Anne Frank’s stepsister: Trump ‘acting like another Hitler’

(JTA) — The stepsister of Holocaust teen diarist Anne Frank compared Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump to Hitler. Eva Schloss, 86, made the comparison in an essay in Newsweek magazine published Wednesday in honor of International Holocaust Remembrance Day. “If Donald Trump become(s) the next president of the U.S., it would be a complete disaster,” she […]

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(JTA) — The stepsister of Holocaust teen diarist Anne Frank compared Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump to Hitler.

Eva Schloss, 86, made the comparison in an essay in Newsweek magazine published Wednesday in honor of International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

“If Donald Trump become(s) the next president of the U.S., it would be a complete disaster,” she wrote. “I think he is acting like another Hitler by inciting racism.”

Schloss, who lives in London, noted that the theme of this year’s Holocaust remembrance day is “Don’t stand by.”

“This is particularly important now with the refugee crisis going on as more people than ever are being bystanders,” she wrote. “We haven’t really learnt anything — I’m depressed by the current situation. The experience of the Syrian refugees is similar to what we went through.”

Schloss, who survived Auschwitz, was 11 years old when her family left Nazi-annexed Austria in 1938 for Belgium.

“We were treated as if we had come from the moon. I felt as if I wasn’t wanted and that I was different to everybody,” she wrote. “It is even harder for today’s Syrian refugees, who have a very different culture. We were Europeans as well as Jews — we were assimilated. I was shocked that I wasn’t accepted like an ordinary person. I am very upset that today again so many countries are closing their borders. Fewer people would have died in the Holocaust if the world had accepted more Jewish refugees.”

Schloss praised Germany for accepting more than 1 million refugees, noting that “the country has not gone under.” She also said the refugee problem is not Europe’s alone, suggesting that if the United States and Canada took more refugees it would mitigate the problem.

Schloss’ mother married Anne Frank’s father, Otto, after World War II. The families were friends in Amsterdam and the two girls played together before the Franks went into hiding. She is the co-founder of the Anne Frank Trust UK.

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