Did you ever read the book the Diary of Anne Frank?
Kevin LoweI never have.
Kevin LoweI know, it's crazy.
Kevin LoweI guess my teachers never had it on the reading list, but therefore, I was so excited when I got the opportunity to interview Cara Wilson, Granite.
Kevin LoweBecause Cara, she has a story about Anne Frank from a perspective you've probably never heard before, even if you have read the book, because, see, Kara, she developed an amazing relationship with the father of Anne Frank, his name, Otto Frank.
Kevin LoweAnd today, you're gonna get to hear that entire story, Kara's story, Anne Frank's story, Otto Frank's story.
Kevin LoweYou're gonna get to hear it all inside of today's episode.
Kevin LoweAnd I am so excited to get to bring it to you.
Kevin LoweSo, my friend, I welcome you to episode 339.
Speaker BYo, are you ready to flip the script on life?
Speaker BCause those bad days, they're just doors to better days.
Speaker BAnd that's exactly what we do here at Grit, Grace, and Inspiration.
Speaker BYour host, Kevin Lowe, he's been flipping the script on his own life, turning over 20 years of being completely blind into straight up inspiration, motivation, and encouragement just for you.
Speaker BSo kick back, relax, and let me introduce you to your host, Kevin.
Speaker BHello.
Kevin LoweI am in the studio today with Cara Wilson, Granite.
Kevin LoweCara, welcome to the podcast.
Cara WilsonThank you so much, Kevin.
Cara WilsonI'm very happy to be here.
Kevin LoweOh, my goodness.
Kevin LoweI am so excited to get to explore your story.
Kevin LoweAnd I was trying to think, where's the best place for us to begin?
Kevin LoweAnd I know that a big part of your story is going to revolve around kind of the story of Anne Frank and specifically her father.
Kevin LoweAnd I don't want to assume that anybody listening to the podcast, which I have, people from all over the world that everybody knows the story of Anne Frank.
Kevin LoweAnd I was hoping, if you wouldn't mind, to just take a few minutes to share a little bit about her and her story.
Kevin LoweSo it kind of gives the rest of our conversation some context.
Cara WilsonOf course, I would love to do that.
Cara WilsonAnne Frank was a little girl.
Cara WilsonShe was a German child in the 30s in Germany.
Cara WilsonAnd that was a time when it was a terrible time for so many people, but in particular for the Jewish people.
Cara WilsonA chancellor named Hitler took over.
Cara WilsonHe wanted to ethnically cleanse all of Europe of Jews, Jehovah's Witnesses, people who disabled, people of color, people who are political politically against him.
Cara WilsonIt was a really horrible time.
Cara WilsonBut especially, especially the Jewish people.
Cara WilsonHe made them the target, the scapegoat of why people in Germany had lost their war and they were Hungry.
Cara WilsonAnd everything bad that was happening to them, he said, was the Jewish people.
Cara WilsonAnd so it was a time that it was horrible.
Cara WilsonAnd so basically the father, Otto Frank, and the mother, Edith Frank, took their children, Anna and Margot out of Frankfurt, Germany, where they had lived all their lives.
Cara WilsonOtto Frank had been a top ranking lieutenant in the World War I.
Cara WilsonHe didn't, they had a very beautiful life there.
Cara WilsonThey were, he considered himself a German, even over being a Jew.
Cara WilsonBut now their lives were very dangerous.
Cara WilsonQuickly they, he tried to get them escape and they could not get out of the country, out of Europe.
Cara WilsonSo Otto Frank found a hiding place that I'm, I'm.
Cara WilsonIt's an abridged version, I'm telling you right now.
Cara WilsonOf course, above his spice factory, he was an import, export, spice and preserve factory in Holland.
Cara WilsonAnd in time he tried for his family to be as normal as possible, but the world was closing in on them and they had to go into hiding.
Cara WilsonAnd they went into hiding above his spice factory with his family and in time his business partner and their son and a dentist, eight of them in hiding above the spice factory, hidden by his office workers, four of them who helped them.
Cara WilsonAnd it was, it was amazing.
Cara WilsonFor two years and one month these people survived by the help of their non Jewish friends below who worked below.
Cara WilsonBut somebody betrayed them.
Cara WilsonAnd in that time that Anne, they were in that hiding and they had tried to have as much normalcy as possible.
Cara WilsonYou know, try to be quiet while the factory workers were working below.
Cara WilsonAnd Anna would write in her diary.
Cara WilsonAnd she wrote nonstop.
Cara WilsonShe was there, she was 13 when she went in to the annex.
Cara WilsonAnd she lived to be not even 16, but she was writing in her diary.
Cara WilsonAnd she wrote after that.
Cara WilsonWhen the diary is filled up.
Cara WilsonMiep, who was the assistant to Otto Frank, gave her notebooks and notebooks.
Cara WilsonShe wrote prolifically.
Cara WilsonNobody knew what was in this because she was very private, she was funny.
Cara WilsonShe drove them crazy.
Cara WilsonYou know, she was a teenager trapped with a bunch of adults and her sister and Peter.
Cara WilsonShe wrote about them.
Cara WilsonAnd in the most incredible way.
Cara WilsonAnd bottom line, somebody betrayed them.
Cara WilsonAnd they were captured.
Cara WilsonAugust 4, 1944.
Cara WilsonThey were sent to the concentration camps and the only one who returned was Otto Frank.
Cara WilsonIt was a ghastly, ghastly story of their deaths and dying.
Cara WilsonAnd when you read her the Miep, her, the assistant found the diary after the Nazis had left, there was her diary and all her writings across the floor.
Cara WilsonMiep retrieved them, saved them, and she was going to save it for Anne when She returned.
Cara WilsonBut when that wasn't going to happen, she gave everything to Otto Frank and said, this is your daughter's legacy.
