terça-feira, 6 de dezembro de 2016

anne frank

The Diary of Anne Frank was composed by the then adolescent Anne Frank, in the period that extends from 1942 to August 1, 1944. This could be a diary written by any 13-year-old girl, in the present times, with all the worries and concerns Of a young woman, if she were not living in one of the most difficult contexts of human history, World War II.
She was only 13 years old and suddenly saw her existence undergo a radical transformation. Suddenly Anne was living with her family and other Jews, companions of the same fate, hidden in Amsterdam, Holland, at a time when this country was invaded by German Nazis.
Anne has the idea of ​​writing a diary that could actually be published after listening to a radio broadcast that encouraged people to document the events linked to the war, as this material would in future have a high significance. She inscribes in her writings everything that goes on in the daily life of the fugitives, including her notorious predilection for her father, whom she considered loving and noble, unlike her mother, with whom the girl was always in confrontation.
After difficult times, Gestapo officials uncover the hideout, on August 4, 1944, arresting the refugees and leading them to various concentration camps. On the same day Otto Heinrich Frank, the father, receives his daughter's diary and, as he is the only remnant of the period spent as a prisoner, fights for the publication of his texts, finally realizing Anne's dream. With the help of writer Mirjam Pressler, he achieves his goal and launches the diary in 1947.
In the first version many passages were censored by the father himself, who was aware of how controversial it was at this time to disclose the conflicts between mother and daughter, as well as revealing aspects of Anne's emerging sexuality. In a later edition, the diary was published in its entirety.
Anne died in the concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen in late February 1945. The original Diary is preserved at the Dutch Institute for War Documentation.

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