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Edith Frank (née Holländer; 16 January 1900 – 6 January 1945) was the mother of Holocaust diarist Anne Frank and her older sister Margot. After the family were discovered in hiding in Amsterdam during the German occupation, she was transported to Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.
Philosophy of life, Edith Frank Edith Frank was professedly Jewish. She regularly attended synagogue and read religious books. Subject. Gebedenboek van Edith Frank. Fotograaf: Allard Bovenberg. Collectie: Anne Frank Stichting. Copyright: AFS rechthebbende
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Study Guide. Full Book Analysis. Key Facts. Character List. Otto Frank. Edith Frank. Margot Frank. Peter van Daan. Literary Devices. Themes. Motifs. Symbols. Questions & Answers. Is The Diary of Anne Frank a novel? How long did the Franks hide in the annex? Did Anne Frank survive? Where was the annex located?
1 Biography. 1.1 Early life. 1.2 Marriage. 1.3 Emigration. 1.4 Persecution and death. 2 Diary. 3 Further reading. 4 External links. Biography. Early life. Edith was the youngest of four children, having been born into a German-Jewish family in Aachen, Germany.
Edith was an open-minded woman who educated her daughters in a modern way. Her older brothers Walter and Julius immigrated to the United States after 1938, and Rosa Holländer-Stern left Aachen in 1939 to join the Frank family in Amsterdam, where she died in January 1942. Anne Frank's cousin Bernhard ("Buddy") Elias has said that "Edith never ...
- Otto Frank, (m. 1925; her death, 1945)
Summary. PDF Cite Share. On June 12, 1942, at the height of World War II in Europe, Anne Frank celebrates her thirteenth birthday in hiding from the Nazis. Two days later, she makes her first...
These books - Dutch translations of Not so quiet: stepdaughters of war (1930), Women of the aftermath (1932) and Shadow women (1932) - told the story of some English girls of good character who were ambulance drivers behind the front carrying off wounded soldiers. The author depicted the accompanying coarsening rather explicitly.