Prøve GULL - Gratis
My Friend Anne Frank
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
|July 2023
In 1933, Hannah Pick-Goslar and her family fled Nazi Germany to live in Amsterdam. There, she struck up a beautiful friendship with a girl named Anne Frank. Then their lives abruptly changed forever. This is their story.

When I was four, I had just arrived in Amsterdam with my parents, escaping Berlin after Hitler came to power and fired my father, a deputy cabinet member in the Prussian government during the Weimar Republic. One day, not long after our arrival, I walked hand in hand with my mother to a local grocery. There, my mother noticed another woman talking in German to her dark-eyed daughter, who was about my age. The two mothers spoke briefly to one another, smiling, clearly relieved to find some familiarity in this foreign place.
I was a shy child and I clung to my mother’s leg, unused to other children but curious about the little girl looking back at me.
She was to be my very first friend. A childhood playmate, neighbour and school friend. Our families became close as they navigated life as refugees in a new city, sharing their fears as the war, occupation and all that would mean for us moved inexorably closer.
That little girl, so full of life, would become the most famous victim of the Holocaust. A symbol, in many ways, of all the hope and promise that was lost to hatred and murder. Talking about her story, our story, would later become a thread that bound me to her and kept our friendship alive long after she was gone. But from when we first met to when she abruptly disappeared from my life, not long before my 14th birthday, to reappear fleetingly in the strangest and most tragic of ways, she was simply my friend, Anne Frank.
I was shy on a good day, but setting off for my first day of nursery school at the 6th Montessori School on Niersstraat, was positively petrified. I spotted a girl with glossy dark hair that was almost black. I couldn’t see her face as her back was turned towards me. She was playing on a set of silver bells. In that moment, she turned around and looked at me. In a flash, we recognised one another. It was the girl from the corner grocery store!
Denne historien er fra July 2023-utgaven av Australian Women’s Weekly NZ.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
Thin blue line
When PC Philomena McCarthy finds a young child wandering the streets in the middle of the night as a major incident unfolds across town, her two worlds – one on the right side of the law, the other firmly on the opposite - collide.
6 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
RICHARD SCOLYER My wish is to leave hope for others
Groundbreaking melanoma scientist Professor Richard Scolyer captured the hearts of people everwhere as the Australian of the Year who bravely experimented on his own brain cancer in the hope of finding a cure. As his tumour returned with a poor prognosis, Richard speaks with The Weekly about life and hope.
5 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
SISSY SPACEK The power of saying yes
At 75, Sissy Spacek is working on some of her favourite projects to date – on screen and at home. She sits down with The Weekly for an intimate chat.
7 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
Follow the sun
Yearning for warmth and sunshine? Yes, it's winter, but these exciting escapes will give you a sun-filled adventure!
2 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
How a holiday in Cambodia changed our lives'
The world's problems often feel too big and overwhelming to tackle. Yet the Palti family found that taking small steps can make a real difference.
4 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
The silent menopause symptom
It affects more than half of our women over the age of 60, yet few can name this condition.
3 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
In search of cleopatra
Twenty years after she began exploring a neglected site in Egypt, self-taught archaeologist Kathleen Martínez has discovered unexpected treasures and believes she is closer than ever to unlocking the secrets of Egypt's last queen.
9 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
Beauty muse Jennifer Aniston
From red carpets to casual days off, the actress has long mastered the art of laid-back glamour.
1 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
Colour me HAPPY
This year's Your Home and Garden's Resene Colour Home Awards winner's work on her holiday house proves that a shoestring budget is no obstacle to true creativity.
2 mins
August 2025

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
Stirring the pot
Make Roast Pumpkin Soup (overleaf) to the end of step 2. In step 3, omit ginger and spices; add 1 tablespoon Moroccan spice mix to capsicum, garlic and onion.
2 mins
August 2025
Translate
Change font size