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Anne Frank
Anne Frank achieved world fame
after her death from typhus in March 1945 in the Nazi
concentration camp Bergen-Belsen through the publication of her
diary in which she described the lives of eight Jews in hiding
in the city of Amsterdam between June 1942 and August 1944.
Anne Frank was born on June 12, 1929, in Frankfurt, Germany. Her
father, Otto, was the son of wealthy parents. He attended the
classical gymnasium and served as a lieutenant of the German
army in World War I. Following the loss of his parent's fortune
during the 1920s' inflation in Germany, he was able to establish
himself as a businessman in Frankfurt specializing in banking
and in the promotion of name brands. Anne's mother also came
from a well-to-do family. Anne had a close and warm relationship
with her father and a more distant one with her mother. Anne's
sister Margot, a pretty and feminine girl, was born in 1926 and
also died in Bergen-Belsen.
Following the Nazi takeover of Germany in January 1933, the
Franks emigrated to Amsterdam, Holland, where Otto Frank became
the managing director of a food company with a warehouse and
office on the Prinsengracht, one of the city's canal-streets.
Anne attended the Montessori school in Amsterdam. When the Nazis
occupied Holland in May 1940 they began to institute anti-Jewish
regulations which forced Anne to leave her school and to attend
a Jewish secondary school. Jews were forced to wear the yellow
Jewish Star of David, and deportation of Jews from Holland to
the Auschwitz extermination camp commenced. Margot received an
order to report for deportation in early July 1942.
Otto Frank, who had prepared for this eventuality by setting up
a hiding place for his family, decided that the time had come.
He moved his family into the hidden rear portion of the
warehouse where he had prepared two apartments. He was joined
there by Mr. van Daan, a co-worker, with his wife and
16-year-old son Peter. Eventually an eighth person joined them,
an elderly Jewish dentist named Dussel.
The friends of the hidden Jews who worked in the office of the
firm, Mr. Koophuis, Victor Kraler, Miep (de Jong) van Santen,
Henk van Santen, and Elli Vossen, supplied them with food, black
market ration cards, and other necessities. They were quiet
during the day when the normal business of the firm was
conducted downstairs. Life for the hidden began in the late day
and evening hours.
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