in a museum in Amsterdam
Her original diary is in a bank vault in Switzerland. There is a perfect facsimile of it in the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam.
The house where she and her family hid is now a museum.
»Anne Frank. here & now« Exhibition in BerlinAnne Frank ZentrumRosenthaler Straße 3910178 Berlin, GermanyAnne Frank MuseumPrinsengracht 267 (1016 GV)PO Box 730, 1000 AS Amsterdam, Niederlandesince May 3rd 1960
Anne Frank did not live in Germany. She lived in a set of attic rooms in a house in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, during the time that it was occupied by German Nazi troops during World War II. To reach the secret rooms the tiny doorway was hidden behind a bookcase. You can visit her house, and enter into her rooms through the doorway, as I and my family did a few years ago, as her house in Amsterdam is now a museum. Sadly, Anne Frank and her family were discovered by the Nazis after her whereabouts was told to the occupying forces by a traitor. She and her family then perished in the German concentration camps before the war ended.
write the diary that we know now as the diary of anne frank
NO
how old is anne frank now
I was 19 when I was in Anne Frank. I'm 20 now.
Anne-Frank-Huis is Dutch for Anne Frank House, which is the house where the Franks and the other hid. It is now a museum.
Anne Frank called Peter Schiff her "one true love." Now his photograph, below, is to be displayed in the Anne Frank House museum .
Anne Frank's diary is currently housed at the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It is on display for visitors to see as part of the museum's exhibit on Anne's life and the Holocaust.
Anne went to school to a school that is now called Anne Frank's School.
Anne Frank lived on Prinsengracht street in Amsterdam, specifically at 263 Prinsengracht where the Anne Frank House is now located.
Yes, but she is now dead....read Anne Frank"s diary if you'd like to know more.
in a museum in Amsterdam
Anne Frank and her family were in hiding in a secret annex located behind a bookcase on the upper floors of 263 Prinsengracht in Amsterdam, Netherlands, during World War II.