Anne Frank House, Amsterdam, NetherlandsDuring the Holocaust, Anne Frank and her family and friends lived in the attic of Prinsengracht 263, now commonly called the
Anne Frank House. Anne’s father, Otto, also conducted his spice business from this building. The doorway to the attic was hidden behind a moveable bookcase, constructed especially for this purpose. The men and women who worked in Otto’s business knew of the hiding place and they supplied the eight people with food and news of the outside world. During her two years in hiding, Anne detailed her struggle in the international bestseller
The Diary of Anne Frank. On 4, August 1944, the hiding place was betrayed. The people in hiding were deported to various concentration camps and only Otto Frank survived. After his release from the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz, Mr. Frank was presented with his daughter’s diary. He said it revealed a person he did not know; her thoughts and words were not those of the young girl he had known. Today, the rooms of the Anne Frank House still evoke powerful emotions. Quotations from Anne’s diary, historical documents, photo enlargements, film clips, and origin al ephemera that belonged to those in hiding bring to life the events that took place here. Anne’s original diary and other notebooks can also be seen in the museum. Tip by
von.otter, photo by
Kajser-MK
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