This book is about a Jewish girl named Annie. Her life completely changed around 1941. When Hitler had started to do the bad things to the Jewish. She had two sisters, Rachael and Sini. They lived in Winterswijk. They weren’t safe living there, so they moved to the woods. Their mother was sick, so she didn’t want to go to America. She ended up in the hospital. But she died a week before they were taking Jewish people from the hospitals. The Germans wanted more people to go to the concentration camps so they had to hide. Their dad went to a friends hiding place because they only had space for one. Rachael, Sini and Annie were supposed to go to the Hanninks. Rachael did not want to go. Sini had to die her hair to go so they wouldn’t know she was a Jewish. Annie had to cut her hair and dress like a boy to go. When they got to Usselo she met Dini Hannink, they went to her house together. They stayed there for about to two weeks. Then they had to go to the Oostervelds. They were really nice people. Johan was a farmer, Dientje, and Opoe (Johan’s mother). They were supposed to stay there for at least a week because Mr. Hannink thought a German followed him. Annie’s legs were getting crooked and couldn’t walk that much so she had to exercise. She really hated to do that. After a year and a half they haven’t even seen how the house looked. And Sini really wanted a tan. So Johan let them go out. He was going to pick them up around dinner. But then Dientje’s sister came and they couldn’t get in. Annie got real sick that day. A nice doctor came and helped them. The Germans came to inspect their house but Johan made a hiding place in the closet. The Germans caught one of their friends. They knew who had told the Germans so they told Johan to kill him and he did. He went to hide for a while in somewhere else. Then one day Germans come and tell them they want to use their house for headquarters. They tried…
Chapter 1- Blima is working at her aunt Rachel's Bakery. She is happy that she gets to work at her aunt's bakery ,because her aunt picked her to work their out of all of the sisters. She loves it at the bakery ,because the little children that walk in to buy baked goods for their parents and blima always talks to the children and ask them questions. Then, Its time for Blima to go home and she is wait for her sister her sister finally gets their and they are going to walk home together. As they were walking Blima was frustrated ,because she thought her sister Adele was prettier than she was and that really disturbed her. Also, They talked about the nazis just picking up random people on the streets.…
Throughout the story Anne Frank learned at a young age how hard life could be and the hope for better things to come.…
Annemarie was a brave girl even though she did not think she was . She did things that she didn’t realize was a sign of bravery.” I will take it,” said Annemarie. She was relating to the package that was for Uncle Henrik; She could have ran into trouble with German soldiers, but she was brave enough to do it. Annemarie always came in contact with German soldiers. [pages 2-3.] As a result from these actions, Annemarie is brave.…
These towns are important to take notice because there is virtually no warning in between chapters of when she is moving from place to place. The plot for the book is the story of a little girl in who resides in the town of Lidice, Czechoslovakia. She lives with her family and her grandmother. On the night of Miladas birthday party, German Nazis come to her house to take her away from her family. The Nazis take Milada, her mother, little sister, and grandmother to a temporary prison camp where Milada is graded upon her features to see if she is eligible to be one of Hitler’s perfect example of a German child.…
To say the least, it was not hard to figure why Kristin Hannah’s novel that detailed how two sisters dealt with the Nazis Occupation won so many awards. Hannah crafted a masterpiece from the words spilled on the cream pages. The author displayed so elegantly and tearfully the elements of forbidden attractions, tragic deaths, and horrid atrocities in her novel. In addition to reliving the events of an occupied frame through the eyes of a young Vianne, the reader also is granted the experience of seeing the world through an aged Vianne. “The Nightingale has sung”(Hannah).…
Anne was born on June 12, 1929, in Frankfurt, Germany, and she was just a teenager when Nazis began to torture the Jewish people. During the camp life, she kept writing down a journal about her and others’ life. Anne’s older sister’s name was Margot, and both of them were not a good match for being friends, although they were siblings, because Margot was jealous of Anne. Anne’s father, Otto, was a practical and kind man that he had hopes to survive even if he was older than Anne. Anne died when she was a teenager at the camp because she was not keeping a hope like her father. Hope is the only elements to make a person, who has it, reach his/her goal in life.…
Jacob Mendel, the Jewish main character, had family in Nazi-occupied Hungary. He had no idea if his son, his daughter-in-law, or his grandchild were alive, and if they were, they were either in hiding or had been captured. His problems and struggles in this book were very similar to Anne Frank’s, a young girl who lived during World War II. Anne Frank was also a Jew who went into hiding when the Nazis invaded her country. However, the Nazis discovered their hiding place and sent them into a concentration camp, just as the Nazis did to Jacob’s family. Only she was not able to escape. Corrie Ten Boom and her entire family also were taken to concentration camps for helping Jews, like Jacob’s family, except Jacob’s family…