Cara WilsonIt was a devastating time for him because it was like a double death.
Cara WilsonHe really had.
Cara WilsonHe didn't really know is he was so close to Ann, but he didn't know that side of her.
Cara WilsonAnd it's extraordinary.
Cara WilsonAnd what's amazing, and I've talked to people, so many students from all over, and they all relate to her, no matter who they are, no matter what religion, no matter what race, she talks the voice of young people, and you can't believe that she didn't survive with her sister Margaret.
Cara WilsonSo, you know, the diary is like, she.
Cara WilsonShe told her father, I want to live on even after my death.
Cara WilsonAnd that was why he had Her Words published in Time.
Cara WilsonThat's the story, you know.
Kevin LoweYeah, yeah.
Kevin LoweSuch a.
Kevin LoweSuch a powerful story.
Kevin LoweAnd for, I think, so many of us have read that book in school.
Cara WilsonYes.
Kevin LoweLike elementary or middle school.
Kevin LoweAbsolutely.
Kevin LoweNow, you ended up developing a relationship over a long period of time with her father, with Otto.
Kevin LoweHow did that even begin?
Cara WilsonBy the time the book the Darry Van Frank was published, that was the early 50s, it became a Broadway show.
Cara WilsonIt became so popular all over the world.
Cara WilsonIt was, like, amazing.
Cara WilsonAnd then 20th Century Fox sent out talent scouts because they were going to do the movie the Diary Van Frank.
Cara WilsonAnd they went all over the country trying to find someone who looked like a young Anne.
Cara WilsonAnd I was at 12 years old.
Cara WilsonI looked a lot like her.
Cara WilsonAnd somebody said, would you like to audition for the part?
Cara WilsonOf course, I went crazy.
Cara WilsonI mean, you know, here I was in Southern California.
Cara WilsonI wanted to be a dancer and an actor and all of that.
Cara WilsonI was thrilled.
Cara WilsonAnd it was the first time at age 12, that I even read the Diary of Anne Frank.
Cara WilsonAnd I was so devastated.
Cara WilsonI.
Cara WilsonI'd never read anything about her.
Kevin LoweIt.
Cara WilsonTo me, it kept saying, did she die?
Cara WilsonIs she alive?
Cara WilsonAnd, you know, it was so wrenching to me.
Cara WilsonAnd they said, no, this is a true story.
Cara WilsonAnd no, she did not survive.
Cara WilsonAnd so I did an audition.
Cara WilsonI went to 20th Century Fox.
Cara WilsonWell, of course, I didn't get the part.
Cara WilsonI keep saying, oh, well, oh, well, you know, beautiful Millie Perkins got the part.
Cara WilsonBut I said, is Otto Frank still alive?
Cara WilsonAnd they said, yes, he's still alive.
Cara WilsonHe's in Basel, Switzerland.
Cara WilsonWell, could I write to him?
Cara WilsonAnd they said, yes.
Cara WilsonAnd they gave me his address.
Cara WilsonAnd that was the beginning.
Cara WilsonAnd he and his second wife, Fritzi, who he met Coming back from the camps, became his wife.
Cara WilsonAnd she was somebody very important in my life as well.
Cara WilsonI started writing to him, and basically it became not just, you know, his first letter to me was, thank you.
Cara WilsonVery short and sweet.
Cara WilsonI can't, you know, thank you for writing to me.
Cara WilsonI'm very busy writing to, you know, young people all over, but please do good in Anne's name.
Cara WilsonIt was that sort of bye, bye.
Cara WilsonAnd I wrote him back right away, that's okay, Mr.
Cara WilsonFrank.
Cara WilsonYou don't have to write to me.
Cara WilsonI just want to write to you.
Cara WilsonAnd so I think he realized in time, this kid's not going away.
Cara WilsonI'm going to write to her.
Cara WilsonAnd so he did.
Cara WilsonHe became like a grandfather.
Cara WilsonI poured out my heart.
Cara WilsonI told him everything about my life and questions and everything.
Cara WilsonAnd he guided me throughout my life, nearly 20 years of my life.
Cara WilsonAnd we did finally meet in person.
Cara WilsonBut it was a very, you know, he's very transformative.
Cara WilsonAnd what he gave me is what I want to share with others.
Cara WilsonHe was a man of hope and a tremendous amount of hope.
Cara WilsonAnd I'll tell you, Kevin, that the key letter that changed my soul and lifted me was in the 60s when Martin Luther King was assassinated and Robert Kennedy was assassinated and President Kennedy was assassinated.
Cara WilsonWe had the Vietnam War, we had race riots.
Cara WilsonI couldn't believe what was going on in our world, and I was devastated.
Cara WilsonAnd I wrote to him and I said, I don't know why you speak of hope so much, Otto Frank, because I have none.
Cara WilsonAnd I will never bring a child into a world this cruel.
Cara WilsonAnd he wrote back to me and he said, even if you believe the end of the world would be imminent, Kara, you still plant a tree today.
Cara WilsonNever give up hope.
Cara WilsonAnd he had two trees planted in my name to punctuate that.
Cara WilsonAnd it meant more to me than anything because he knew nature means so much to me.
Cara WilsonBut it does mean so much.
Cara WilsonIt's sort of like even when we go through the hopeless times that we're facing in this world today, to me, Mother Nature is the great healer, and we cannot give up hope.
Kevin LoweYes.
Cara WilsonYou know, we can't.
Kevin LoweYeah, absolutely.
Kevin LoweHope is everything.
Cara WilsonIt is everything.
Cara WilsonKevin.
Kevin LoweYes.
Kevin LoweNow, out of curiosity, I mean, you were just a teenage girl, a young teenage girl.
Kevin LoweWhat made you.
Kevin LoweI mean, especially.
Kevin LoweYou didn't get the part.
Kevin LoweBut what made you want to write, to reach out to her father?
