Prologue: A Letter from Belgium PROLOGUE A Letter from Belgium This project did not begin as an investigation into the darkest corners of the Secret Annex. It began with a letter sent to me in 2009 by a fifteen-year-old boy in Antwerp named Jeroen De Bruyn. Like millions of other children, Jeroen had been touched by Anne Frank's diary, which his mother first read to him when he was just six years old. By any measure, Jeroen had been a curious and unusually mature child. As soon as he was able to understand that the world had once been at war, he asked his mother for details. She told him the stories that she had heard growing up--about neighbors forced to wear yellow stars and V2 rockets exploding on the streets of Antwerp. The next question was something that children always ask and adults often forget to: Why? His mother had no real answer, so she turned to one of the most famous documents from that time, Het Achterhuis (The Annex), known in English as The Diary of a Young Girl . Some people will probably think that Jeroen was too young to be exposed to such a difficult text, but I believe we tend to underestimate what children are capable of understanding or expressing--as Anne's diary demonstrates so powerfully. Besides, Jeroen's mother didn't read him the whole diary, just excerpts, carefully avoiding the most upsetting passages. Jeroen was fascinated. He spent hours staring at the black-and-white pictures of the swinging bookcase and the tiny, cramped confines of the Secret Annex. He could not wrap his little mind around why whole families, even young children, needed to hide like mice to avoid being killed. He started asking his mother more questions about the war, and in time she brought him other children's books on the subject. When Jeroen got a little older, he began checking out books on the Holocaust from the library himself. His parents thought his budding interest was a bit strange, yet they were open-minded liberal Europeans, more inclined to explain the harsh reality of the world than to hide it from view. In time, the children's books and animated movies were replaced with thick histories and grainy documentaries. The stories and pictures became more explicit, more terrible. By age twelve, Jeroen had seen every available film about the Holocaust--Claude Lanzmann's nine-hour documentary Shoah made the greatest impression on him--and he had read every book he could find about Anne Frank. The more Jeroen learned, the less he understood. How could it have happened on the same placid, tree-lined streets that he walked down every day? How was it that his grandmother, the same woman who sent him silly text messages, could have seen it all with her own eyes? Neighbors rounded up. Swastikas on the streets. The city in flames. Jeroen's grandmother was also named Anne. She was born the same year as Anne Frank--1929--and during World War II lived for a time with her grandparents only half a mile from the Frank family apartment in Amsterdam South. In the early days of the Occupation, she fell in love with a Jewish boy named Louis. Though he managed to slip out of the Nazis' grasp by hiding in the Dutch countryside, most of his family was murdered at the Sobibor death camp in eastern Poland, where a staggering thirty-four thousand Dutch Jews were killed in approximately five months between March and July 1943. Was it that grandmother, Anne--the same age, same city, same name--who kindled Jeroen's obsession with Anne Frank? Because that was what it turned into: an obsession, a need to know everything that had happened inside the Secret Annex. Jeroen printed out hundreds of articles, made scrapbooks, spent his school vacations in Amsterdam at the Anne Frank House. He bought a scholarly edition of the diary and pored over the footnotes. His teacher thought his "research," the expanding set of files he created on every aspect of the case, was just the idle hobby of a schoolboy with too much time on his hands; it wouldn't amount to anything. Yet Jeroen was enterprising, even as a teenager, and he could read between the lines. He was interested not only in what was known about the case but also what was unknown or misunderstood. He began to focus on the people who had guarded the Secret Annex, those who had risked their lives to keep Anne and her family safe for 761 days--until, not long before the Liberation, they were all mysteriously betrayed. From his reading, Jeroen realized that three of the "helpers," as they are known in Dutch, had already been studied extensively: they had given copious interviews, written their own memoirs, or had been the subjects of books and documentaries. Yet there was another helper, who happened to be the youngest, about whom next to nothing was known. The usual explanation for why there was such scant information about this helper was that she was shy and self-effacing by nature and had played only a minor role in the drama of the Secret Annex. But Jeroen could see, based on the evidence, that none of that was true. In fact, he was beginning to suspect that the youngest helper may have been the most important to Anne. She was her best friend and closest confidante. In the face of great danger, she had acted heroically. Yet for some reason that Jeroen could not figure out, she had spent her entire life after the war hiding from what she had done. That person was my mother, Bep Voskuijl. From the moment the Secret Annex was raided by the Gestapo on August 4, 1944, until her death on May 6, 1983, my mother actively avoided the subject of Anne Frank. She declined public recognition for her involvement in the case and refrained from talking about the role she had played with her closest family, even though she privately grieved the loss of her young friend, and would name her only daughter, Anne, in her memory. The reason for her avoidance had nothing to do with Bep's unassuming nature, as had earlier been thought. Rather, Bep had been traumatized by what she had lived through, and she avoided attention because she had secrets she wanted to keep, secrets she intended to take with her to the grave. Jeroen knew he had a story. The only problem: he was just