While thousands of Kashmiris remain imprisoned in Indian jails, on the other side of the world Jewish activists cite disease in Nazi death camps in a call to free detained immigrants, because “Anne Frank did not die in a gas chamber.” According to this group of human rights activists, “Crowded, unsanitary detention camps are a death sentence for the people inside. These are the conditions that killed Anne Frank, who died of typhus in 1945.” This article is republished here from commondreams.org under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License. Relevant Links section included after the article.
Activists with the Jewish advocacy group Never Again Action are reminding the American people that famed Holocaust victim Anne Frank died in a Nazi concentration camp not from a gas chamber but from typhus—warning that an infectious disease like coronavirus within immigration detention camps in the U.S. could have the same potential for killing migrants as the outbreak spreads throughout the country.
On Sunday night, activists with the group projected an image of Anne Frank onto the John F. Kennedy Federal Building in Boston and onto the wall of a New York City immigration court to call on Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts and Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York to release detained immigrants, including families and children, in their states.
“Anne Frank didn’t die in a gas chamber,” Never Again Action Massachusetts spokesperson Elizabeth Weinbloom told the Boston Globe. “She died of a communicable disease in a crowded detention facility. It’s very clear that that’s going to happen to immigrants being held in Massachusetts.”
BREAKING: Tonight, Never Again Action showed up at New York’s immigration courthouse, to demand that @NYGovCuomo use his emergency powers and influence to ensure the release of ICE detainees from New York’s detention centers before COVID turns them into death camps. pic.twitter.com/rIYWxTb5zy
— ✡️ Never Again Action ✡️ (@NeverAgainActn) March 21, 2020
“Anne Frank died of an infectious disease in a crowded detention center,” the Boston message read. “Governor Baker, release everyone in ICE detention before it’s too late.”
The camps, which are run by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), threaten to become “de-facto death camps,” said Never Again Action national campaign director Alyssa Rubin—necessitating action from state governors.
“ICE is not interested in the health and safety of their detainees,” said Rubin. “We demand that governors use their emergency powers to order the release of all immigrant detainees in their state.”
Crowded, unsanitary detention camps are a death sentence for the people inside. These are the conditions that killed Anne Frank, who died of typhus in 1945.
— ✡️ Never Again Action ✡️ (@NeverAgainActn) March 16, 2020
Governors, use your emergency powers to save lives! Release immigrants in your state from detention before it's too late. https://t.co/qNnDpJQlEy
As Common Deams reported Sunday, Never Again Action protested the continuing detention of immigrant families in New Jersey and California over the weekend by surrounding both the Hudson County Detention Center in New Jersey and Gov. Gavin Newsom’s home in California with cars, honking and demanding from bullshorns that the states release detainees.

Eoin Higgins
Senior Editor and Staff Writer
Eoin Higgins is senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams. Follow him on Twitter: @EoinHiggins_
Relevant Links
URGENT: UN Human Rights Chief @mbachelet urges Governments to act now to prevent #COVID19 devastating the health of people in detention and other closed facilities, as part of global efforts to contain the pandemic.
— UN Human Rights (@UNHumanRights) March 25, 2020
Learn more 👉 https://t.co/rnNyBisoDM#StandUp4HumanRights pic.twitter.com/xZZyqeVKwn
Razia Sultana, daughter of JKLF resistance leader Mr Yasin Malik appeals her dad not to go on hunger strike.#lockdown #COVID19outbreak #COVIDー19 #coronavirus #ReleaseKashmiriPrisoners #Kashmir pic.twitter.com/MtByZT7xSU
— Cashmiri Since Bronze Age🍁 (@Kaschmirr) March 22, 2020
I saw an old man collapse in front of me because the forces wouldn't let him go to a hospital amidst the curfew. I lost 3 relatives during the lockdown and got to know months later when the blockade on phones was lifted. Do not compare your lockdown with what we had to endure.
— Nabeel (@DukeofKashmir) March 24, 2020