Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Fritz Pfeffer was professedly Jewish and very religious. Subject. According to Otto Frank, Fritz Pfeffer was the only one of the people in the Secret Annex who was truly religious. He had been raised Orthodox [1] and prayed every Friday. [2] Fritz Pfeffer's son, Werner, described his father as very religious, but not orthodox.

  2. Name: Dr. Fritz Pfeffer (Dr. Dussel) Age: April 30, 1889 Fritz Pfeffer joined the members in the annex on November 17, 1942. He would have been 53 at that time. Personality: Pfeffer was a smart, dental surgeon, divorced with one child who he sent to safety in England. He was very athletic and physically fit. He had a long-standing romance with a

  3. People also ask

    • Anne and Her Family
    • The Van Pels Family
    • Pfeffer
    • The Secret Annex
    • The Helpers

    The Frank family was not unanimously devout. Hanneli recounted years later how Margot and Edith regularly went to synagogue, while Otto and Anne stayed at home. Otto Frank said in a 1977 interview that his family did not eat pork when their religious grandmother visited. According to her husband, Edith prayed in the Secret Annex every Friday.Otto a...

    Among the Van Pels family, there was no evidence of any affinity with belief. The same applies to the brothers, sisters and parents of both spouses. Of course, this does not mean that there were no religious feelings in these families, but it does mean that there are no sources to prove this. However, the family does appear in the records of the Sy...

    From Anne's descriptions, Fritz Pfeffer emerges as a religious man. In one of her stories, she describes how she had to witness Pfeffer praying on Sunday mornings. According to Otto Frank, Pfeffer said his prayers every Friday, a day that is also a more logical one for a believing Jew than a Sunday. Furthermore, Pfeffer had divorced his first wife,...

    There was no explicit enforcement of food laws during the hiding period. On the contrary: eel appeared on the table in the summer of 1942.A few weeks later it was Yom Kippur, the most important holiday in the Jewish rite. Anne mentioned this day in passing, emphasising how peaceful and quiet it was. In December '43, St Nicholas, Christmas and Hanuk...

    Victor Kugler and Miep Gies both came from old Austria, a predominantly Catholic area. There are no signs of an emphatic religious life. When Kugler remarried after the death of his first wife, it was according to all the rules of Catholic faith. Kleiman's family came from a Reformed area, but his father had - as his daughter put it -"departed from...

  4. Fritz Pfeffer was born on 30 April 1889 in Giessen as the son of textile merchant Ignatz Pfeffer and Jeanette Hirsch. [1] He had a sister and four brothers: Minna, Julius, Emil, Ernst and Hans. [2] After attending grammar school in his home town, he trained as a dentist at the University of Würzburg from 1908 to 1911.

  5. Mar 4, 2014 · 2 portraits of Dr. Fritz Pfeffer, Anne Frank's roommate. Anne Frank, the 13-year-old Jewish girl who was forced into hiding with her family in 1942 (while essentially a story of youthful optimism) lived and died in one of the saddest eras in all of history. Anne's diary memorialized the daily life of eight Jews confined like caged animals to a ...

    • Daniel Demers
  6. Jan 1, 2018 · The Big Five—Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, Neuroticism and Openness to Experience—are a set of five broad, bipolar trait dimensions that constitute the most widely used model of...

  7. parents, her sister, the van Pels family (called van Daan by Anne), and Fritz Pfeffer (called Alfred Dussel by Anne), as well as the war going on around her and her hopes for the future. As a result of a radio broadcast made the by Dutch government in exile asking people to save their wartime diaries for

  1. People also search for