Mirjam Finkelstein


Mirjam Finkelstein was a Holocaust survivor and educator. Born in Berlin, Germany to Dr Alfred Wiener, a Jewish activist and founder of the Wiener Library, her family moved to Amsterdam in 1928. There she grew up in the same community as Anne Frank and they knew each other as children.
In June 1943, however, Finkelstein was taken by the Nazis along with her mother and sisters to Westerbork transit camp and then to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. She was one of the eye witnesses to the fact that Anne Frank and her sister, Margot, were in Bergen-Belsen. When she saw them arrive in the camp she took out a forbidden pocket diary and wrote a note about their arrival, which became important evidence after the war for Anne Frank's whereabouts. Mirjam's father, who had managed to reach London in 1939, was able to obtain fake Paraguayan passports for his family, but the visas arrived after the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands in May 1940. The other members of the family were included as part of a prisoner exchange at the Swiss border in January 1945. German soldiers still boarded the train to take them to another camp. With her two sisters, Ruth and Eva, Mirjam Wiener successfully pressed them to allow their safe passage on the train from Bergen-Belsen because their mother was too ill to move. Other ill prisoners were removed instead. Margarethe, her mother, died from starvation after her arrival in Switzerland.
Finkelstein settled in London, England spending the rest of her life on behalf of the Anne Frank Foundation and the Holocaust Education Trust visiting schools to talk about her experiences during the Holocaust. In 2016 she was photographed for the book Survivor. She married Ludwik Finkelstein. The couple had three children: Daniel Finkelstein, Anthony Finkelstein, and Tamara Finkelstein.