Anne Frank
Anne Frank | |
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Frank in May 1942, two months before she and her family went into hiding | |
| Born | Annelies Marie Frank 12 June 1929 Frankfurt, Germany |
| Died | c. February or March 1945 (aged 15) Bergen-Belsen, Germany |
| Resting place | Bergen-Belsen concentration camp |
| Occupation | Diarist |
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Annelies Marie Frank (German: [ˈanə(liːs maˈʁiː) ˈfʁaŋk] ⓘ, Dutch: [ˌɑnəˈlis maːˈri ˈfrɑŋk, ˈɑnə ˈfrɑŋk] ⓘ; 12 June 1929 – c. February or March 1945)[1] was a German-born Jewish girl and diarist who perished in the Holocaust. She gained worldwide fame posthumously for keeping a diary documenting her life in hiding during the German occupation of the Netherlands. In the diary, she regularly described her family's everyday life in their hiding place in an Amsterdam attic from 1942 until their arrest in 1944.
Frank was born in Frankfurt, Germany, in 1929. In 1934, when she was four and a half, Frank and her family moved to Amsterdam in the Netherlands after Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party gained control of Germany. By May 1940, the family was trapped in Amsterdam by the German occupation of the Netherlands. Frank lost her German citizenship in 1941 and became stateless. Despite spending most of her life in the Netherlands and being a de facto Dutch national,[2] she never officially became a Dutch citizen. As persecutions of the Jewish population increased in July 1942, the family went into hiding in rooms concealed behind a bookcase in the building where Frank's father, Otto Frank, worked. The family was arrested two years later by the Gestapo, on 4 August 1944.
Following their arrest, the Franks were transported to concentration camps. On 1 November 1944,[3] Anne Frank and her sister, Margot were transferred from Auschwitz to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where they died (presumably of typhus) a few months later. The Red Cross estimated that they died in March, with Dutch authorities setting 31 March as the official date. Later research has alternatively suggested, however, that they may have died in February or early March.
Otto, the only Holocaust survivor in the Frank family, returned to Amsterdam after World War II to find that Anne's diary had been saved by his secretaries, Miep Gies and Bep Voskuijl. Moved by his daughter's repeated wishes to be an author, Otto Frank published her diary in 1947.[4] It was translated from its original Dutch version and first published in English in 1952 as The Diary of a Young Girl (originally Het Achterhuis in Dutch, lit. 'the back house'; English: The Secret Annex) and has since been translated into over 70 languages.[5] With the publication of The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne became one of the most-discussed Jewish victims of the Holocaust. One of the world's best-known books, it is the basis for several plays and films.
- ^ Research by The Anne Frank House in 2015 revealed that Frank may have died in February 1945 rather than in March, as Dutch authorities had long assumed. "New research sheds new light on Anne Frank's last months" Archived 24 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine. AnneFrank.org, 31 March 2015
- ^ "How citizenship eluded Anne Frank? | Citizenship by Investment Journal". 22 November 2019. Archived from the original on 5 February 2024. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
- ^ Von Benda-Beckmann, Bas (2020). Na het Achterhuis. Anne Frank en de andere onderduikers in de kampen. Amsterdam: Querido. p. 217. ISBN 978-9021423920.
- ^ Van der Rol, Verhoeven (1995). Anne Frank Beyond the Diary: a Photographic Remembrance. New York: Puffin/Viking. pp. 80, 103. ISBN 978-0140369267.
- ^ "The publication of the diary". 15 October 2018. Archived from the original on 28 April 2019. Retrieved 3 December 2021.