
The Diary of a Young Girl
The Diary of a Young Girl started two days before Anne Frank's thirteenth birthday. In 1942, the Nazis had occupied Holland, and her family left their home to go into hiding, as they were Jews. Anne Frank recorded daily events, her personal experiences and her feelings in her diary for the next two years. Cut off from the outside world, she and her family faced hunger, boredom, claustrophobia at living in confined quarters, and the ever-present threat of discovery and death. One day, she and her family were betrayed and taken away to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where she eventually died. It is a record of a sensitive girl's tragic experience during one of the worst periods in human history. This diary is so powerful that it leaves a deep impact on the mind of its readers.
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About the Author
Anne Frank, a Jew of Germany, fled from Nazis to Amsterdam in 1934 and kept a diary during her years in hiding from 1942 until people captured her family in August 1944 and sent to concentration camps, where she died of typhus at Belsen; survivors published her posthumously in 1947. Father of Annelies Marie "Anne" Frank, a girl, moved to the Netherlands in 1933, and the rest followed later. Anne, the last, came in February 1934. She wrote with four friends during the occupation of the Netherlands in World War II. Anne lived with her parents and sister during the Holocaust in the attic of office of her father to escape. During that period, she recorded her life.