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A young
Dutch victim of the
Holocaust and author of a famous
diary. Soon after
the Nazi rise to power in 1933, Anne Frank and her family
left
Germany for
Amsterdam, Holland. When the Germans subsequently occupied
the Netherlands in October 1940, Anne's father, Otto, began
to prepare for the eventuality of having to go into hiding.
On July 5, 1942 Anne's older sister, Margot, received a
summons from the
Central Office for Jewish Emigration (Zentralstelle fuer
Juedische Auswanderung), which ordered her to appear for
forced labor.
The very next day, the Franks moved into the empty annex of
Otto's office at Prinsengracht 263. Four of Otto's employees
knew about the plan and helped the Franks hide: Victor
Kugler, Johannes Kleiman, Elli Voskuijl, and Miep Gies. A
week later, the Franks were joined by the family of Otto's
partner, Hermann van Pels. An 8th person, Fritz Pfeffer,
came to hide in the annex on November 16, 1942. Anne turned
13, one month before she went into hiding, and for her
birthday she had received a diary. She immediately began to
record entries, addressed to an imaginary friend named
Kitty, and continued to write while living in the annex.
Anne wrote about her family relationships, her own
development, both physical and emotional, and about how it
felt to be in hiding. She described the events that occurred
in the annex and her reactions to them. On August 4,
1944, after more than 2 years of hiding, the
Security Service (SD) in Amsterdam found out that Jews
were living at Prinsengracht 263. They immediately came and
arrested the Franks, van Pels, and Pfeffer. Kleiman and
Kugler were also arrested and imprisoned. The 8 Jews were
sent to the Dutch transit camp at Westerbork,
and the Franks were transferred to
Auschwitz on the last
transport from the camp. Anne's mother, Edith, died in
Auschwitz. Anne and
Margot were moved to
Bergen-Belsen at the end of October 1944. Both died
there of typhus in March 1945. Their father, Otto, survived
Auschwitz and was
liberated by Soviet troops on January 27, 1945. When Otto
returned from Auschwitz, Miep Gies gave him the papers she
had saved from the annex; among them was Anne's diary. Otto
published the diary in 1947, under the name The Annex.
Since then, 20 million copies have appeared in more than 50
editions, in many languages. A stage version of the diary
premiered on Broadway on October 5, 1955; winning the
Pulitzer Prize for Best Play of the Year. A film version
appeared in 1959. The diary,
now known as "Anne Frank—The Diary of a Young Girl," has had
a very strong impact on people all over the world. For some,
it is their first contact with the Holocaust. Many view Anne
as a tangible symbol of the millions of victims of the
Holocaust. Eleanor Roosevelt declared that the diary is "a
remarkable book. Written by a young girl—and the young are
not afraid of telling the truth—it is one of the wisest and
most moving commentaries on war and its impact on human
beings that I have ever read." In 1960 the
annex where Anne hid during the war was made into a museum
addressing the struggle against Racism and
Antisemitism.
The Anne Frank Foundation has a documentation center,
creates teaching aids, and organizes traveling exhibits
about those subjects. The original diary is on display.
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