They first took her and the rest of the Secret Annex families to Westerbork Transit camp in Holland, then they were all transported to Auschwitz and then from there Anne, Margot and Auguste van Pels were taken to Bergen-Belsen in Germany where she contracted typhus and died. As for her punishment, she was treated like every other Jew at the time.
No, there is no evidence to suggest that Margot Frank told on her family. The Frank family, including Margot, were discovered by the Nazis who were searching for Jews in hiding during World War II.
1942, but Margot lied to Anne at first and said that it was Otto Frank who was drafted.
Tehy run!
Anne Frank's family included her father, Otto Frank, her mother, Edith Frank, and her older sister, Margot Frank. The family went into hiding during World War II to escape the Nazis. Otto is the only member of the family to survive the Holocaust.
Anne Frank and her family were hiding from the Nazis with the help of Otto Frank's trusted colleagues. They were hidden in a secret annex in Otto's office building in Amsterdam. The hiding place was eventually betrayed, leading to their arrest by the Nazis.
They were Jews in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands (Holland). When Margot Frank received a demand to report for 'resettlement in eastern Europe' (that is deportation to a concentration camp in Poland) the family went into hiding.
No, Anne Frank was a young Jewish girl who was persecuted by Nazis after being in hiding.
The Nazis. They were busy killing Jews by the millions, and the Frank family was hiding from them.
Anne Frank went into hiding because of the Nazis. Her dad didn't want to follow them, so he decided that the family should go into hiding, but another family went into hiding also, so in total, 8 people lived in the annex. She went into hiding from 1942 to 1944 (age 13-15).
Tehy run!
Anne Frank died in a concentration camp during the Holocaust in 1945. She and her sister, Margot, were likely victims of typhus. Anne's diary, which she kept while hiding from the Nazis, was later published and has become a widely read account of the Holocaust.
On August 4, 1944 - when the Nazis took her away