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==Escape from Germany== With the {{lang|de|[[Anschluss]]}}, Germany's annexation of Austria on 12 March 1938, Meitner lost her Austrian citizenship.{{sfn|Sime|1996|pp=184β185}} [[Niels Bohr]] extended an offer to lecture in Copenhagen, and [[Paul Scherrer]] invited her to attend a congress in Switzerland, with all expenses paid. Carl Bosch still said that she could remain at the KWI for Chemistry, but by May she was aware that the [[Reich Ministry of Science, Education and Culture]] was looking into her case. On 9 May, she decided to accept Bohr's invitation to go to Copenhagen, where Frisch worked,{{sfn|Sime|1990|p=262}} but when she went to the Danish consulate to get a [[travel visa]], she was told that Denmark no longer recognised her Austrian passport as valid. She could not leave for Denmark, Switzerland or any other country.{{sfn|Sime|1996|pp=189β190}} Bohr came to Berlin in June, and was gravely concerned. When he returned to Copenhagen, he began looking for a position for Meitner in Scandinavia. He also asked [[Hans Kramers]] to see if anything was available in the Netherlands. Kramers contacted Coster, who in turn notified [[Adriaan Fokker]]. Coster and Fokker attempted to secure a position for Meitner at the [[University of Groningen]]. They found that the [[Rockefeller Foundation]] would not support refugee scientists, and that the [[International Federation of University Women]] had been flooded with applications for support from Austria. On 27 June, Meitner received an offer of a one-year position at Manne Siegbahn's new {{ill|Manne Siegbahn Laboratory|sv|Manne Siegbahnlaboratoriet}} in [[Stockholm]], then under construction, which would be devoted to nuclear physics, and she decided to accept it. But on 4 July she learned that academics would no longer be granted permission to travel abroad.{{sfn|Sime|1990|p=263}} [[File:Flugsnapparen 8.JPG|thumb|left|Meitner lived at this address for most of her years while in Sweden.]] Through Bohr in Copenhagen, [[Peter Debye]] communicated with Coster and Fokker, and they approached the [[Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (Netherlands)|Netherlands Ministry of Education]] with an appeal to allow Meitner to come to the Netherlands. As foreigners were not allowed to work for pay, an appointment as a non-salaried {{lang|nl|privaat-docente}} was required. [[Wander Johannes de Haas]] and [[Anton Eduard van Arkel]] arranged for one at [[Leiden University]].{{sfn|Sime|1990|p=264}} Coster also spoke to the head of the border guards, who assured him that Meitner would be admitted. A friend of Coster, E. H. Ebels, was a local politician from the border area, and he spoke directly to the guards on the border.{{sfn|Sime|1990|p=265}} On 11 July, Coster arrived in Berlin, where he stayed with Debye.{{sfn|Sime|1990|p=265}} The following morning, Meitner arrived early at the KWI for Chemistry, and Hahn briefed her on the plan. To avoid suspicion, she maintained her usual routine, remaining at the institute until 20:00 correcting one of the associate's papers for publication. Hahn and [[Paul Rosbaud]] helped her pack two small suitcases, carrying only summer clothes. Hahn gave her a diamond ring he had inherited from his mother in case of emergency; she took only 10 marks in her purse ({{Inflation|DE|10|1938|fmt=eq|cursign=β¬|r=-1}}). She then spent the night at Hahn's house. The next morning Meitner met Coster at the railway station, where they pretended to have met by chance. They travelled on a lightly used line to [[Bad Nieuweschans railway station]] on the border, which they crossed without incident;{{sfn|Sime|1990|p=266}} the German border guards may have thought that Meitner was the wife of a professor.{{sfn|Sime|1990|p=267}} A telegram from Pauli informed Coster that he was now "as famous for the abduction of Lise Meitner as for the discovery of hafnium".{{sfn|Sime|1996|p=205}} Meitner learned on 26 July that Sweden had granted her permission to enter on her Austrian passport, and two days later she flew to Copenhagen, where she was greeted by Frisch, and stayed with Niels and [[Margrethe Bohr]] at their holiday house in [[Tisvilde]]. On 1 August she travelled by train and steamship to [[Gothenburg]] station in Sweden, where she was met at by [[Eva von Bahr (physicist)|Eva von Bahr]]. They took a train, and then a steamer, to Von Bahr's home in [[KungΓ€lv]], where she stayed until September.{{sfn|Sime|1996|p=207}} Hahn told everyone at the KWI for Chemistry that Meitner had gone to Vienna to visit her relatives, and a few days later the institute had closed for the summer. On 23 August, she wrote to Bosch requesting retirement.{{sfn|Sime|1996|p=210}} He tried to ship her belongings to Sweden, but the Reich Ministry of Education insisted they remain in Germany.{{sfn|Sime|1990|pp=215β216}} Meitner was also concerned about her family in Austria. One of her first actions in Sweden was to apply for a Swedish immigration permit for Gusti and her husband Justinian (Jutz) Frisch.{{sfn|Sime|1990|pp=215β216}} Hahn selected [[Josef Mattauch]] to replace her as head of the physics section, and went to Vienna to offer him the job. While there he dined with Meitner's sisters Gusti and Gisela and their husbands Jutz Frisch and Karl Lion on 9 November. The next day Gusti informed him that Frisch had been arrested. That day, Meitner arrived in Copenhagen; arranging a travel visa had been difficult with her invalid Austrian passport. Hahn joined her in Copenhagen on 13 November, and had discussions about the uranium research with Meitner, Bohr and Otto Robert Frisch.{{sfn|Sime|1990|pp=226β228}}
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