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  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. Fritz Pfeffer goes into hiding. 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.

  3. Der Streit eskaliert so, dass Anne ihren Vater bittet, zwischen ihr und Fritz zu vermitteln. Schließlich gibt Fritz - eher unwillig - nach. Im Rückblick schreibt Anne: „Pfeffer machte ein belämmertes Gesicht, redete zwei Tage nicht mehr mit mir und musste von fünf bis halb sechs doch noch an dem Tisch sitzen.

  4. Friedrich „Fritz” Pfeffer (n. 30 aprilie 1889 , Gießen , Hessa , Germania – d. 20 decembrie 1944 , Lagărul de concentrare Neuengamme , Hamburg , Germania Nazistă ) a fost un dentist și refugiat evreu german , care s-a ascuns împreună cu familia Annei Frank în timpul ocupației naziste a Țărilor de Jos și a pierit în lagărul de concentrare Neuengamme din nordul Germaniei .

  5. 15. Dez. 2008 · Albert Dussel About Fritz. Fritz Pfeffer was born on April 30 1889 in Giessen, Germany. He was given the rather unflattering name Albert Dussel by Anne, which translates as 'idiot.'

  6. 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. Synagogues were set on fire, and ...

  7. To preserve the anonymity of the people living with her, she thinks up pseudonyms: the Van Pels family become the Van Daan family, and she calls the dentist Fritz Pfeffer, with whom she has frequent run-ins, Albert Dussel (“idiot” in German). She turns her own family name into Robin or Aulis, but this name is not used in the published versions of the diary.