Cara WilsonI fell in love with him.
Cara WilsonHe was like, you know, my father was a good man.
Cara WilsonAs a kind person, I wanted that relationship that Anne had with her father.
Cara WilsonI wanted this man.
Cara WilsonI wanted his full attention.
Cara WilsonI wanted his time.
Cara WilsonI never knew my grandfather's.
Cara WilsonTo me, he represented everything that a father was.
Cara WilsonAnd of course, looking at it later in as an adult, I realized of course he was all of that Fred.
Cara WilsonHe was trapped inside, you know, they were hiding.
Cara WilsonAnd so he had been a businessman, he wouldn't have had the time either.
Cara WilsonBut because he was there with them.
Cara WilsonHe was their teacher, he was their confidant.
Cara WilsonHe was everything.
Cara WilsonAnd to me he was their everything.
Cara WilsonAnd I loved his relationship with.
Cara WilsonAnd it really moved me.
Cara WilsonHe was like To Kill a Mockingbird is also one of my favorite.
Cara WilsonHe was my Atticus, you know, it's just that I loved his compassion, his caring and I just, I felt I needed to talk to him.
Kevin LoweYeah, yeah, absolutely.
Kevin LoweNow, during the time that you spent this time writing back and forth, did you ever tell your family, your friends about this?
Cara WilsonI did, you know, some of them and some of them understood.
Cara WilsonIt wasn't until really recently when I start have been giving talks all over that people, you know, really, really care about this story.
Cara WilsonAt the time, my father didn't really know.
Cara WilsonHe was busy.
Cara WilsonLater on he felt a little, I think a little jealous.
Cara WilsonBut it's sort of like, that's fine.
Cara WilsonI had this wonderful relationship.
Cara WilsonIt was just a very special relationship.
Cara WilsonAnd I felt I could tell him anything.
Cara WilsonAnd he was so patient and kind with me.
Cara WilsonThe way he.
Cara WilsonAnd he validated it didn't, you know, later when I saw my letters, you know, it was almost embarrassing.
Cara WilsonI every.
Cara WilsonEverything was exclamation points and blah, blah, blah.
Cara WilsonAnd I thought, oh my God, you know, this man was so kind.
Cara WilsonBut it was only later, later, later Kevin, when I finally met him in person, would I realize how much he validated not only myself, but the world of children that reached out to him.
Cara WilsonHe gave us.
Cara WilsonWhen he opened up this cupboard door when we finally were together and I saw from ceiling to floor, boxes and boxes and boxes, thousands of letters from young people all over the world.
Cara WilsonAnd he answered every one of us.
Cara WilsonAnd then he took this huge box, put it in front of me and said, these are your letters.
Cara WilsonAnd so he saved, he validated me, saved me.
Cara WilsonAnd you know, and that's what he did for all of us.
Cara WilsonI mean, one of the, one of them, two of them are like, I call them my brothers.
Cara WilsonThe long time correspondence with Otto Frank.
Cara WilsonOne became an artist and the other one became a priest.
Cara WilsonAnd so, yeah, they're my brothers.
Cara WilsonFather John Neiman and Ryan Cooper, and I love them dearly.
Cara WilsonAnd they have their own extraordinary stories about Otto Frank.
Kevin LoweYeah.
Kevin LoweWow.
Kevin LoweNow tell me the story about finally getting to meet Otto.
Cara WilsonOh, well, that's good.
Cara WilsonYou know, I've told that story so many times, and each time it's going to make me cry.
Kevin LoweI'm sorry.
Cara WilsonYou're going to make me cry, Kevin.
Cara WilsonWell, you know, coming from Hollywood, you know, that world, everything in my life, it still is scene A and scene B.
Cara WilsonScene A is the way I wish life would be.
Cara WilsonAnd scene B is the backup scene.
Cara WilsonIt could never be that good, but, you know, oh, well, I'll do that.
Cara WilsonAnd so finally, when I was heading first to Amsterdam to meet Miep, you know, Miep was his assistant, and Kevin, she's a story all on her own.
Cara WilsonMiep Gies is a hero.
Cara WilsonAnd she would get upset.
Cara WilsonNo, I'm not.
Cara WilsonI said, oh, yes, you are.
Cara WilsonYou know, you see, they've done movies about her and documentaries.
Cara WilsonShe was extraordinary human being, and she was the one.
Cara WilsonShe and her husband Jan, took me through the Anne Frank house and told me everything.
Cara WilsonSo many of the things I know now are because of me.
Cara WilsonAnd so we had this wonderful time together.
Cara WilsonShe says, well, you better get to Basel because Otto and Fritzi are waiting for you.
Cara WilsonAnd so I practiced on this train going to Basel, Switzerland, after riding Basel a million times, it seems on this train.
Cara WilsonAnd I'm practicing.
Cara WilsonScene A was I wanted him to be everything I wanted him to be, you know, that we would hug each other and it would be so emotional, and he would be this beautiful soul that I love so much.
Cara WilsonBut scene B was, you know, I'm a busy man, Cara, you know, let's have some tea.
Cara WilsonAnd I, you know, I must go.
Cara WilsonIt was that, you know, I thought, oh, it can't be that.
Cara WilsonI want it to be seen.
Cara WilsonA And finally, Basel station doors open, trains open.
Cara WilsonAnd there's Fritzie.
Cara WilsonAnd we recognized each other right away.
Cara WilsonOh, my God.
Cara WilsonWe were hugging each other.
Cara WilsonAnd I said, where's.
Cara WilsonWhere's Otto Fritzi?
Cara WilsonShe says, there he is.
Cara WilsonAnd there he was, Kevin, standing on the platform.
Cara WilsonA very tall man.
Cara WilsonYou could see where he could have been a Prussian soldier.
Cara WilsonHe carried himself so tall and erected, you know, very elegant with his suit and tie and shirt.
