The painting, by Italian artist Costantino Ciervo, is on display in Germany, at the privately run Fluxus+ Museum in Potsdam as part of an exhibition titled “Commune – The Paradox of Imagination in the Middle East Conflict.” It shows Frank, a universal symbol of the Holocaust, wearing a red-and-white keffiyeh, writing with a pencil on what seems to be the screen of a modern tablet.

Times of Israel (h/t Nita) The Israeli Embassy in Germany has condemned the piece, calling it “a prime example of a growing artistic trend” in which artistic freedom is used to normalize “historical distortion, antisemitism and, ultimately, terrorism.” The embassy called out Ciervo for portraying Jews as “modern Nazis” and demanded the immediate removal of the piece.
Volker Beck, chairman of the German-Israeli Friendship Association, voiced similar concerns. He filed a police complaint against the exhibition’s curators, charging that the work trivializes the persecution suffered during the Holocaust, turning a victim of Nazism into a symbol of the Palestinian cause.

“It suggests Israel is doing to Palestinians what the Nazis did to Anne Frank,” Beck said. “Even if the artist is protected by freedom of expression, curators have a duty to prevent attacks on the dignity and memory of Jewish victims.”
Kai Diekmann, president of the Friends of Yad Vashem in Berlin and former editor of the Bild newspaper, also condemned the painting, saying it is “a clear distortion of the Holocaust and is nothing less than cynical falsification of history.”
“The Holocaust and its victims are not templates for political debates,” he said in a statement. “When Anne Frank is portrayed as Palestinian, and Israelis are implicitly labeled as the new Nazis, this immediately crosses the line of what the IHRA working definition describes as antisemitic – especially where Israeli policies are equated with those of Nazi Germany.”
The painter, Ciervo, has meanwhile rejected accusations of antisemitism, saying the painting is intended as political criticism of Israeli policies rather than an attack on Jews or Holocaust memory. “This work is about Israeli actions, not Judaism,” he said in a video posted to social media, adding that he “strongly rejects” claims that the piece is antisemitic.
View this post on Instagram
That image doesn’t even look to me like Anne Frank. Poor artist.