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War and Conflict: Twentieth Century - How Did Anne Frank's Diaries Survive World War Ii?

How did Anne Frank's diaries survive World War II?

Anne Frank was a young German-Jewish girl who kept diaries during the twenty-six months she and her family were hiding from Nazi (abbreviation for National Socialist German Workers' Party) German authorities in Amsterdam, Holland. The Franks were in hiding because Jews were being rounded up and sent to concentration camps, places where the Nazis forcibly detained Jews, political prisoners, and other "undesirable" people considered to be "enemies of the state." The diaries, which Anne had written in three notebooks, were left behind by the Gestapo (Nazi secret police) when they raided the hiding place and arrested the Franks. The notebooks were found by two Dutch women who had helped conceal the Franks from the Nazis. The women gave the notebooks to Anne's father, Otto Frank (1889–1980), when he returned to Holland from the Auschwitz concentration camp...

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