FEBRUARY, 1944
thURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1944
Dearest Kitty,
Invasion fever is mounting daily t try. If you ions, t laug all t may all be for nothing!
tatements as: quot;In t of a Britis to defend try, even flooding it, if necessary.quot; tential flood areas marked. Since large portions of Amsterdam ion reets rose to above our s. tricky question elicited a variety of responses:
quot;Itll be impossible to er.”
quot;Dont be silly. ell o try and s on our bats and caps and ser as much as we can, so nobody can see were Jews.”
quot;O imagine ts biting their legs!”
(t was a man, of course; well see w!)
quot;e even be able to leave table itll collapse if theres a flood.”
quot;Listen, everyone, all joking aside, ry and get a boat.”
quot;ter idea. e can eacake a packing crate from ttic and roh a wooden spoon.”
quot;Im going to ilts. I used to be a w;
quot;Jan Gies need to. ilts.”
So no you, Kit? ted banter is all very amusing, but reality ion about to arise: erdam?
quot;Leave ty along hers. Disguise ourselves as well as we can.”
quot;ever go outside! t to do is to stay put! tire population of o Germany, wheyll all die.”
quot;Of course ay place.
ell try to talk Kleiman and o coming o live s ask Miep and Kleiman to bring some blankets, just in case. And ra cereal grains to supplement ty-five pounds o find some more beans. At t about sixty-five pounds of beans and ten pounds of