Student’s video blasting Trump says Anne Frank did not die in Nazi camp
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Student’s video blasting Trump says Anne Frank did not die in Nazi camp

NowThis removed video from Twitter and re-uploaded it with a segment missing, after one of the guests on it 'misspoke' about the diarist

Screenshot from NowThis' Twitter account
Screenshot from NowThis' Twitter account

The progressive NowThis news website removed a segment of a video in which a George Washington University student asserted that teenage Holocaust diarist Anne Frank did not die in a concentration camp.

The six-minute video about President Donald Trump’s executive order signed last month that directs “robust” enforcement of existing civil rights protections for Jews on campus slammed Trump for “defining what is and what isn’t being Jewish,” and said it was a “veiled way to silence Palestinian voices” against Israel. The order says attackers target Jews since they perceive them to be a race or having a shared national identity.

Senior Becca Lewis, who says she is Jewish, makes the false claim in the video about Anne Frank while speaking with two Palestinian students at the Washington, D.C., school. They are wearing around their necks black-and-white checkered kaffiyehs, a traditional Arab headdress, which is worn as a symbol of Palestinian nationalism.

“What’s going to happen if there’s another Holocaust? Well, we’re seeing what’s happening. We’re seeing people die at the border for lack of medical care. That’s how Anne Frank died. She didn’t die in a concentration camp, she died from typhus,” Lewis says in the now-deleted video segment. The original video can be seen here.

Frank died in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in February or March 1945, likely of typhus.

NowThis tweeted a link to the video on Friday, days after the original had been posted, with a message reading: “CORRECTION: We have removed a segment of this video in which the speaker misspoke regarding Anne Frank’s death. These Jewish and Palestinian students are speaking out against Trump for equating anti-Zionism with antisemitism in his Judaism executive order.”

Critics called Lewis a Holocaust denier and said her statement should have been left in order to cast doubt on the veracity of  other statements.

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