BEIJING, April 24 (Xinhuanet) -- A holiday postcard
signed by Anne Frank was found by a Dutch school director while preparing an
exhibition featuring the Jewish diarist, a museum said Wednesday.
The card was sent in 1937. It was addressed to one of
Frank's best friends, Samme Ledermann, and postmarked from just across the Dutch
border in Aachen, Germany, said Maatje Mostard, of the Anne Frank Museum.
Decorated with a clover-covered bell atop a snowy
field and wishing "good luck for the new year" in German, the card was signed
"Anne Frank" with no other handwritten message.
Mostard said the museum has seen another such card,
mailed the same day from the same town, where the 8-year-old Frank was visiting
her grandmother. "We know it's an original," she said.
The teacher, Paul van den Heuvel, found the winter
greeting card while gathering material on Anne Frank for his school. He came
across it in a box of cards in his father's antique store in the town of
Naarden.
"I don't know what he will do with it. We hope we can
get it for our collection," Mostard said.
The museum, which encompasses the small Amsterdam
apartment where the Frank family hid from the Nazis for 25 months, has the
largest collection of documents and papers on Frank, whose diary is the most
widely read book relating to the Holocaust.
Frank, her parents and sister and four other Jews
hiding there were arrested in August 1944 and deported to Auschwitz. The sisters
were later sent to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where Anne died of
typhus in March 1945, two weeks before the camp was liberated. She was 15.
(Agencies)