Cara WilsonAnd everything about him had class and elegance.
Cara WilsonAnd he turns to me, arms outspread.
Cara WilsonK.
Cara WilsonAt last.
Cara WilsonIt was CN it was scene A.
Cara WilsonIt was incredible.
Cara WilsonI'll never.
Cara WilsonWe just.
Cara WilsonIt was so emotional.
Cara WilsonAnd we went back to their place.
Cara WilsonAnd I was talking, talking, talking, talking nonstop.
Cara WilsonAnd he showed me the family albums that Meep had recovered as well, and of the children.
Cara WilsonAnd we were saying everything there was.
Cara WilsonYou know, I asked him a million questions, the two pivotal ones, and I wish I had more time with him and more things to talk to him about, but I was so overwhelmed.
Cara WilsonBut there was two things that stand out in my mind.
Cara WilsonOne, he showed me this picture, this little snapshot, and they were.
Cara WilsonI said, who is that, Otto?
Cara WilsonAnd he said, ah, those little boys in a sandbox.
Cara WilsonAdorable, little golden haired boys in a sandbox.
Cara WilsonThey were my friends.
Cara WilsonThat is me as a child.
Cara WilsonAnd all of those little boys grew up to become Nazis.
Cara WilsonAnd that was like a gut punch, because those children were not Nazis.
Cara WilsonThey learned that.
Cara WilsonThey became that.
Cara WilsonYou know, that's something.
Cara WilsonYou know, you learn cruelty, you learn fear.
Cara WilsonBut those beautiful little children were not that.
Cara WilsonAnd it really, really affected me.
Cara WilsonAnd the other part, when I.
Cara WilsonNot only the extraordinary, seeing all the letters, which was just floored me, but when I asked him, otto, do you know who betrayed you?
Cara WilsonAnd he turned to me and he just said, it doesn't matter.
Cara WilsonAnd I've learned since that he probably did know who it was.
Cara WilsonBut at the time I met him, it was three years before he died.
Cara WilsonHe.
Cara WilsonWhen it first.
Cara WilsonWhen he was first liberated, it mattered extraordinarily.
Cara WilsonHe did everything he could to find out, what is it?
Cara WilsonSomebody he knew.
Cara WilsonThere were many suspects, and he went to trials, he tried to find out who did this.
Cara WilsonAnd by the time I met him, there was peace.
Cara WilsonYou could see the pain in his eyes.
Cara WilsonBut he had let it go.
Cara WilsonIt wasn't going to do anything any good, and it would have destroyed the innocent people around, whoever it was who betrayed them, and mostly the children of this person.
Cara WilsonSo he just said to me, it doesn't matter.
Cara WilsonAnd that doesn't matter has resonated with me throughout my life, because everything in my life is, oh, my God, this matters.
Cara WilsonThis matters.
Cara WilsonIt matters that now I can hear Otto saying, does it really.
Cara WilsonDoes it really matter?
Cara WilsonCan you let it go?
Cara WilsonAnd most of the time, we can.
Kevin LoweWow.
Kevin LoweI mean, is there not such wisdom in that very statement alone?
Cara WilsonIsn't it true?
Kevin LoweI mean, talk about setting you free, you know, to acknowledge, does it really matter?
Cara WilsonThat's right.
Kevin LoweWow.
Kevin LoweNow, speaking about the thing of who betrayed them, I actually read, preparing for our interview day, that all these letters, years later, would actually be used in some type of investigation into this.
Cara WilsonThat's true.
Kevin LoweYeah.
Kevin LoweTalk to Me about that.
Cara WilsonThat was a recent discovery, Let me tell you.
Cara WilsonI had no idea.
Cara WilsonI was contacted by.
Cara WilsonHis name is Vince Pankoc.
Cara WilsonHe's absolutely become a very dear friend of mine, a very.
Cara WilsonHe was retired FBI agent and he was part of this investigation.
Cara WilsonHe had been retired, and it was a cold case investigation that he was asked, would you help us see if we can find who the betrayer was?
Cara WilsonSo he was involved in extensive.
Cara WilsonI mean, we're talking about years of trying, you know, uncovering every single.
Cara WilsonThere's so many people I could talk to you about who are suspect even now that they have very good cases.
Cara WilsonThere's many of them who you'd say, well, he has to be.
Cara WilsonA wonderful book by.
Cara WilsonCarol Ann Lee wrote the Hidden Life of Otto Frank, who.
Cara WilsonAbsolutely.
Cara WilsonThe family believes this is Tony Allers, a Dutch Nazi who was blackmailing Otto Frank.
Cara WilsonVery good case against him.
Cara WilsonThere's so many that I could talk about.
Cara WilsonBut the main thing was that why my letters were integral is that they felt that they found.
Cara WilsonOtto Frank was given the name when he came back.
Cara WilsonWhen he was liberated in 45, somebody gave him a name of somebody who was the betrayer.
Cara WilsonAnd it was not somebody who knew them, but he was head of the Jewish Council.
Cara WilsonAnd he basically was given a list of buildings, if I understand it clearly, it's a little complicated for me, but where there might be Jews hidden.
Cara WilsonSo I think what I understand is that he gave this to the Nazis that he worked with to protect his own family.
Cara WilsonHe was a father also.
Cara WilsonBut his name was given to Otto Frank by a friend of Otto's.
Cara WilsonAnd Otto typed that name down and hit it, put it away.
Cara WilsonIt was one of those things.
Cara WilsonBut why Vince contacted me was that he said, would you mind?
Cara WilsonWould you be able to.
Cara WilsonIf we promise that we will take good care of your letters, would you send your first letters to us in Europe for us to analyze?
Cara WilsonBecause we believe, would Otto Frank type this name?
Cara WilsonIt would have been on a typewriter with the same font as your letters had.
