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  1. Elfriede Geiringer (Fritzi; née Markovits; 13 February 1905 – 2 October 1998) was a Jewish survivor of World War II and the Holocaust. She was the second wife of Otto Frank, who was the father of Anne and Margot Frank.

  2. Oct 2, 1998 · Elfriede Edith Geiringer - Markovits | Knowledge base | Anne Frank House. Fritzi Markowitz. Fritzi Markovits lost her husband and son in Mauthausen. She married Otto Frank in 1953. Person. Elfriede Edith Geiringer - Markovits. Born on: Feb. 13, 1905. Born in: Wenen, Oostenrijk. Died on: Oct. 2, 1998. Died in: Londen, Groot-Brittannië.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Eva_SchlossEva Schloss - Wikipedia

    Eva Schloss MBE (née Geiringer; born 11 May 1929) is an Austrian-English Holocaust survivor, memoirist and stepdaughter of Otto Frank, the father of Margot and diarist Anne Frank. Schloss speaks widely of her family's experiences during the Holocaust and is a participant in the USC Shoah Foundation's Visual History Archive project to record ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Otto_FrankOtto Frank - Wikipedia

    Otto Frank married former Amsterdam neighbor and fellow Auschwitz survivor Elfriede Geiringer (1905–1998) in Amsterdam on 10 November 1953, and the couple moved to Basel, Switzerland, where he had family, including relatives' children, with whom he shared his experiences.

  5. Oct 4, 1998 · On a train returning Auschwitz survivors to the Netherlands after the war, Eva recognized Otto Frank and introduced him to her mother. Frank was the sole survivor from his family. Share this...

  6. Feb 6, 2019 · A TALE OF TWO SISTERS “The Diary Of Anne Frank” tells the stories of Anne Frank (pictured) and Eva Schloss, whose young lives paralleled one another's, and whose surviving parents, Otto...

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  8. Jan 21, 2022 · In the main camp, Eva found Otto Frank, a neighbor from Amsterdam and the father of her playmate, Anne. Otto told Eva that he had seen her father and brother, Erich and Heinz Geiringer, who had been transported to Auschwitz with Eva and her mother; they had been forced to join a death march several weeks earlier.