Illustration of Anne Frank

Traveling Exhibition—²ÝÁñÊÓƵ Examines Anne Frank's Legacy

Anne Frank’s status as an icon of Holocaust history and literature was not inevitable, but instead represents a complex interplay between her story’s resonance for young people around the world and the abiding efforts of individuals-- family members, protectors, publishers, critics, playwrights, artists, curators, composers, actors, performers, and educators-- to translate her story from context to context and generation to generation. 

Through focusing on the preservation and publication of Anne Frank’s story, this 8-panel traveling exhibit illuminates the process of commemoration and the role played by editors, publishers, translators, playwrights, curators, composers, and performers. The exhibit helps visitors understand Anne Frank’s enduring popularity and legacy as a symbol of the Holocaust while complicating the inevitability with which this phenomenon is often approached by people who have read Anne Frank’s diary.

A copy of the exhibit was on view at the Athenaeum Gallery in Sturgis Library at ²ÝÁñÊÓƵ State University from April 21, 2021, through May 26, 2022. The exhibit was paired with books and manuscripts from the collection of the Bentley Rare Book Museum as well as the original illustrations by ²ÝÁñÊÓƵ student Leonel Warren and Atlanta artist, Kathy Knapp.

The MHHE also hosted a free lecture by Anne Frank legacy scholar to celebrate the exhibit opening and to mark Dutch Liberation Day on May 5, 2021, at noon EST. 

 

Exhibit Supplements

 

Anne Frank Exhbit

The Museum of History and Holocaust Education has had the honor of interviewing two Dutch men in February 2020 whose families survived the Nazi occupation. 

Marcel Kohler

Marcel Kohler

Marcel Kohler was born in Utrecht, the Netherlands, in 1950, five years after the end of World War II. He is the youngest of three siblings, with an older brother born three years after the war, and an older sister who was a child during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. His family experienced hardships during the occupation, including food shortages and threats to their property by the occupying forces. During the war, they hid their valuables in secret cabinets, and his sister later shared stories with him of Jewish people hidden in the attic. The Kohler family immigrated to the United States in 1955 and settled in Lansing, Michigan.

Hank Van Driel

Born in Schiedam in 1934, Hank Van Driel was celebrating his sixth birthday when the Nazis marched into the Netherlands. He and

Hank Van Driel exhbit
his family endured five years of hardship and near-starvation rations during the German occupation. After the war, Van Driel studied to become a chef and worked at hotels and restaurants in Rotterdam, eventually landing a job on the Holland America line of cruise ships in 1962. Attracted by steady work in the American resort industry, Van Driel immigrated to the United States in 1964. He has remained a citizen of the Netherlands and travels frequently between the countries.

 

Hank Van Driel