Cara WilsonThey wanted to assess the timing, the date, the font, the typewriter was all essential.
Cara WilsonBut he didn't tell me the details.
Cara WilsonHe just said, may we analyze your letters?
Cara WilsonAnd I said, yes, he says, I will register them.
Cara WilsonAnd he was so nervous when he went to Amsterdam.
Cara WilsonHe waited for this plane, which was delayed because my letters were on there.
Cara WilsonAnd he was absolutely freaking out.
Cara WilsonOh, my God, we've lost her letters.
Cara WilsonThey arrived and they sent them off to us, you know, this specialist in Germany to analyze Those early letters.
Cara WilsonAnd when Vince wrote back to me, he was beyond excited.
Cara WilsonThank you so much.
Cara WilsonWe have what we need, and I cannot tell you what it is, you know.
Cara WilsonAnd so it was much later that I learned it was.
Cara WilsonIt was the font, it was the typewriter, it was that what they were looking at.
Cara WilsonAnd they felt that they had what they needed.
Cara WilsonNow, again, there are many, many theories going around, but I feel Rosemary Sullivan's book was brilliant and Vince Van Koch is extraordinary.
Cara WilsonYou'll want to talk to him sometime, Kevin, because he's walking atlas.
Cara WilsonHe's a scholar on this, and the work that he put into this is amazing.
Cara WilsonSo ultimately they feel that that is it.
Cara WilsonBut again, you can't 100% say anything, you know, that this is definitively.
Cara WilsonBut he has some very good proof.
Cara WilsonAnd apparently my letters had something to do with it, which was beyond anything I could even fathom.
Kevin LoweYeah, absolutely.
Kevin LoweHow many years after, maybe after Otto passed away, did this happen where they contacted you about the letters?
Cara WilsonThis was recently.
Cara WilsonThis was a few years ago.
Kevin LoweOkay.
Kevin LoweWow.
Kevin LoweWow.
Kevin LoweEven more crazy that it was that long.
Cara WilsonThat's right.
Cara WilsonThat's right.
Cara WilsonWell, his ids, the cold case, I don't know the dates.
Cara WilsonHe was working on it maybe 10 years.
Cara WilsonBut as they were going through and going through that, then they thought, okay, they were zeroing in on the fact that he typed this down, he wrote it down, and that's where they were just zeroing in, zeroing in.
Cara WilsonAnd so when he found me, it was, you know, so we have, since we've all met, we have Father John and Ryan and Vince and I, we call ourselves the Automobilers.
Cara WilsonWe've given talks together and they each have amazing points of view.
Cara WilsonWe all have our own perspective of Otto Frank and how we did that.
Cara WilsonBut, yes, I mean, we have our own theories.
Cara WilsonAnd after a while, you know, you think this person could absolutely have done it.
Cara WilsonOr that person.
Cara WilsonOr that person.
Cara WilsonAnd Otto Frank said, you know, there were at least two hundred and fifty people who knew they were in hiding.
Cara WilsonIt could have been, you know, an accident.
Cara WilsonSome people say it was an absolute accident that they were discovered.
Cara WilsonOne of the things that Vince said, and I found it profoundly fascinating, was when the Nazis and the Dutch, the Dutch Nazis, they call them the Green Police.
Cara WilsonAnd the head Nazi, Silber Bauer, on August 4, were.
Cara WilsonWent to the office workers and said, give us the key.
Cara WilsonShow us, you know, they knew.
Cara WilsonNow they found out that there were Jews hiding.
Cara WilsonWhat they would have noticed.
Cara WilsonAnd as an investigator, Vince said they would have noticed immediately because, you know, the door where the family was hiding was now a bookcase was in front of it.
Cara WilsonNobody would have known that there was a door behind it.
Cara WilsonUnless you look down on the floor.
Cara WilsonWhat was called a witness sign.
Cara WilsonYou know, a witness.
Cara WilsonIt was like, you saw this.
Cara WilsonIt's a crescent shape on the floor that says that this bookcase opens and closes.
Kevin LoweYes.
Cara WilsonAnd they would have seen that right away.
Cara WilsonSo it's a fast.
Cara WilsonIt's a story that keeps on.
Cara WilsonEach time I think the story has been told one more, one more thing, you know, so that witness sign was just phenomenal.
Cara WilsonAnd yeah, Vince went into much detail about it and that, you know, the capture itself is just horrible.
Cara WilsonBut reading.
Cara WilsonI'm working on another project about Otto Frank.
Cara WilsonAnd it takes me back there in those camps.
Cara WilsonAnd he was a man.
Cara WilsonHe identified more than anything in the world of being Papa Frank, being a father.
Cara WilsonAnd that's the thing that kept him alive, the very, very thing.
Cara WilsonHe was nearly near his death and he said to this young man with him when they were in Auschwitz, he says, let's just talk about literature and music, not about food.
Cara WilsonThere was death and stench all around them.
Cara WilsonHe says, talk, let's talk about what we love music.
Cara WilsonAnd he says, and please, I need to be a father to someone.
Cara WilsonI need to be a father.
Cara WilsonThat's why I'm calling me Papa Frank.
Cara WilsonAnd so this young man called him Papa Frank forever.
Cara WilsonAnd that's what he wanted to tell you.
Cara WilsonYeah, it was really extraordinary story.
Cara WilsonAmazing.
Kevin LoweWow.
Kevin LoweAbsolutely.
Kevin LoweI'm curious for you, kind of your own personal life, how did this relationship affect you and impact maybe where you went with your life as you grew older?
Cara WilsonIt's a great, great question, Kevin, you know, and usually one I haven't talked because I'm so used to talking about them.
Cara WilsonBut after he passed and Fritzie and I were still writing to each other and very close.
Cara WilsonI was close to Buddy Elias, his nephew.
Cara WilsonThis family.
