Jan Gies

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Jan Gies, 1941
Jan Gies, 1941

Jan Gies (October 18, 1905 - January 26, 1993) was a member of the Dutch Resistance who, with his wife Miep, helped hide Anne Frank and her family from Nazi persecution during the occupation of the Netherlands.

[edit] Life

Jan Gies (Henk van Santen) was born and raised in Amsterdam's south side. He met his future wife, Miep Santrouschitz, in 1933 when he was a bookkeeper and she an office worker at a local textile company. It was not until after they'd gone their separate ways - Jan into the Dutch Social Services and Miep to Otto Frank's company Opekta - that they met each other again socially in 1936 and began a relationship.

They married in Amsterdam on July 16, 1941, when Miep was threatened with deportation back to Vienna after she refused to join a Nazi women's group. Their wedding was attended by Otto and Anne Frank, Hermann van Pels and his wife, and Miep's colleagues Victor Kugler, Bep Voskuijl and Johannes Kleiman. Later that year Jan was appointed the nominal director of Otto Frank's company after he was forced to resign from the board under the newly introduced Nazi laws which forbade Jews to hold directorships, and from then on, the company traded under the name 'Gies & Co'.

As the persecution of Amsterdam's Jewish population intensified he dedicated himself to assisting Jews and others escape by obtaining illegal ration cards for food, finding them hiding places, and securing British newspapers free from Nazi propaganda.

Jan aided the Frank family's escape to their hiding place at the Gies & Co premises, 263 Prinsengracht, and visited them frequently during their two year confinement. In addition to their concealment of the Frank and van Pels families and Fritz Pfeffer at the Prinsengracht, Miep and Jan also took in a student, who had refused to sign a Nazi oath.

Following the arrest and deportation of the hidden families in August 1944, Miep rescued the diaries and other manuscripts of Anne Frank from the hiding place before it was ransacked by the Dutch secret police. Of the eight people she and Jan had assisted to hide, Otto Frank was the only survivor, and upon his return to Amsterdam in June 1945 he moved in with them, and stayed with them for seven years before he emigrated to Switzerland to be close to his mother.

After the publication of Anne Frank's diary, under the title Het Achterhuis ("The Backhouse," commonly translated as "The Secret Annex") in 1947, Jan and Miep found themselves the subject of media attention, particularly after the diary was translated into English and adapted for the stage and screen, and attended memorial ceremonies and gave lectures about Anne Frank and the importance of resisting fascism.

[edit] Further reading

  • Anne Frank Remembered, Miep Gies with Alison Leslie Gold, Simon and Schuster 1987.
  • The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank, Penguin 2002.
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