People during the holocaust were tortured and killed for nothing, but this one family was courageous. Anne and her family were brave enough to go into hiding during this time. They spent 25 months on a tiny anex above her father's shop. They spent it with the Van Pels and Mr. Feffer. They had to stay in complete silence for so many months ending up to be years. The historical events in Anne Frank changed the family’s relationships and moods. Historical evidence changed the mood of the characters by showing the Franks, Van Pels, and Mr Feffer how serious it was outside of the annex. “You don’t realize what’s going on… Right here in Amsterdam every day hundreds of Jews disappear...” (Hackett, 130) Anne is normally a pretty chill character
in this story. But when she hears about Jopie getting sent to a camp she loses it and breaks down in tears. She goes from being so chipper and happy to balling her eyes out. ”oh no not Jopie... she turns away in tears...” (page 130 Hackett) This supports thesis by showing how important it was to go into hiding at the time they did. Also how serious the matter was when it came to jews dying and getting taken. There are also other ways it affected them like in their relationships. The historical events changes the characters relationships with each other. “No no no more talk i want them to leave”(page 177 hackett)Mrs Frank wants them to leave but then she is happy towards them.“Didn't you hear what miep said, the invasion has come, we are going to be liberated! This is a time to celebrate!” (page 180 Hackett)This shows how one second Mrs. Frank is yelling at Mr. Van Pels the next she is embracing him. She is so happy that she even wants to celebrate just because the invasion has come. The historical events in Anne Frank changed the family’s relationships and moods. So basically the mood was changed by the thought of people dying so close to home really put the who hiding thing into perspective. Then relationships are changed by how when they receive the news that d-day started they forget their problems with each other. The events in anne frank were a pity because they were forced into hiding and had to leave everything to be with people they didn’t even know and in the end it didn't even matter they were still captured just for being in a different religion.
In the book of Anne Frank there are the Van Daan’s and the Franks. Then there's the people that help them which are Mr. Kraler and Miep. the Van Daan’s and Frank’s are in hiding because they were taking jews to concentration camps and had to go into hiding. They were hiding in a place called The Secret Annex in Amsterdam. In my Essay today I will be talking about who showed courage, compassion, and sacrifice.
There are many stories, diaries and books from the time of The Holocaust but arguably the most famous of them all is the story of Anne Frank. Anne Frank was a teenage Jewish girl who went into hiding in her fathers offices in Amsterdam, The Netherlands when the Nazis called up her older sister, Margot (Anne ??). Just before the call up, Anne had started to write a “diary” which she continued to write when she went into hiding with her family. Throughout the book Anne writes that her worst nightmare is to be discovered (Anne ??). The Franks when into hiding in 1941 in the Annex of the Opekta offices and were arrested by the Nazis in ???. After such a long period of time in hiding there are many suspects for who betraye...
I told you why Anne had felt this way during her ordeal, and what this reveals about her character and her views about life. Anne is a strong and heroic young girl who has a heart for others and she is very compassionate towards others. Which is a great quality to have in that time period she was going through? No one could have done it better than Anne. She helped people look at the good in the situations she was never the one mention the negative things. You think how you would react to this situation. Would you be buoyant? Or would you be colorless in this and always look at the crummy never say anything positive. All quotes can be found in the collections book pages
Anne Frank was my age, 15, when she was murdered by Nazis during World War II. I can’t even fathom what she must have gone through in the months before her death. Through her diary, one can understand the hardships of the Jewish people in Nazi Germany occupied countries
Despite several notable contrasts between Anne Frank’s life presented in the play, “The Diary of Anne Frank,” and other accounts of Jewish people in hiding during World War II, the lives of these Jews had more similarities than differences. These people were similar in the way that they lived the same schedule every day. Anne and the other Jews relied on their helpers, who risked their lives willingly, to provide food and other human necessities for them, as well as tried to include aspects of their old lives before the Holocaust into their new lives in hiding. The Jews lived with fear of getting caught by Nazis in the back of their minds. Even though Jewish people may have had different
Anne Frank was a 13-year-old Jewish girl who was thrown into one of the worst periods in the history of the world; the Holocaust. Though she went through awful things that many people will never experience, she always kept the faith that there was still some good in everyone. She once said, “Despite everything I still believe people are truly good at heart.” Her diary, which she kept while her family was in hiding from the Nazis, shows the triumph of her spirit over the evil in the world even through the pain of adolescence. The Franks and Van Dans were hiding and they suffered many hardships, mentally and physically. Many people in Anne’s situation would have become bitter and resentful, but Anne never would despair.
During World War II, the Nazi regime, under the leadership of Adolf Hitler, attempted to eliminate all the Jews and other “inferior peoples” of Europe. The Nazis and their collaborators killed millions of people, including six million Jewish people and other minority groups, such as 200,000 gypsies and 200,000 disabled people ("Introduction to the Holocaust”). This terrible period in history is now referred to as the Holocaust ("Background to the Holocaust”). A young girl named Anne Frank wrote one of the most notable Jewish texts from this period. Her optimism about the future should inspire the resolution of the modern religious and racial conflicts which stem from WWII era prejudices.
