The Franks, who had left Germany for Amsterdam in the 1930s, moved into the Secret Annex, as it came to be known, after Margot received a summons to report to a labor camp in Germany. The entrance was ...
During the day, the bedroom of Otto, Edith, and Margot Frank acted as the Frank family's living room. Space was limited inside the annex, so it was vital for the inhabitants to rely on each other ...
It was impossible to see what happened behind the light, and Mrs. Frank cried: ‘The children! My God! My God!’ ” In the hell of Belsen, Anne and Margot Frank lasted scarcely five months.
Well, we hadn’t had tears for some time. “And then, a few days later I went to look for the Frank girls and learned that Margot had fallen from her bunk. Just like that, on to the stone floor ...
This bedroom was shared by Otto, Edith, and Margot Frank. Anne shared a room with Dr. Fritz Pfeffer. Anne’s room, which she shared with Dr. Fritz Pfeffer, includes copies of the photos and ...
The exhibit at the Center for Jewish History in Manhattan represents the first time the annex has been completely recreated ...
A new book focuses on the desperate letters written by many Jews seeking refuge in the Netherlands but who were denied entry ...
Ruth Franklin's 'The Many Lives of Anne Frank' complements the diarist's story and refuses to police its interpretation by countless admirers.
Anne and her older sister Margot died of typhus at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945. A replica of the secret Anne Frank annex is seen at the "Anne Frank The Exhibition," during its ...
After six months of treatment and recovery, the Jewish trumpeter, composer and musical omnivore is back, starting new musical ...