 36, 42–44; “daisy chain” arrests of, 209; deportations of, 44–45, 49–50, 53, 220; fate of, in WWII, 4n, 17, 27, 32, 47, 85, 133, 148–49; postwar treatment of, 85–87; razzias (roundups) of, 33–34, 57, 59, 252, 291–92, 322; registration of, after German occupation, 42, 148–49; registration of businesses owned by, 49, 325; returning to Netherlands after WWII, 85–87, 293–94; statuses, types, and exemptions, 220–23; as V-people, 150–51, 155–57, 213–15. See also Jewish Council Dutch Theater (Hollandsche Schouwburg), Amsterdam, 114, 269, 290–91, 318