Elizabeth Voskuijl | |
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Bep Voskuijl in 1945
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Born |
Amsterdam, Netherlands |
5 July 1919
Died | 6 May 1983 Amsterdam, Netherlands |
(aged 63)
Nationality | Dutch |
Other names | Bep Vuskuil, Elli Vossen |
Occupation | Secretary of Opekta |
Elizabeth "Bep" Voskuijl (Dutch pronunciation: [eːlisabɛt bɛp ˈfɔskœyl]) (Elli Vossen) (5 July 1919 in Amsterdam – 6 May 1983 in Amsterdam) helped conceal Anne Frank and her family from Nazi persecution during the occupation of the Netherlands.
Bep was born in Amsterdam. She was one of the eight children of Johannes Hendrik Voskuijl and Christina Voskuijl. When still a teenager, Bep worked as a modiste, waitress and housekeeper in order to earn money for tuition and graduated as a secretary.
She was hired by Otto Frank in 1937 as a secretary and by 1942 was the administration manager of his company, Opekta, based at 263 Prinsengracht, the address which would become the Frank family's hiding place. She was eighteen, when she started working, and she was the youngest employee in the office. She had good relations with Miep Gies. Later her unemployed father (he had health problems) Johannes Hendrik Voskuijl became Opekta warehouse supervisor. In her book "Anne Frank Remembered", Miep Gies portraits Bep as a gentle and very shy girl and recalls they soon became close friends. Elisabeth was a young typist who agreed to help bring provisions to Otto's family and four other people concealed in the back rooms of the office building, from July 1942, until their betrayal and arrest on 4 August 1944. Bep was responsible for milk and bread, and Bep's sister sewed garments for the people in hiding. She also ordered correspondence courses, such as shorthand and Latin for those in hiding and spent much time with Anne, speaking about movies, dresses and books and sharing confidences about her sweetheart, and bringing her postcards of the Dutch royal family. During the Gestapo raid, she went into hysterics and managed to escape with a few documents which would have incriminated their black market contacts, but returned to assist Miep Gies in collecting the personal possessions of the captured Jews, amongst which were Anne Frank's diaries and manuscripts.