Cara WilsonMy life after, you know, I was in Southern California.
Cara WilsonI was a married woman.
Cara WilsonMy sons, Ethan and Jesse were often school grown.
Cara WilsonI went through divorce, bankruptcy.
Cara WilsonI lost everything that I knew in my life.
Cara WilsonHit the floor.
Cara WilsonIt.
Cara WilsonIt was like I was, you know, almost 50 years old.
Cara WilsonI had never really been out on my own.
Cara WilsonAnd I thought this was the end of my life.
Cara WilsonI didn't know how.
Cara WilsonHow I was going to cope with anything.
Cara WilsonYou know, it was just.
Cara WilsonI was a babe in the woods, you know, and just terrified.
Cara WilsonSo a friend of mine wrote to me and said she was in Monterey and said, come.
Cara WilsonCome to us from la, my husband and I, and write, you know, do press releases and we'll find you a place.
Cara WilsonDon't worry, you're going to be fine.
Cara WilsonThis was.
Cara WilsonShe was an angel.
Cara WilsonShe was a total angel.
Cara WilsonAnd so it was the first time I really got in this funky old car and I took off.
Cara WilsonI don't know how I did it.
Cara WilsonAnd I heard this voice loud and clear in my soul that's said, you know, you're all right, you are fine.
Cara WilsonYour children are fine.
Cara WilsonYou know, they're off in school and in college, and, you know, you're healthy, your animals are going to be fine.
Cara WilsonI had six animals to take care of.
Cara WilsonBut this voice said, but you're not learning your lessons.
Cara WilsonAnd so we've pulled the rug out from under you, and you're going to have to start all over again.
Cara WilsonAnd this is what this voice.
Cara WilsonI have some tough, tough angels, Kevin.
Cara WilsonThey're not messing with me.
Cara WilsonYou know, it's like there's no sugarcoating there.
Cara WilsonThey're just saying, get over it and get on.
Cara WilsonYes, I was.
Cara WilsonSo I'm not going to say it was easy.
Cara WilsonI sat on the studio floor, this little box, after having this beautiful rustic home in the Hollywood Hills, with boxes all around me, my six animals.
Cara WilsonI was very.
Cara WilsonI didn't know if I wanted to go on living.
Cara WilsonBut the only thing that really kept me going, even though I knew my sons were fine, I had to feed my animals.
Cara WilsonI mean, I love them more than anything, so who was going to take care of them if I off myself?
Cara WilsonSo I went out and had every job in the world, which turned out to be the best thing that could have ever happened to me.
Cara WilsonI mean, it was really.
Cara WilsonBut on top of that, while I'm sitting on the floor, I had this fax machine that was.
Cara WilsonStarted pumping out just all these papers.
Cara WilsonAnd what it said was, a friend of mine who was in Hollywood said, kara, I think I found a producer to.
Cara WilsonWants to, you know, a publisher who wants to write your story about Otto Frank.
Cara WilsonAnd I went, what?
Cara WilsonThat was.
Cara WilsonSo I.
Cara WilsonAre you what?
Cara WilsonAnd there it was.
Cara WilsonI was able to.
Cara WilsonYou know, I didn't even want to write that because it was all about going back into my past, a past that was painful.
Cara WilsonI didn't want to talk about the house I used to have, the marriage I used to have.
Cara WilsonI didn't know if I wanted to.
Cara WilsonSo I turned to Fritzie and Buddy and I said, is this.
Cara WilsonDo you want me to do this, should I write about.
Cara WilsonThey said, yes.
Cara WilsonWe want people to know who Otto Frank was.
Cara WilsonYou need to write this story.
Cara WilsonAnd I got in advance.
Cara WilsonThat money saved me.
Cara WilsonAnd that was Otto Frank.
Cara WilsonIt was like this, you know, he was right there writing a check for me.
Cara WilsonAnd on top of that, another spooky thing that would happen while I was doing all this strangest thing kept happening.
Cara WilsonThe number eight kept popping up.
Cara WilsonYou know, if eight friends would show up to go to a concert on the eighth row with eight tickets, I'd go into the forest, and there at the right, at my feet, there'd be a torn card with the number 8 on it.
Cara WilsonIt was happening all the time.
Cara WilsonAnd finally somebody called me and said, kara, do you know what the number eight is in Italian?
Cara WilsonIt's auto.
Kevin LoweWow.
Cara WilsonI know.
Cara WilsonAnd it's a sign of infinity and, you know, abundance.
Cara WilsonHe was again from on high telling me, you can't give up hope.
Cara WilsonSo I'm telling you, it was an extraordinary second half of my life.
Cara WilsonThat was.
Cara WilsonAnd that's how I met my husband now, Peter.
Cara WilsonBut that took years.
Cara WilsonI mean, it was.
Cara WilsonI had to do a lot of work.
Cara WilsonI had to grow up.
Cara WilsonI'm still not growing up, Kevin.
Cara WilsonI mean, I'm an older than God, but I still have not grown up.
Kevin LoweOh, my goodness.
Cara WilsonYeah, I'll remain immature all my life, and maybe that's.
Cara WilsonMaybe that's a good thing.
Kevin LoweAbsolutely.
Kevin LoweOh, my God.
Kevin LoweSo your book, your memoir is Tree of Hope.
Cara WilsonTree of Hope.
Kevin LoweTalk about the title.
Cara WilsonBecause when he, you know, told me, even if the end of the world would be imminent, you still plant a tree today.
Cara WilsonHe was my tree of hope.
Cara WilsonHe gave me that hope.
Cara WilsonHe would.
Cara WilsonAnd trees, to me, are everything.
Cara WilsonHopeful and all of nature.
Cara WilsonOne of my other books is Strength from Nature.
Cara WilsonBut he knew that.
Cara WilsonHe knew how much that would mean to me, and he was.
