History, asked by sakshamrajmittal, 1 month ago

Make a diary entry to your friends telling about how many difficulties you have faced as a Jew in nazi Germany

Answers

Answered by itzpreetkaur
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Alexandra ZapruderThree days before Anne Frank began her diary in Amsterdam on June 12, 1942, another writer 1200 kilometers away in Stanislawow ghetto in Poland began what would be the second-to-last entry in her diary. Twenty-two-year-old Elsa Binder wrote “Well, this whole scribbling doesn’t make any sense. The world will know about everything even without my wise notes.”  Her words were hauntingly prescient. For decades, the world did indeed come to know about the Holocaust without her “scribbling”, which languished, untranslated, in an archive in Poland. In a twist of fate, however, it was precisely Anne Frank’s “musings,” as she described them, that brought the subject of Jewish suffering during the Holocaust into the homes of many millions of readers.

hope this helps you

Answered by kartavyabhola3432
0

Answer:

HI BRO THIS IS YOUR ANS.

Explanation:

Alexandra Zapruder

Three days before Anne Frank began her diary in Amsterdam on June 12, 1942, another writer 1200 kilometers away in Stanislawow ghetto in Poland began what would be the second-to-last entry in her diary. Twenty-two-year-old Elsa Binder wrote “Well, this whole scribbling doesn’t make any sense. The world will know about everything even without my wise notes.”

Her words were hauntingly prescient. For decades, the world did indeed come to know about the Holocaust without her “scribbling”, which languished, untranslated, in an archive in Poland. In a twist of fate, however, it was precisely Anne Frank’s “musings,” as she described them, that brought the subject of Jewish suffering during the Holocaust into the homes of many millions of readers.

Anne Frank at her desk at the Montessori School in Amsterdam (winter 1940). In this picture, Anne is 11 years old and in sixth grade.

Amsterdam.

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