
A replica of Anne Frank’s bedroom, which I shared with Fritz in Fiver, a dentist in his fifties.
John Halburn/Same In Frank Exhibition
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New York – The rooms are small and durable, but they are full of details that will make the house at home: colored carpets, accurate beds, a board game on the table, and even pictures of the British royal family on the wall.
But this is not just a house-it is the re-creation of the supplement as Ann Frank and her family hidden from the Nazis for more than two years. Currently displayed in Jewish History Center In New York, this is the first time that such an exhibition is available outside Amsterdam.
The exhibition continues until the end of October.
Hermann and Ugistan Room Van Bells. On the table is a tablet game similar to the one he presented to their son Peter on his sixteenth birthday. It was one of the only entertainment or toys available in hiding.
John Halburn/Compliment Ann Frank
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In 1942, the older sister of Anne Margut got a shower notification.
“She receives a summons to submit a report to the German Labor Party camp, and she has issued instructions to be there the next day,” said Michael Galikman, who advises Ann Frank at the New York City Exhibition and JMUSE CEO.
This is when the Frank family decided to hide.
While they were there, they had to adhere to strict rules in order to stay without discovery. The windows had to be eliminated when the sun fell, toured the socks, and they had to be careful not to wipe the toilet.
But there are also residue of the displayed family life offered, such as children’s heights that carry a wall.
“As many parents did over time, you got these signs in your home showing your children’s growth scheme.” “Otto and Edith (Frank’s parents) measured girls in their time to hide.”
Not only was the Frank family that lived there. The Van Bils family and a dentist named Fritz in Fiver, who participated in Ane, also lived in the appendix.
As a teenage girl, the sharing of narrow neighborhoods with a middle -aged man means many quarrels. In particular, it became a source of tension: the joint writing office.
Fritz was studying Spanish because he was hoping to move to South America and started life after the war, while she was writing the diaries that were now translated into more than 75 languages and are still present in schools and libraries today.
A replica of the writing office that fought Ann Frank with her room -hiding room colleague – a dentist in his fifties. The office is the place where she wrote its notes, which are still reading today.
John Halburn/Same In Frank Exhibition
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Just as the memoirs of Anne Frank continued to raise strong feelings, visitors to the exhibition said that the questions raised by her life and death are still echo in our time.
“Learn about Anne Frank at school, I didn’t know that they tried to come to the United States,” said Tris Dero, who lives in Bronx, New York. “If you have to flee, where do you go?”
Mark Credler, who came with Dero to see the exhibition, said that there are similarities between what he saw in the museum exhibition, and what he sees around the world today.
They said, “Oh, the Jews were deported.” Credler said. “There is a talk about the deportation of people from our country now to prisons elsewhere.”
Sarah Kroford, 33, lives in New York and said that the exhibition helped her understand the story of the Holocaust in a deeper and more personal way.
“I think the reason that Anne Frank appeals to many people is that he does not destroy this experience otherwise, but it is very overwhelming to think about this huge population.” “I think many people can see themselves as a child in it.”