English, asked by meghasg2004, 1 year ago

what were the gifts given to Anne on her birthday by her parents and how did she enjoy her birthday in her school.......
( from novel Anne Frank )​


Atharv81: yl wo sab bhul jao ..apki bhot yaad aayi
Atharv81: bhot roya bhi tha
Atharv81: ab nhi karunga kissi bhi girls sa baat
Atharv81: hi
meghasg2004: hlo
Atharv81: kkrh
meghasg2004: ntg
Atharv81: ok
Atharv81: wo upar kuch msg kiya tha mena
Atharv81: apna uska reply nhi kiya

Answers

Answered by moksha9946
6

Anne was given many toys and a dairy with red and white checked cover. She and her friends played ping pong and enjoyed a lot on her birthday.

She celebrated her birthday on 12 june 1942, although the diary she received was an autograph book,bound with red-and-white checkered cloth and with a small lock on the front, Frank decided she would use it as a diary, and she began writing in it almost immediately. In her entry dated 20 June 1942, she lists many of the restrictions placed upon the lives of the Dutch Jewish population.she kept a diary she had received as a birthday present, and wrote in it regularly.


meghasg2004: plz little long answer I will make brainliest
Answered by arshadkhan87
1
Anne has just turned thirteen, and she lists the birthday presents which she has received, including the diary, which she says is "possibly the nicest of all." She then gives us a brief description of her personal history, mentioning her birth in Frankfurt, Germany, the family, their emigration to Holland after Hitler's rise to power and his persecution of the Jews in Germany, the Nazi occupation of Holland, among the Nazis' occupation of other European countries, plus the various, severe restrictions imposed upon Jews there. Anne describes all this in a very matter-of-fact way, listing the sorts of things that Jews must and must not do: "Jews must hand in their bicycles, Jews are banned from trains and are forbidden to drive. Jews are only allowed to do their shopping between three and five o'clock, and then only in shops which bear the placard 'Jewish Shop,'" and so on. She points out, however, that "life went on in spite of it all," and "things were still bearable" (June 20, 1942). Thus, in the midst of persecution and restrictions, Anne still describes her feelings about boyfriends and about girl friends, about school and her teachers, and also describes meeting Peter Wessel, a boy whom she apparently was rather fond of (June 30, 1942).
Anne's father tells her that at some future date the family will have to go into hiding in order to avoid being sent to concentration camps; to Anne, this all seems to be vaguely distant. Yet, suddenly, less than one month after the diary begins, the family does suddenly have to go into hiding because Anne's older sister, Margot, has been summoned by the Nazis to be sent to a concentration camp. All Jews knew that the concentration camps were terrible places of imprisonment, although the full extent of what was actually done there was not yet known. And so, the family had no choice; they packed a few basic possessions into shopping bags, put on as many items of clothing as they could, made arrangements for their cat to be looked after, and they set off on foot-in the rain-for the "hiding place" that Anne's father had been arranging and preparing for some time.
Straightaway, Anne and her father set about arranging and tidying the place, while Anne's mother and Margot lie down on their beds, too tired and emotionally drained and miserable to help (July 9-10, 1942).

arshadkhan87: hi
arshadkhan87: bhool gye kya
meghasg2004: nope
arshadkhan87: bhool gye ho
meghasg2004: nope friend
arshadkhan87: kese ho
arshadkhan87: bye
arshadkhan87: sorry aap ko disturb kiya
arshadkhan87: byee
meghasg2004: hlo
Similar questions