Cara WilsonThat.
Cara WilsonHe was my tree of hope.
Cara WilsonHe would not let me give up hope.
Cara WilsonAnd I know when I go to, I have a side of me that has a dark side, a hopelessness.
Cara WilsonOh, it's never going to.
Cara WilsonYou know, when I see the tragedies that are happening in the world today there, I tend to go to that place.
Cara WilsonAnd yet I remember, you know, I would be calling up Otto and saying, please, please tell me again.
Cara WilsonWhen I read about what he went through and then losing his beautiful daughters, all of that.
Cara WilsonAnd yet he was able to give all of us young people, many of them had riveting stories of hopelessness, and he gave us all that.
Cara WilsonAnd that was able to, you know, we were able to help him continuing.
Cara WilsonContinue being the father that he was meant to be.
Cara WilsonAnd he was our father figure.
Cara WilsonI can't give up hope.
Cara WilsonYou know, I have grandchildren.
Cara WilsonThat why I looked at these young people who have.
Cara WilsonI believe they signed on for this crazy world.
Cara WilsonSo I can't leave them or give up hope.
Cara WilsonWe're here to help each other and to teach each other.
Cara WilsonWe're all students.
Cara WilsonWe're all teachers.
Cara WilsonEverything we go through is something to help others.
Cara WilsonIt's how we learn.
Cara WilsonIt's how we uplift each other.
Cara WilsonI learn.
Cara WilsonI'm an absolute survivor junkie.
Cara WilsonI mean.
Cara WilsonI mean, to me, your story, Kevin, is amazing.
Cara WilsonI mean, I thrive in knowing people who are overcoming many obstacles in order to be who they are and enlighten people.
Cara WilsonAnd that's what gives me hope.
Kevin LoweYeah, I love it so much.
Kevin LoweI want to ask you about the book, writing this book, right.
Kevin LoweWas it difficult for you to go back and to be so open and to share this honestly, this deeply personal relationship with somebody, to then put it out into the world?
Kevin LoweAnd kind of on top of that question is, my second part is, had you.
Kevin LoweBesides for the letters back and forth, had you ever thought about being a writer in the first place?
Cara WilsonI loved writing.
Cara WilsonI don't know if I thought about being a writer.
Cara WilsonI think more than anything, I wanted to be a performer, a dancer, an actor.
Cara WilsonAnd my kids have continued that.
Cara WilsonMy grandchildren, you know, they're.
Cara WilsonThey have that gene.
Cara WilsonBut I basically.
Cara WilsonI thought more of that.
Cara WilsonBut more than anything, I wanted to be a mother.
Cara WilsonAnd I wrote.
Cara WilsonOne of the things that Otto said to me, and it affected me deeply, is he said that with tears in his eyes when he was telling me the first time he opened Ann's diary.
Cara WilsonAnd he was so devastated because here he was, the closest to her of all of them, and yet he didn't know this side of her.
Cara WilsonAnd it just threw him.
Cara WilsonI didn't know my daughter.
Cara WilsonAnd he said to me, know your children.
Cara WilsonGod, I know your children.
Cara WilsonAnd I'm so grateful.
Cara WilsonI didn't keep journals or diaries of myself.
Cara WilsonI tried to, and it was just like, ugh.
Cara WilsonBut I wrote about them.
Cara WilsonI wrote journals about my children.
Cara WilsonAnd writing was something that I love doing, and I've done it.
Cara WilsonI was a commercial writer.
Cara WilsonI was a copywriter, marketing advertising for years.
Cara WilsonYou know, broadcast writing.
Cara WilsonI love.
Cara WilsonI'm a storyteller, so I love writing people's stories and telling people's stories, because everybody has A story.
Cara WilsonBut did I want to be.
Cara WilsonSee myself as a writer?
Cara WilsonNo, I don't think so.
Cara WilsonI think I just love writing.
Cara WilsonThere wasn't, you know, it was sort of jack of all trades.
Cara WilsonI loved doing it all.
Cara WilsonI wanted to do it all.
Cara WilsonThe arts.
Cara WilsonI wasn't that disciplined to do one thing.
Cara WilsonAnd I had to whittle down to what kind of a writer I am since I started out.
Cara WilsonLater, as in doing commercial writing, I realized I'm not, you know, a Harper Lee, you know, who to me is the best.
Cara WilsonI'm a conversational writer.
Cara WilsonI write the way I talk.
Cara WilsonAnd so, no, I didn't.
Cara WilsonI didn't see myself that way.
Cara WilsonWriting was something that was easy for me.
Cara WilsonI loved writing it.
Cara WilsonI read, you know, people's letters, I write.
Cara WilsonI read love stories, people's vows.
Cara WilsonI've done it for all my life.
Cara WilsonAnd it's just something that I enjoy immensely.
Cara WilsonThat just comes naturally to me.
Cara WilsonBut, yeah, no, I just think I never saw myself that way and I could never have imagined.
Cara WilsonYes, it was a very painful book.
Cara WilsonIt was like the fourth book.
Cara WilsonThere were other books before that.
Cara WilsonThis was the last one.
Cara WilsonIt's my favorite because the last part of it are the lessons I learned from Otto Frank.
Cara WilsonAnd I feel those are the ones I love to talk about what he gave me and continues to give me in so many ways.
Cara WilsonIt was a hard book, and it was a hard book for me to read later on, even now, because it's almost embarrassing to see how absolutely how open I was.
Cara WilsonBut in a sense, it endeared us to each other because we had a.
Cara WilsonA love for each other.
Cara WilsonWe didn't get to, you know, I didn't get to visit him as much and see him the way Father John and Ryan did.
Cara WilsonBut I had a deep love for him and his family.
Cara WilsonBuddy Elias, the nephew.
Cara WilsonAnd Fritzie was absolutely there for me and very, very painful time.
