If i ever get the change to visit Amsterdam, and i'm sure this will happen sooner or later, Anne Frank's House is one of the city's attractions that i wish to visit. Vitória traveled to Amsterdam a few days ago and she visited the house. She said it was a very emotional visit, i believe so.
For more than two years Anne Frank and her family lived in the
annex of the building at Prinsengracht 263 where Anne’s father, Otto Frank, also
had his business. The Van Pels family and Fritz Pfeffer hid there with them. The
doorway to the annex was concealed behind a moveable bookcase constructed
especially for this purpose. The office personnel knew of the hiding place and
helped the eight people by supplying them with food and news of the outside
world. On August 4, 1944, the hiding place was betrayed. The people in hiding
were deported to various concentration camps. Only Otto Frank survived the war.
© Anne Frank Stichting / Foto: Hans v. d. Heuvel
Nowadays, the rooms at the Anne Frank House, though empty, still breathe the
atmosphere of that period of time. Quotations from the diary, historical
documents, photographs, film images, and original objects that belonged to those
in hiding and the helpers illustrate the events that took place here. Anne’s
original diary and other notebooks are on display in the museum. In the
multimedia space, visitors can go on a “virtual journey” through the Anne Frank
House, accessing background information about the people in hiding and World War
Two. - in: http://www.amsterdam.info/museums/anne_frank_house/
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