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Did Anne Frank go to school in the concentration camp?
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Anne Frank was a prisoner sent to do hard labour and prisioner were sent to gas chambers.
The concentration camps was not a civil place. Here is the story of what happen just before the Anne Frank was sent to the concentration camps, during and after.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Frank
On the morning of August 4, 1944, the Achterhuis was stormed by the German Security Police (Gr?ne Polizei) following a tip-off from an informer who was never identified. Led by Schutzstaffel Oberscharf?hrer Karl Silberbauer of the Sicherheitsdienst, the group included at least three members of the Security Police. The occupants were loaded into trucks and taken for interrogation. Victor Kugler and Johannes Kleiman were taken away and subsequently jailed, but Miep Gies and Bep Voskuijl were allowed to go. They later returned to the Achterhuis, where they found Anne's papers strewn on the floor. They collected them, as well as several family photograph albums, and Gies resolved to return them to Anne after the war.
The members of the household were taken to the Gestapo headquarters where they were interrogated and held overnight. On August 5, they were transferred to the Huis van Bewaring (House of Detention), an overcrowded prison on the Weteringschans. Two days later the eight Jewish prisoners were transported to Westerbork, The Netherlands. Ostensibly a transit camp, by this time more than 100,000 Jews had passed through it. Having been arrested in hiding, they were considered criminals and were sent to the Punishment Barracks for hard labour.
On September 3, the group was deported on what would be the last transport from Westerbork to the Auschwitz concentration camp. They arrived after a three days' journey, and were separated by gender, with the men and women never to see each other again. Of the 1019 passengers, 549 people-?including all children under the age of fifteen years-?were selected and sent directly to the gas chambers where they were killed. Anne had turned fifteen three months earlier and was spared, and although everyone from the Achterhuis survived this selection, Anne believed her father had been killed.
Memorial for Anne and Margot Frank at the former Bergen-Belsen site, along with floral and pictorial tributes.
With the other females not selected for immediate death, Anne was forced to strip naked to be disinfected, had her head shaved and was tattooed with an identifying number on her arm. By day, the women were used as slave labour; by night, they were crowded into freezing barracks. Disease was rampant and before long Anne's skin became badly infected by scabies.
On October 28, selections began for women to be relocated to Bergen-Belsen. More than 8,000 women, including Anne and Margot Frank and Auguste van Pels, were transported, but Edith Frank was left behind. Tents were erected to accommodate the influx of prisoners, Anne and Margot among them, and as the population rose, the death toll due to disease increased rapidly. Anne was briefly reunited with two friends, Hanneli Goslar (nicknamed "Lies" in the diary) and Nanette Blitz, who both survived the war. Blitz described her as bald, emaciated and shivering. Goslar said that although Anne was ill herself, she told her that she was more concerned about Margot, whose illness seemed to be more severe and who remained in her bunk, too weak to walk. Anne told both her close friends that she believed her parents were dead.
In March 1945, a typhus epidemic spread through the camp killing an estimated 17,000 prisoners. Witnesses later testified that Margot fell from her bunk in her weakened state and was killed by the shock, and that a few days later Anne was dead too. They estimated that this occurred a few weeks before the camp was liberated by British troops on April 15, 1945, although the exact dates were not recorded. The camp, after liberation, had to be burned due to the epidemic, and Anne and Margot were buried in a mass grave, the exact whereabouts of which are unknown.
After the war, it was estimated that of the 110,000 Jews deported from the Netherlands during the Nazi occupation, only 5,000 of them survived.
The individual fates of the other occupants of the Achterhuis, their helpers, and other people associated with Anne Frank, are discussed further
I think that it would be pretty tough to go to school at camps se was sick and tired along with rest of the kids there.
Hudson, New Hampshire
NO WAY!!! She worked all Day.
This is one account of how it was living in the concentration camps, and who Anne Frank was.
Maintaining and provisioning these "training camps" became problematic as the war wore on.
Shipments of food and medicine were delayed or destroyed on their way to the camps and people starved or became ill. Many died in an emigration program run off its wheels.
The hospitals in the camps could not handle all of the sick and many died of typhus. The Frank family was finally caught in this Zionist-Gestapo dragnet. In October, 1944, Anne and Margot were transported from Auschwitz to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany.
Thousands died from starvation and epidemics at Bergen-Belsen, which was without food, heat, medicine, or elementary sanitary conditions. Anne and Margot, already weakened from living in the concentration camps, became ill with typhus.
The camp was liberated by allied troops in 1945, one month after the death of Anne Frank. Anne, her sister and her mother died of typhus shortly before the war ended.
Otto Frank was stronger and, in the camp hospital, was able to recover.
http://www.real-debt-elimination.com/real_freedom/Propaganda/anne_frank_life_and_times.htm
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Who was Anne Frank, what was she like?
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Anne dreamed about becoming an actress. She loved watching movies, but the Dutch Jews were forbidden access to movie theaters since January 8, 1941.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Frank#Before_going_into_hiding
For her thirteenth birthday on June 12, 1942, Anne received a book which she had shown her father in a shop window a few days earlier. Although it was an autograph book, bound with red-and-white plaid cloth and with a small lock on the front, Anne decided she would use it as a diary, and began writing in it almost immediately.
More here about Anne's diary - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Diary_of_Anne_Frank
Article from Wikipedia - Click link for more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Frank
Anne Frank Museum - The Diary and the Secret Annex.
The most complete and current information with unique photos and film images.
www.annefrank.org


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