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A six-year cold case investigation into the betrayal of Anne Frank has identified a surprising suspect in the mystery of how the Nazis found the hiding place of the famous diarist in 1944.

‘Media giants have a responsibility’: Anne Frank skit stirs debate

A show airing on Netflix has drawn the ire of Australian Holocaust survivors after a recent episode made distasteful jokes about Anne Frank and Adolf Hitler.

Historical Roasts, a series by US stand-up comic Jeff Ross, was released last month and is currently available to stream in Australia. In each episode, cast members – mostly comedians – dress up as real-life historical figures such as Abraham Lincoln, Freddie Mercury and Cleopatra, and go on stage to exchange insults with others who are also in character.

One episode, written and performed entirely by Jewish people and featuring actors portraying Anne and Hitler, crosses the line, says a group of Melbourne-based Holocaust survivors.

The skit includes jokes such as Hitler’s character telling Anne’s, “Everyone knows you as a hero and best-selling author, but to me, you’ll always be little number 825060”.

Holocaust survivors Joe De Haan, 97, Irma Hanner, 88, Annetta Able, 95,  and John Chaskiel, 90, said in a joint statement with Anti-Defamation Commission chairman Dvir Abramovich that Netflix should take the episode down.

“Netflix has crossed all lines of moral decency by allowing these Jewish comedians to callously mock the memory of those who perished at the hands of the Nazis,” the group said. “There is nothing funny or amusing about a bestial dictator responsible for the extermination of six million Jews or the death of Anne Frank. Media giants have a responsibility to remember the Holocaust appropriately and respectfully, not as material for a crass punchline.”

Read the article by Broede Carmody  in The Sydney Morning Herald.