Plot * Liesel, her mother and her brother Werner are all travelling on a train, to greet Werner’s and Liesels foster parents. * Liesel, illiterate has a dream o Adolf Hitler and speaks to him in broken German. * As she is half awake, Liesels brother dies, and there were two Nazi soldiers who argue on weather they leave the body there or take it with them. * Both Liesel and her mother are traumatized by his sudden death and 2 days later he is buried. * After the ceremony finishes Liesel digs at his grave but is dragged away by her mother, but before getting on another train Liesel steals a book she is unable to even read the title of. * She is taken to a place in Munich called Himmel -"Heaven" to meet Rosa and Hans Hubermann, her foster parents. * She refuses to meet or get out of the car with her suitcase that only contains her clothes and the book she stole from her brother’s gravesite. * The only person that manages to get her out of the care is her foster father. * Liesel feels abandoned by her mother, but understands that it’s better for her to live there and be protected from the poverty; she also learns that her father was a communist, but she doesn’t yet know the meaning of that word. * Liesels foster mother acts harshly upon her and calls her a "pig girl" when she refuses to bathe, but claims to loves her. * Her foster father, Hans develops a closer relationship with her and teaches her how to roll cigarettes. she starts calling them "mama" and "papa" * Liesel got terrible nightmares about her brother the first few months and was accompanied by Hans, who she kept the book hidden from. * She kept the book as a symbol reminding her the last time she saw her brother, and the last time she saw her mother. * Liesel is put in school but has to stay with a much younger grade, just learning the alphabet. When she turns ten she joins the Hitler Youth. * Liesel makes a friend names Rudy who…
In a country full of wealth and luxury many people who lack in these things fly under the radar. In the essay “School’s out for the Summer” by Anna Quindlen she takes a forceful approach on bring it to the American people's attention. She shows America that the stories you hear about on the news are more than just oceans away, but right here in your backyard. In Anna Quindlen's essay she effectively shines a light on America's fight against child hunger.…
Most Americans know the story of Anne Frank; the most discussed Jewish victims of the Holocaust who posthumously gained prominence through the publication of The Dairy of a young Girl, her experience in hiding during the occupation of the Netherlands by Germany in World War II. It is one of the world's most widely known books and has been the basis for several plays and films. Most of the atrocities I’ve learned of in various history classes concerning World War II sprang from her diary accounts. Just when I thought I knew all about the "enemy" (Nazis) and the heinous crimes that they inflicted on human…
The Diary of Anne Frank by Francis Goodrich and Albert Hackett is about a girl who goes into hiding with her parents and other friends. She goes into hiding to hide from the Nazis. Hitler started it all by killing Jews. He was a bad man who wanted to get rid of Jewish people. While Anne was hiding they got to know each other more. But…
World War Two was the year the Holocaust happened and families of many were put in danger. “The Diary of Anne Frank” is a playwright authored by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett. This diary leads to historical events that is portrayed through dialogue and stage directions of these three families who lived in a storage room for about two in a half year.…
Sofia couldn't understand how a human could commit to this. The sick feeling of starving people and killing them if their day didn't go the way it was supposed to. She wondered if they enjoyed it. She wolfed down the soup once inside the barracks and tried to listen to the whispering between a couple jews. She could hear the nazis struggling to lift the body, a couple laughed when they dropped it. A nazi came into the barracks and pointed at Sofia and a younger girl Sofia knew as…
On the other hand, Anne did not get to live a normal life since she was a Jew, she had to hide from the nazi's so she would not get caught and be sent to concentration camps. In light of present circumstances, paying little mind to the likelihood that you were not a Jew you didn't continue with a normal life you see warriors dragging people out of their own homes you hear in the city that such a substantial number of them has passed on in concentration camps. Nobody which could make a move until world war 2 wrapped up. In any case, Anne was a splendid young woman, she even had a quote "I live in a crazy time" she did and she knew it. Ordinary, every day it got more troublesome for Anne, and her family since Miep who is one of the general populations who convey nourishment to them the individual who offered sustenance to Miep since they got.…