“There's only one rule you need to remember: laugh at everything and forget everybody else! It sound egotistical, but it's actually the only cure for those suffering from self-pity.” (Frank 321) Anne Frank was a young Jewish girl who went into hiding during World War II to avoid being captured by the Nazis. She and seven other people had to hide in a secret annex Prinsengracht 263 in Amsterdam. Anne received a diary on her 13th birthday and wrote about all the little things that had happened to her throughout the day.
Jews have perished because of their beliefs since the beginning of time but never have so many Jews been persecuted worldwide as they were in World War II. Anne Frank’s diary reaches a place within all of our hearts because it reminds us how easily the innocents can suffer. Sometimes we may choose to close our eyes or look the other way when unjustifiable things happen in our society and Anne’s tale reminds us that ignorance, in part, claimed her life. Sadly, her story is but one of many of those who died in the Holocaust and as with other Jews, her fate was determined by the country she lived in, her sex and her age.
The Nazi’s eventually created concentration camps, where Jews were tortured and killed. As a reasult, Jewish families would go into hiding, a good example being the Franks and Van daans. They had to live silently in a tiny secret compartment, living in fear.Anne Frank, the daughter of otto Frank, was constantly worried and confused about this. However, her father came to make her feel better. Otto danced with her and talked to her all the time. So did her sister, and peter van daan. This act of compassion would make the person happy, and comfortable, even in the worst of situations. This gave not only Anne, but all of the residents of the hiding place happiness, and hoe for a better life.
The name “Anne Frank” is synonymous with hope, optimism, and belief in human good, even in times of relentless evil. Although she only lived to be fifteen, Anne is known and respected throughout the world for the humanistic light her work shed on an infamous time. Born June 12th, 1929, in Germany, she spent her early years in a middle-class Jewish-German family. However, the tranquility of the Frank family and 522,000 other German-Jews’ lives would be shattered by one of the most nefarious events in history, the Holocaust. Anne’s diary has become an influential resource in understanding historical and emotional aspects of the Holocaust.
The reign of Adolf Hitler devastated all Jews in World War 2. A small family gone into hiding has one member who writes down her feelings and thoughts about growing up, adults, and the effects of the Holocaust on the Family. Her name was Anne Frank, and she had a diary brought from their old home that she called 'Kitty.' This diary would list all of her thoughts and opinions on the ordeal that is the Holocaust, as well as the people she was living with in these hard times. Within this page filled piece of history lies a quote that was written down by Anne. "In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." What does this mean? That no matter how tough or mean some people may be, they are kind on the inside. This
If you haven't heard of the Frank family, it was a Jewish family of four living in the Netherlands during World War II. The father's name was Otto, the mothers Edith, and the two daughters, Anne and Margot. Adolf Hitler was a dictator over Germany from 1934 to 1945. His ultimate goal was to gain power over as many countries as possible, however he also wanted to change Christianity to be more Nazi appropriate and eliminate the Jewish religion completely. The Franks were, as mentioned before, Jewish, this is obviously bad considering they live in a Nazi infested country. The Franks needed to go into hiding, so they met with Otto's friend and co-worker who would allow them to hide in the "secret annex", which is a set of rooms and an attic blocked
On June 12, 1929, at 7:30 AM, a baby girl was born in Frankfort, Germany. No one realized that this infant, who was Jewish, was destined to become one of the worlds most famous victims of World War II. Her name was Anne Frank. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, by Anne Frank and B.M. Mooyaart, was actually the real diary of Anne Frank. Anne was a girl who lived with her family during the time while the Nazis took power over Germany. Because they were Jewish, Otto, Edith, Margot, and Anne Frank immigrated to Holland in 1933. Hitler invaded Holland on May 10, 1940, a month before Anne?s eleventh birthday. In July 1942, Anne's family went into hiding in the Prinsengracht building. Anne and her family called it the 'Secret Annex'. Life there was not easy at all. They had to wake up at 6:45 every morning. Nobody could go outside, nor turn on lights at night. Anne mostly spent her time reading books, writing stories, and of course, making daily entries in her diary. She only kept her diary while hiding from the Nazis. This diary told the story of the excitement and horror in this young girl's life during the Holocaust. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl reveals the life of a young innocent girl who is forced into hiding from the Nazis because of her religion, Judaism. This book is very informing and enlightening. It introduces a time period of discrimination, unfair judgment, and power-crazed individuals, and with this, it shows the effect on the defenseless.
The autobiography book, “The Diary of a Young Girl”, is a collection of Dutch diary entries authored by Anne Frank, a 13-year-old Jewish girl who lived through the atrocities of the Anti-Semitist German Nazi Regime. Beginning on June 14, 1942, the diary, which Anne named “Kitty”, vividly depicts fear-filled stories of the Franks and other Jews in evading racial annihilation. Besides the stories of war, the world-renown personal account narrates a teenage girl’s blossoming and her search for identity, love, and acceptance. The entries end abruptly on August 1, 1944, signifying the Gestapo’s capture of the Frank family and all the other residents of the Secret Annexe, but despite the impermanence of Anne’s life, her legacy endures