Thursday, March 21, 2019

The Diary of Anne Frank Thanks to the Nazis :: Anne Frank

The Diary of Anne wiener thank to the national socialists   The Diary of Anne Frank Journeying back to the early nineteenth century, when Nazi forces occupied Germany during World War II, the lives of those living in this territory was dog-tired in constant fear and anxiety. The Diary of Anne Frank leads readers through the common times of a family trying to escape imprisonment in tightfistedness camps by Nazi soldiers, where death was almost certain. Born on June 12, 1929, Anne Frank was a German-Jewish teenager who was forced to go into secrecy during the Holocaust. She and her family, along with cardinal others, spent 25 months during World War II in an attach of rooms above her fathers agency in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. During the dickens years in hiding which Anne refers to as "a time when the ideals are being shattered and destroyed, when the worst side of human nature predominates, when every one has abide by to doubt true statement, justice and G od (pg.327)." Anne kept a diary that was habituated to her by her father, Otto Frank, on her birthday. Between June 1942 and August 1944, from Annes thirteenth birthday until curtly after her fifteenth birthday, Anne recorded her feelings, her emotions, and her thoughts, as well as the events that happened to her. "Ideas, dreams, and love hopes rise within us only to meet the horrible truth and be shatteredyet in spite of everything I hush believe that people are really good at center (pg. 327)." The diary is an accurate record of the way Anne grows up and matures, in the ominous situation she found herself. Given the circumstances in which the original is pen Anne gave a very vivid description of her surroundings and the feelings she encountered throughout her ordeal. The novel displays the grief and frustration that is experienced throughout the time spent in hiding. The emotions of the situation are captured in the text and gives validity to the pain and fru stration encountered. Despite the amusing and enlightening side of the diary, that documents the process of her adolescence, it also provides a vividly terrifying description of what it was like to be Jewish hiding during the time the Nazis sought to kill all the Jews in Europe. After two years of living in the "secret annex", behind a bookcase, and having to be extremely quite during the day so that the workers in the office and warehouse below could not hear them the family was captured.

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