Annelies Marie Frank, known as Anne Frank, was born on June 12, 1929, in Frankfurt, Germany. Her family fled Nazi persecution and relocated to Amsterdam, where they hoped to escape the growing threat to Jews under Hitler’s regime. In 1942, as the Nazis occupied the Netherlands, the Franks went into hiding in a secret annex behind her father’s business premises.
During the two years in hiding, Anne chronicled her thoughts, fears, hopes, and daily experiences in a diary she received for her 13th birthday. Her writing reveals a remarkably mature, insightful, and hopeful voice, even amid the horrors surrounding her. In 1944, the family was betrayed, arrested, and deported. Anne died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in early 1945, shortly before the camp was liberated.
Her father, Otto Frank, the only surviving member of the family, later published her diary as The Diary of a Young Girl. It became one of the most important and widely read books of the 20th century, offering a poignant, human perspective on the Holocaust and the enduring spirit of a young girl who longed to live and write freely.