Cara WilsonShe wrote to me like a grandmother and was there guiding me.
Cara WilsonShe was very funny lady, but she was a very strong woman.
Cara WilsonAnd they adored each other.
Cara WilsonBut, yeah, it was not an easy one.
Cara WilsonAnd what is only easy to talk about now is I feel like I'm a channel for him.
Cara WilsonI don't want it to be the Kara Show.
Cara WilsonIt has nothing to do with me.
Cara WilsonI want to be the voice for those people that have passed, Anna and Margot and especially Otto, whose voice is so strong, especially now with all the horror and the tragedy that is happening in the world.
Cara WilsonI know that he would just be devastated with it.
Cara WilsonAnd would be saying the same thing.
Cara WilsonYou cannot give up hope.
Cara WilsonWe must unite.
Cara WilsonHe was a man that believed in uniting the world.
Cara WilsonAll races, all religions, Israelis, Palestinians.
Cara WilsonHe would wanted them all to be together.
Cara WilsonAnd I echo that.
Cara WilsonWe must not have enemies of each other.
Cara WilsonWe're here to love each other.
Kevin LoweYeah, absolutely.
Kevin LoweSuch a beautiful story that you have.
Kevin LoweAnd I have one last question.
Kevin LoweBut before I ask you that question, for somebody who's interested in your book and interested in everything that you do, because I would love for you even to share a little bit about what you do with writing.
Kevin LoweTell everybody where people can go to learn more about you and what you do.
Cara WilsonThank you.
Cara WilsonYes, certainly my books are on Amazon, Tree of Hope and also A Strength from Nature.
Cara WilsonBut you can go on my website, which is Words from Cara c a r a dot com www wordsfromcara.com and I'm writing right now with a person that you know very well, who we introduced to Sally Lotz.
Cara WilsonAnd she is an author and a speaker and a podcaster and she, and she coaches people to write their books.
Cara WilsonShe's a one and she's a longtime friend of mine, very dear woman.
Cara WilsonAnd we, we are trying something new because we're, this is sort of our, our wheelhouse and we're doing 90 day turnaround books.
Cara WilsonAnd so I interview them and we market them and she finds a way to do that.
Cara WilsonBut basically in 90 days we, you know, you can have your story and, and you can find her also.
Cara WilsonHello at Sally Lotz L O T Z.
Cara WilsonBut you can find that also on my website.
Cara WilsonYou can contact Sally.
Kevin LoweYeah, amazing.
Kevin LoweWell, I will be sure that all of that is in the show notes for anybody interested for easy access.
Kevin LoweI'll do all the links, all the details.
Kevin LoweSo amazing, so powerful.
Kevin LoweMy last question for you is whether it's something you gain from auto, whether maybe it's something that you've gained from your own life's experience in the world today that we're going in and all these just crazy, uncertain times.
Kevin LoweWhat is that last message you would like to leave the person listening to us today who's maybe worried they're anxious, they're struggling just with the fear of the world today.
Kevin LoweWhat would you leave them with?
Cara WilsonOh, that's wonderful.
Cara WilsonI would leave them with what helps me, Kevin.
Cara WilsonMother Nature always helps me.
Cara WilsonAnd it goes back to the tree.
Cara WilsonNo matter.
Cara WilsonEven if you believe this is all going to end.
Cara WilsonYou plant a metaphorical or a real tree, but you go out in nature and nature to me is the great healer.
Cara WilsonTo me, that is where God is.
Cara WilsonSo I would say find the hope there, find belief there.
Cara WilsonWhatever you believe in, whomever you believe in, however you pray or wish or whatever it is, just go somewhere and breathe in nature.
Cara WilsonAnd there, you mustn't give up hope, because we're here to help each other.
Cara WilsonWhat a mantra.
Cara WilsonI say all the time, my purpose is love and light.
Cara WilsonIt is to be love and light, to give love and light, to receive love and light, to communicate love and light.
Cara WilsonWhen you see yourself that way, you are that way.
Cara WilsonAnd whatever you're going through, the pain you're going through, the sorrow you're going through, we all go through it.
Cara WilsonBecause we wouldn't be here otherwise.
Cara WilsonWe can help others find the blessings inside us in our lives.
Cara WilsonAnd they're there.
Cara WilsonThey are always there.
Cara WilsonThey're harder sometimes to dig.
Cara WilsonThey're like gems, but they're there.
Cara WilsonAnd so, yes, I continue helping others through whatever you're going through, just like you are, Kevin.
Cara WilsonAnd I'm grateful, very grateful to all those who are doing the very thing.
Cara WilsonSo I just.
Cara WilsonDon't give up hope.
Cara WilsonPlant a tree.
Cara WilsonDon't give up hope.
Kevin LoweI love it so much.
Kevin LoweCara, thank you so much for sharing your story, for sharing the story of Anne Frank, of Otto Frank.
Kevin LoweIt's such a powerful message, and I just sincerely appreciate you sharing it with us today.
Cara WilsonThank you for giving me this opportunity, Kevin.
Cara WilsonAnd it's a pleasure meeting you.
Cara WilsonWonderful meeting you.
Cara WilsonThank you with all my heart.
Cara WilsonAnd they can contact me anytime they want.
Kevin LoweOkay?
Kevin LoweYes.
Kevin LowePerfect.
Kevin LowePerfect.
Kevin LoweAnd for you listening today, my hope, as always, is that you've heard something today that not only you enjoyed, but more so, maybe has you thinking about life in a little bit different way.
Kevin LoweBecause that's what it's about here.
Kevin LoweIt's about inspiring you to look at the hard stuff, maybe from a different angle, and hopefully making tomorrow even a little bit better than today.
Kevin LoweUntil next time, I'm Kevin Lowe, and this, of course, is another episode of Grit, Grace and Inspiration.
Kevin LoweSa.