how did they get anne frank from holland to germany
Anne Frank was not taken from Holland to Germany as a child refugee or tourist; she was arrested in Amsterdam in 1944 and then deported by the Nazi regime to camps in German‑occupied territory, including camps physically located in Germany.
The short answer
- The Frank family moved from Germany to the Netherlands in 1933–1934 to escape Nazi persecution.
- In August 1944 they were discovered in their hiding place in Amsterdam and arrested by German authorities (the SS/Gestapo).
- They were first sent to Westerbork transit camp in the Netherlands, then deported on a train to Auschwitz‑Birkenau in occupied Poland, and later (Anne and Margot) to Bergen‑Belsen concentration camp in Germany.
So the “getting from Holland to Germany” happened as part of the Nazi deportation system, not as a voluntary or family‑arranged move.
How the family originally left Germany for Holland
Before Anne was deported, the family had already fled Germany:
- After Hitler became Chancellor in 1933, Otto Frank left Frankfurt for Amsterdam to set up his company Opekta.
- Edith Frank followed in September 1933; Margot arrived in December 1933, and Anne in February 1934.
- This was a regular emigration: they bought tickets, traveled as a family, and settled in Amsterdam as Dutch residents.
That move was from Germany to Holland, the opposite direction of what your question asks.
How Anne Frank was taken from Holland to “Germany”
What actually happened in 1944:
- Arrest in Amsterdam
- On 4 August 1944, the German SS and police raided the “Secret Annex” where the Frank family and four others were hiding.
* They were arrested on Dutch soil, in Amsterdam.
- Westerbork transit camp (Netherlands)
- The detainees were first sent to Westerbork, a transit camp in the Netherlands used by the Nazis to hold Jews before deportation.
* This was still in Holland, not yet Germany.
- Deportation to Auschwitz‑Birkenau (occupied Poland)
- From Westerbork, the Frank family was transported on a train to Auschwitz‑Birkenau, in German‑occupied Poland.
* This was part of the large-scale deportation system that moved Jews from the Netherlands eastward to camps.
- Transfer to Bergen‑Belsen (Germany)
- In late 1944, Anne and her sister Margot were selected and transported from Auschwitz to Bergen‑Belsen concentration camp, which was located in Germany (in what is now Lower Saxony).
* This was the actual move from “Holland” (via Poland) into Germany, entirely under Nazi control.
Why this is often misunderstood
Some people phrase it as “Anne Frank from Holland to Germany” because:
- The family originally fled Germany → Holland in the 1930s.
- Then, in 1944, they were taken Holland → (Poland) → Germany as deported prisoners.
The second movement was not a normal journey; it was a forced deportation as part of the Holocaust.
Timeline in plain steps
- 1933–1934 : Frank family escapes Nazi Germany and settles in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
- July 1942 : They go into hiding in the Secret Annex in Amsterdam.
- 4 August 1944 : Arrested by German security police in Amsterdam.
- August 1944 : Sent to Westerbork transit camp (Netherlands).
- September 1944 : Deported to Auschwitz‑Birkenau (occupied Poland).
- Late 1944 : Anne and Margot transferred to Bergen‑Belsen (Germany).
- February/March 1945 : Anne and Margot die in Bergen‑Belsen.
Information gathered from public historical sources and portrayed here.