Because she saw the good in other people, even though those people were horrible.
In the play "The Diary of Anne Frank," Anne's father is not put to shame by her. Anne's emotional growth and maturity throughout the play highlight her bravery and resilience in the face of difficult circumstances. At the end of the play, Anne's father is proud of her strength and spirit, not ashamed.
Someone else's answer: Because she believed that everyone has a bit of good, despite how things are and her dad didn't believe any part of that. My answer: Anne still believed people were still good at heart, above everything that happened having to do with Hitler. Mr. Frank could no longer feel angry at the world or believe all the world was bad for killing his wife, and 2 daughters, knowing that she still believed people were still good at heart. That's why he said at the end of the play, "She puts me to shame."
Anne Frank's father was Otto Frank and her mother was Edith Frank.
New American Shame ended in 2001.
it dont end so shame on u
He's the King of Naples, father of Ferdinand, and by the end of the play is Miranda's prospective father-in-law.
now hur hur hur shame
Oedipus has sex with his mother and murders his father.
The people Anne Frank was hiding with in the Secret Annex were eventually discovered and arrested by the Nazis. They were sent to concentration camps, and Anne Frank tragically died in Bergen-Belsen camp in 1945. Her father, Otto Frank, was the only one to survive and later published Anne's diary.
Decide that they are going to make statues of Romeo and Juliet out of very expensive materials and agree to stop fighting.
Anne Frank Prize ended in 1966.
Queen Anne's Railroad ended in 1905.
Kerri-Anne ended on 2011-11-25.