Anne Frank Conflicts

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“Dearest Kitty…We all live with the objective of being happy; our lives are all different and yet the same” (Frank 215). Characters who can identify with the conflict in their daily lives regularly are scarce. Anne Frank, the main protagonist in her self-titled diary, The Diary of a Young Girl, can. In the time of complete discrimination from the German Nazis toward the European Jews, the setting of this diary is during the desolate times of World War II. From the moment she discovers that her sister has been contacted by the Schutzstaffel, better know as the SS, Anne knows her entire life is about to change drastically. Anne relays on her diary to write her feelings about the war down because she believes “paper has more patience than people.” (Frank 4) .The war as a conflict influences certain aspects of the main character’s personal …show more content…

Due to the fact that the Franks were European Jews, they were followed and tried to stay hidden, due to external conflicts. However, the family kept surviving in the secret annex, staying positive throughout every day. Nonetheless, on the night of August 4, 1944, after nearly two years living within the Secret Annex, the Nazis seized the Frank family, the Van Pels Family, and Fritz Pfeffer. The families were split up into multiple concentration camps, Anne was sent to Auschwitz concentration camp and later to Bergen-Belsen, where she then died in February 1945, from typhus. Otto Frank, Anne’s father, was the only survivor of the Secret Annex, and later published his daughter’s diary. Furthermore, it is clear that external conflicts, in this case World War II, can effect the personal life of a character greatly, even proving to influence life or death. “I don’t think of all the misery, but of the beauty that still remains.…Yours, Anne M. Frank” (Frank

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