fourteen. He could get only so far on a biography without the participation of Bep's surviving family, the people who knew her and had access to whatever documents she had left behind. Yet he feared, correctly, that we would dismiss him because of his age and inexperience. In 2008, Jeroen turned fifteen, the same age that Anne was when she died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Shortly after his birthday, he finally decided to approach my family. He couldn't find a way to get in touch with us directly, so he wrote to Miep Gies, then the only surviving helper from the Secret Annex. Her son, Paul, fielded the request and sent it along to two of my siblings. They said they were not interested in talking about our mother and that, anyway, they had little to share about her. In his note, Jeroen had not mentioned his age and background, but after his first attempt failed, he decided to write us a longer letter, straight from the heart. In five pages, he described his intentions, the documents he had found, and new facts he had put together, and then he asked for permission to interview us. He still could not bring himself to disclose his actual age, so he tacked on a few months and made himself sixteen. Then he mailed the letter to the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, which forwarded it to me. "I am a 16-year-old boy from Antwerp," Jeroen's letter began. "For a long time, I've been very interested in the story of Anne Frank." Jeroen told of his fascination with the Secret Annex, how by degrees his focus had shifted from Anne to the helpers and then to my mother. He was amazed that "so little was known" about her. He said that he had "assembled a file" in which he was trying to "put the pieces of the puzzle together." Each new fact he uncovered on a dusty reel-to-reel tape or in a newspaper archive made him feel "euphoric." He felt that Anne had had a kind of double in my mother, a young guardian on the other side of the bookcase who had been a close friend, who had also fallen in love during the war, who had had her own fights with parents and siblings, who had spent the Occupation living in fear of being found out. Bep was still just a sketchy outline, but "bit by bit," he said, "I am getting to know her better." I was skeptical of Jeroen's youth, but I was immediately struck by his sincere desire to understand my mother. In a sense, I had spent my whole life wanting the same thing. Before I received that letter, no one had ever asked me about her role in the Anne Frank story. The outside world wasn't aware of her past, and within the family we had an unspoken rule never to discuss what happened during the war. Yet over the years my mother told me things that she kept from everyone else, even my father and my siblings. For a time, I was to my mother a bit like what she had been to Anne: a confidant and protector. But the twists of life had complicated our relationship; as close as I got to her, I never understood why, exactly, her experience tortured and haunted her the way it did. I wrote Jeroen back and said that we should meet and that I would be happy to visit him at home in Antwerp to learn what he had discovered and discuss his proposed project. I traveled with my wife, Ingrid, from our home in the eastern Netherlands. Jeroen struck me as earnest, sweet, and intensely focused. He had covered his parents' kitchen table with books, all heavily annotated with yellow Post-it notes, and he created a detailed outline for our conversation. He had just found a rare recording of an interview Bep had given on a visit to Canada in the late 1970s. He played the tape for me, and it was the first time I had heard my mother's voice in more than three decades. I couldn't escape the feeling that that meeting with Jeroen was almost preordained. I had carried around my mother's secrets for years, and only now did I realize that I was waiting for an opportunity to share them, to make sense of them, or--as Jeroen put it--to put the pieces of the puzzle together. We did not know that day that the process would take us more than a decade. I'm still not sure why I trusted that teenager with my family's secrets or why I told him things that had been buried long before. Perhaps there was something about his youth that disarmed me. In any case, I told him that I would help him however I could. I didn't expect my other family members to follow suit, but when I contacted each of them, none was opposed to my participation. Of course they could not imagine then some of the uncomfortable conclusions the evidence would point us toward, the trail of betrayal we would uncover. Contrary to the illusions we had grown up with, the Voskuijls were not all that different from other families in wartime Amsterdam, in which resisters and collaborators often lived under the same roof. In the beginning, I did not intend to be Jeroen's coauthor but simply his guide: to share what I knew and open whatever doors I could. Yet it became clear as the story changed, expanded, and cut closer to the bone that Jeroen could not write it alone. We eventually decided, despite the differences in our ages and backgrounds, to become partners in the project. For the sake of clarity, and to better convey my firsthand experience of growing up in the shadow of the Secret Annex, we would write the book in my voice. But it is just as much Jeroen's story as mine. Having watched him grow up from a precocious teenager into an accomplished journalist, I look back on our work together feeling a bit like a proud father. And this gets to the heart of what our book is ultimately about: though we talk about war and the Holocaust, about collaboration and betrayal, there is no other way of describing this book than as a family story. And as my mother knew well, there are two kinds of family bonds: one forged by birth, the other by circumstance. Joop van Wijk-Voskuijl Heemstede, the Netherlands March 2023 Excerpted from The Last Secret of the Secret Annex: The Untold Story of Anne Frank, Her Silent Protector, and a Family Betrayal by Joop van Wijk-Voskuijl, Jeroen De Bruyn All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.