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Miep Gies

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Miep Gies
BornHermine Santrouschitz
(1909-02-15) 15 February 1909 (age 115)
Vienna, Austria
OccupationHumanitarian
Spouse(s)Jan Gies, (1905–1993)
(m. 1941–1993)
ChildrenPaul Gies (1950)

Miep Gies, née Hermine Santrouschitz (born 15 February 1909), is one of the Dutch citizens who hid Anne Frank and her family from the Nazis during World War II. She discovered and preserved Anne's diary after Anne Frank's arrest and deportation.

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==Biography==Insert non-formatted text hereIn theory, Miep and the other helpers could have been shot if they had been caught hiding Jews. In practice, however, those caught hiding Jews were more commonly sentenced to four to six months of hard labor. On the morning of 4 August 1944, an anonymous informant told the Gestapo about the people hidden at Frank's place of business. All those in hiding, as well as Victor Kugler and Johannes Kleiman, were arrested. Three separate criminal investigations after the war all failed to identify the informant. Miep avoided arrest because the officer, who came to question her, was Austrian and because Miep was also originally from Austria and felt a connection to her. Later, Miep unsuccessfully tried to bribe the Austrian Nazi officer with money in exchange for releasing her friends.

Miep found the discarded diaries of Anne Frank and saved them in a desk drawer for Anne's return. Once the war was over and it was confirmed that Anne had perished in Bergen-Belsen, Gies gave the collection of papers and notebooks that made up the diary to the sole survivor from the Secret Annexe, Anne's father, Otto Frank; he arranged for the book's publication in 1947. Miep did not read the diaries herself before turning them over to Otto Frank, and later remarked that, if she had, she would have had to destroy them because of the incriminating information in them. She was, however, persuaded by Otto Frank to read Anne's diary in its second printing.

Once the book was published and widely translated, Miep and Jan Gies became celebrities in the Netherlands, and their courage was recognized with awards from several international organisations. Among others, they won the Raoul Wallenberg Award for Bravery and the Righteous Among the Nations award. In 1994, Miep Gies received the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany; in 1995, she was awarded the Yad Vashem medal, and, in 1997, she was knighted by The Queen.

During the making of the documentary film Anne Frank Remembered, which was based on Miep Gies autobiography of the same name, Peter Pepper, the son of Fritz Pfeffer, was able to meet Miep Gies for the first time. After his parents divorced, Pepper was raised by his father, until his father felt it was too dangerous for him to remain in Germany, and in 1938 sent him to London to live with his uncle. By the end of the war he had lost most of his close family, including his father, and his mother, who had died in Theriesienstadt. Pepper made the decision to move to the United States. He settled in California, and founded a very successful office supply business. In December, 1994, during the production of Anne Frank Remembered, Pepper, upon meeting Miep Gies, expressed his thanks to her for attempting to save his father's life. Pepper died of cancer just two months later.

Her only child, Paul Gies, was born on 13 July 1950.

She has continued her humanitarian work since then. Her husband Jan Gies died in 1993 from diabetes.

Miep Gies was recently portrayed by actress Pat Carroll in a scene in the successful 2007 drama film, Freedom Writers, based on a visit she made to students in a Long Beach high school in the late 1990s.

Miep Gies currently lives in the Dutch province of Noord-Holland. According to Carol Ann Lee's biography of Otto Frank, The Hidden Life of Otto Frank, Mrs. Gies no longer grants interviews after enduring a bout of severe ill health.

External links

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