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#Biography #History #Documentary

25 Comments

  1. Reading her diary when I was in Junior High School had a great impact on me. I have visited the Anne Frank museum twice, it’s a sad but moving place. It’s so sad that they almost made it thru the war 😔

  2. I remember reading her book for school and was so impressed at how bright she was. It felt like l really got to know her through her writing.
    An absolute tragedy that so many innocent ppl had to experience such a cruel death.
    Life is unfair for everyone, but it was definitely more unfair for them.
    If there is a heaven, l hope she is there with her family

  3. Poor, poor girl and her family and many, many more families. A disgraceful period in human history. Let us pray that it never happens again. Man must get on with his fellow man otherwise we will destroy ourselves . 🙏🙏👵🇦🇺

  4. I read her diary when I was in middle school and high school always had me sad that she lived a short life but I know she a much better place with her family and friends!!

  5. I always wonder what potential is lost in war. What could Anne have become? What other untold stories of promise were snuffed out before the owners of those stories could contribute to the world?

  6. Ironic. Now America has become the Nazi Party, in full support of antisemitism. So sad, the brainwashing of our young people going on in the

  7. Anne Frank was a childhood hero of mine— and remains a hero— for doing what so few twice her age and far more educated could ever do. She made an experience so horrific that it’s difficult to put into words relatable to people all over the world, especially children. WWII, that level of racism and disgust, the Holocaust, and even the idea of just mass-level conflict was foreign to me as a teen from a small town.

    The simple writings of a young girl I had never met made it understandable, relatable, and horrific in a way that shocked me to my core. I recall watching the old Shelley Winters version of the movie and sobbing in front of my classmates, going home, and just reading everything I could find on her, her family, the Holocaust, and the war as a whole. Hell, I sat and asked my grandpa (a WWII vet) to tell me everything he could remember.

    It’s just so rare to find someone who can move you with their words, someone who can reach a group of people so clearly and deeply. The fact she was a child— and writing only to herself— when she did so is just so profound. She’s a brilliant marker of history and should be celebrated as such 🤍

  8. Anne Frank was a German girl and Jewish victim of the Holocaust who is famous for keeping a diary of her experiences. Anne and her family went into hiding for two years to avoid Nazi persecution. Her documentation of this time is now published in The Diary of a Young Gir

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