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Anne Frank's Tree Gets Reprieve

Where: Prinsengracht 267, Amsterdam, Netherlands
October 2, 2007 at 3:05 PM | by pbb | 2 Comments

When we visited the Anne Frank House last year, we were upset to learn that the chestnut tree behind the house was "seriously diseased." An icon of the home, the city planned to remove it because:

Its leaves curl golden in summer because of the horse chestnut leaf miner, a moth that infests it; two fungi, tinder polypore and honey mushroom, are rotting its trunk.

Now, it seems, the tree will stand fast after lengthy bureaucratic proceedings have worn the pro-removal side into submission. (Gotta love Europe.)

Museum officials--who originally supported removal--now say even replacing the tree with a sapling cut from the original won't fly. Instead, they're working to keep the tree as it is--a connection to the past and a reminder that a little girl once looked to its branches for hope.

Related Stories:
· A New Wave of Support for Anne Frank's Ailing Tree [NYT]
· Visiting the Anne Frank House [Jaunted]
· Museums coverage [Jaunted]

2 Comments

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  1. amandak

    Jaunted Member

    Aaaww ...

    How sweet, and definitely an only-in-Europe moment. I've gotta say the Anne Frank Museum is one of my absolute favorite spots, I don't really know why. It wasn't even because of the tree :-) I just remember the big thrill when I saw "the diary" in real life. (Come to think of it, it could've been a replica, but I didn't think that at the time).
    October 2, 2007 at 8:15 PM
  1. sharlad

    Jaunted Member

    Picture of Anne Frank tree

    Hello.
    If you took the picture of the chestnut tree, would you allow me to use it as a background for a library READ poster? The poster would not be used for profit.
    Thanks for considering.
    January 17, 2008 at 7:06 PM

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