A new exhibit in New York City lets you step inside Anne Frank's Secret Annex.
Franklin is the author of the forthcoming “The Many Lives of Anne Frank.” “Poor helpless people are being dragged out of their homes. … Families are torn apart; men, women and children are ...
“Anne Frank the Exhibition” recreates the secret ... Yael Malka for The New York Times Supported by By Laurel Graeber The children seem like typical kindergartners: Some beam at the camera ...
BRANCHBURG — A traveling exhibition honoring the life and legacy of Anne Frank is now on display at Raritan Valley Community College in Branchburg. The “Anne Frank in Translation,” presented by the ...
Many people opposed to Trump’s crackdown posted an excerpt on their social media: ‘Terrible things are happening outside. Poor helpless people are being dragged out of their homes...’ ...
"As we open Anne Frank the Exhibition, we do so in memory of the 6 million Jews who were murdered, and we do so remembering the 1.5 million Jewish children who were murdered," said Michael ...
Commemorating the 80th anniversary of Auschwitz’s liberation, an installation in New York tells the tragic story of the teenage girl and diarist, featuring a precisely scaled re-creation of the ...
A children’s calendar ... because they come from the cramped attic apartment in Amsterdam where Anne Frank, her family, and another four Jews famously hid from the Nazis for two years before ...
The secret annex – one of the most famous dwellings in history, thanks to Frank’s best-selling published diary – can now be explored remotely in New York.
When she was a child, biographer Ruth Franklin read “The Diary of a Young Girl” by Anne Frank, the well-known journal of a 13-year-old who was one of eight Jews who went into hiding in 1942. Frank and ...