Anne was never allowed to make a noise in hiding because, if she did, they could've gotten caught. so, she couldn't do anything that makes a noise, like, flushing a toilet. none of them were allowed to go outside either. so, Anne had barely nothing to do. she wrote in her diary to keep her company, and for something to do.
It was probally dark and misrabel. No one made a sound and was scared.
she managed to let the world know what it was like to be in hiding with her diary, that's a great accomplishment!
yes...
See below
Anne Frank's life before she went into hiding was very nice. She was very fond of her dad Otto who was a very nice man. == ==She had a pleasant. carefree and somewhat spoiled life of a young pre-teen from an upper middle class family in Amsterdam. In other words: Completely normal - until the Nazi occupation began to strip away everyone's freedoms.
It was left like they were living in before they left because the German soldiers took them away to go to the concentre camps straight away. One of the Franks family friend found Anne's diary and kept it and then gave it to Otto when he came out of the concentration camps.
bad gross
The Franks went into hiding in July 1942, not long after Margot received a call-up notice from the SS. They spent over two years in hiding until they were discovered in August 1944, arrested, and deported to concentration camps. Anne and Margot died of typhus in Bergen-Belsen a few months before the camp was liberated. Only Otto Frank survived the Holocaust.
Yes, the Franks were almost a model family in light of how well the members got along (basically) and their relative happiness as a family before going into hiding, which was high.
Yes, Anne Frank's sister's name was Margot. Margot died of typhus like Anne.
The members of the secret annex, including Anne Frank, were sent to concentration camps like Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen during World War II. Anne Frank and her sister Margot died of typhus in Bergen-Belsen in March 1945.
Anne was a Humanist, much like her father, Otto. She believed in a higher power, but not in a traditional Jewish sense.