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  1. Due to the Nuremberg laws, she could not marry Fritz Pfeffer in Germany. Nor could she do so in the Netherlands because of an international treaty dating from 1902 . [3] In 1953 , the Berlin Senator für Justiz decided to retroactively recognise as legally valid the marriages that had been made impossible.

  2. A search of Kalettas belongings uncovered more material on Pfeffer, including four love letters he had written to Kaletta, whom he was unable to marry because of...

  3. Sadly they divorced in 1933. Fritz met and fell in love with Charlotte Kaletta but did not marry because of the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 prohibiting marriages between Jews and non-Jews.

  4. On 16 November 1942, Fritz Pfeffer went into hiding in the Secret Annex. He was the dentist of Miep Gies and an acquaintance of Otto and Edith Frank. His fiancé Charlotte Kaletta had been a guest at the wedding of Miep and Jan Gies the previous year. Pfeffer had told his landlord that he would be hospitalised.

  5. België. After divorcing Vera Bythiner, Fritz Pfeffer got into a relationship with the Catholic Charlotte Kaletta. Because of the 1935 Nuremberg laws, which prohibited marriages between Jews and non-Jews, they could not marry.

  6. Jan 7, 2019 · Fritz Pfeffer was a dentist in Berlin. He was engaged to Charlotte Kaletta, who was a Roman Catholic. He could not marry her, because the German racial laws prohibited marriages between Jews and non-Jews. In November 1938, Jews were assaulted and arrested throughout Germany during the so-called Kristallnacht.

  7. In the mid-1930s he met Charlotte Kaletta. They could not marry because by now the racist Nuremberg Laws were in effect. Part of this was a ban on marriages between Jews and non-Jewish Germans.

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