On the
Deportations
"Our many
Jewish friends and acquaintances are being taken away in droves. The Gestapo is
treatiang them very roughly and transporting them in cattle cars to Westerbork,
the big camp in Drenthe to which they're sending all the Jews....If it's that bad in Holland, what must it be like in
those faraway and uncivilized places
where the Germans are sending them? We assume that most of them are
being murdered. The English radio says they're being gassed."--October 9,
1942
On Her Old
Country, Germany
"Fine
specimens of humanity, those Germanns, and to think I'm actually one of them!
No, that's not true, Hitler took away our nationality long ago. And besides,
there are no greater enemies on earth than the Germans and Jews."--October
9, 1942
On Nazi
Punishment of Resisters
"Have you
ever heard the term 'hostages'? That's the latest punishment for saboteurs.
It's the most horrible thing you can imagine. Leading citizens--innocent
people-are taken prisoner to await their execution. If the Gestapo can't find
the saboteur, they simply grab five hostages and line them up against the wall.
You read the announcements of their death in the paper, where they're referred
to as 'fatal accidents.'"--October
9, 1942
"All college students are being asked
to sign an official statement to the effect that they 'sympathize with the
Germans and approve of the New Order." Eighty percent have decided to obay
the dictates of their conscience, but the penalty will be severe. Any student
refusing to sign will be sent to a German labor camp."--May 18, 1943
Here is were the
story begins ...
On June 12, 1942,
Anne Frank's parents gave her a small red-and-white plaid diary for her
thirteenth birthday. Anne recorded her innermost feelings in her diary, which
she named "Kitty."
Less than a month
after receiving her diary, on July 6, 1942, Anne and her family were forced to
go into hiding. Though they could bring very few things with them to the hiding
place, Anne brought her diary. During the months Anne lived in hiding, her
diary became her best friend and confidant.
In hiding, Anne
continued to write in her diary nearly every day. She wrote about her life with
the seven other people in hiding--her parents, her sister, the van Pels family
(called the van Daan family by Anne), and Fritz Pfeffer (called Alfred Dussel
by Anne), as well as the war going on around her, and her hopes for the future.
When she filled
up her original diary, Miep Gies and Bep Voskuijl, two of the family's helpers,brought
her ledgers and loose sheets of paper to continue writing. She kept these in a
briefcase that belonged to her father.
In 1944, the
Dutch government, which had been in exile in London for most of the
occupation,broadcast a request over the radio for people to save their wartime
diaries. Anne Frank then began to rewrite her diary with the intention of
having it published after the war.
On August 4,1944,
the Nazis raided the Secret Annex and arrested the residents. They emptied Otto
Frank's briefcase onto the floor, including Anne's diary, in order to carry the
family's valuables.
After the
residents were taken away, Miep and Bep went to the Annex, and attempted to
salvage all that they could. They found Anne's papers, as well as other personal
belongings of the residents, which they took away for safe-keeping. Miep put
Anne's diary in her desk drawer, to await Anne's return.
Anne Frank did
not survive the Holocaust. Her father, Otto Frank, returned to Amsterdam after
the war ended, the sole survivor among those who had hid in the Secret Annex.
When he found out that Anne had died in Bergen-Belsen, Miep Gies gave him
Anne's diary, which she had hidden for almost a year.
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