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Born April 4, 1932, in Winterswijk, Holland, as Johanna “Annie” de Leeuw, Reiss was the youngest in a Jewish family of five. The Upstairs Room tells the story of her experiences as a young girl in hiding during the German occupation of Holland in World War II. With one of her older sisters, Sini, Reiss hid upstairs at a farm owned by the Oosterveld family in Usselo. While there, her father and oldest sister, Rachel, were taken in by different families, but her mother perished in a hospital from an illness unrelated to the war. After the war, Reiss attended college and became an elementary school teacher before moving to the US in 1955. There, she married, had children, and even returned to visit the Oostervelds, as is detailed in the Postscript of the novel.
Encouraged by her husband, Jim Reiss, she wrote and published The Upstairs Room in 1972. The novel shared the experiences of Jews in the Netherlands and won the Newbery Honor, the Jewish Book Council Juvenile Book Award, and the Buxtehuder Bull, a prestigious German children’s book award. Additionally, the book was named an American Library Association Notable Children’s Book and a Jane Addams Peace Association Honor Book. In 1976, Reiss followed up the novel with The Journey Back, which recounts her family’s struggle to rebuild their lives in the aftermath of the war. In 2009, Reiss published her memoir, A Hidden Life, in which she shares more about her childhood in Winterswijk, as well as how she navigated life after her husband’s death by suicide. A voice for survivors, Reiss still visits schools all over the world, and in May 2018, the Dutch government recognized her for her work by granting her the Knight of Order of Orange-Nassau, an award given to those who contribute to the betterment of society. Still a resident of the US, Reiss continues to visit family and friends in the Netherlands.
During World War I, Holland remained neutral, so decades later, when Germany began conquering Europe and persecuting Jews, many fled to Holland for safety. However, in May 1940, Germany invaded Holland, and the resulting occupation imposed limitations on Dutch Jews. They lost their businesses, couldn’t work in civil service, had to register with the government, and were required to wear the yellow Star of David. These laws, among others, are evident in The Upstairs Room when the Germans post notices of them on a tree in Winterswijk. In 1941, the Germany army arrested and deported several hundred Jews, which resulted in Dutch workers striking; however, the Nazis brutally suppressed the strike and imposed even harsher laws and forced labor. In 1942, deportations began to concentration camps, primarily Auschwitz and Sobibor. Many Dutch citizens believed that they were going to work camps to support the war effort. As Annie learns from the underground newspaper, however, these beliefs were false: Many Dutch Jews were immediately led to their deaths in the gas chambers upon arrival. In just two years, the Germans killed more than 107,000 Dutch Jews; fewer than 5,200 survived.
Meanwhile, the Dutch Underground, a network of people devoted to saving lives and working against the Nazis, hid 25,000-30,000 Jews. Of these, almost two thirds survived. In The Upstairs Room, Mr. Hannink, Reverend Zwaal, the Oostervelds, and many others represent the extensive efforts of this group to both hide Jews and learn what was really transpiring during the war. Despite these efforts, fewer than a quarter of Dutch Jews survived the Holocaust. Annie, Rachel, Sini, and their father are among those who did.
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