第1个回答 2013-11-13
安妮日记啊 Anne Frank 是它的作者Anne Frank was born into a Jewish family in Frankfurt, Germany, on June 12, 1929. She lived in Frankfurt with her father, Otto; her mother, Edith; and her older sister, Margot. Then, in 1933, her life in Germany began to change. The country had a new leader named Adolf Hitler. Hitler taught hatred and intolerance toward Jews and all other people who were not of his race or who did not share his beliefs. Hitler's followers were known as the Nazis.
Hitler's acts of hatred toward the Jews troubled Anne Frank's father greatly. He was worried for his family's well-being. In 1933 Otto Frank decided to move his wife and daughters to the city of Amsterdam in the Netherlands. Amsterdam offered the Franks a new business opportunity and a safe place to raise their children. Anne Frank was not affected much by this change in her life. She started a new school, made friends, and visited the ocean on vacation.
In 1940 the Germans invaded the Netherlands. One year later they began to take Jewish people from their homes and send them to concentration camps, or prisons, in Germany. Otto Frank was ready for this attack on the Jewish population in Amsterdam. While some Jews tried to leave the country, Anne's father prepared a secret hiding place for his family. On July 5, 1942, the Nazis sent out an order for Margot Frank to be arrested. To prevent this, the Franks went into hiding.
Anne Frank could bring only a few items with her to the hiding place. She brought pictures of movie stars, books, and a diary her parents had given her on her thirteenth birthday. Anne Frank's diary became an important record of the Franks' years in hiding.
Anne Frank's diary
Their hiding place was part of a house attached to Mr. Frank's place of business. The Secret Annex, as Anne Frank called it in her diary, became home to eight people. Another Jewish family, the Van Pels, lived there along with the Franks. Later, an older man named Fritz Pfeffer joined the two families. A few friends and employees of Anne's father provided the people in the Secret Annex with food and news from the outside.
For two years the people in the Secret Annex lived in constant fear of being caught by the Nazis. During the day, when people were working in the building,they sat quietly and moved very little. Only at night could they walk around and talk freely. In the end, all their careful ways could not save them. On August 4, 1944, the families in the Secret Annex were discovered by the Nazis. A phone call from an unknown person had given away the Franks' hiding place.
For the next seven months, Anne Frank and her family were moved from one concentration camp to another. Her mother died at Auschwitz, a concentration camp in Poland. Anne Frank and her sister, Margot, were moved to the concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen in Germany. Many of the prisoners at Bergen-Belsen were dying from disease. With little to eat and only rags to wear in the cold winter, the sisters became ill. Anne and Margot Frank died at Bergen-Belsen in March 1945. Margot Frank was 19, and Anne Frank was 15.
Anne Frank's father was the only person from the Secret Annex to survive the war. After his release from Auschwitz, he traveled back to Amsterdam. A friend of the family had rescued a few of the Frank's belongings, including his daughter's diary. In the summer of 1947, Anne's father decided to publish her diary. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl has given a voice to all the Jewish people who lost their lives during World War II. Anne Frank's diary continues to remind readers how important it is to love and respect others and to allow them to lead their lives in peace.这有几篇英文版的June 12, 1942I hope I will be able to confide everything to you, as I have never been able to confide in anyone, and I hope you will be a great source of comfort and support. COMMENT ADDED BY ANNE ON SEPTEMBER 28, 1942: So far you truly have been a areat source of comfort to me, and so has Kitty, whom I now write to regularly. This way of keeping a diary is much nicer, and now I can hardly wait for those moments when I'm able to write in you. Oh, I'm so alad I brought you along! SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 1942 I'll begin from the moment I got you, the moment I saw you lying on the table among my other birthday presents. (I went along when you were bought, but that doesn't count.) On Friday, June 12, I was awake at six o'clock, which isn't surprising, since it was my birthday. But I'm not allowed to get up at that hour, so I had to control my curiosity until quarter to seven. When I couldn't wait any longer, I went to the dining room, where Moortje (the cat) welcomed me by rubbing against my legs. A little after seven I went to Daddy and Mama and then to the living room to open my presents, and you were the first thing I saw, maybe one of my nicest presents. Then a bouquet of roses, some peonies and a potted plant. From Daddy and Mama I got a blue blouse, a game, a bottle of grape juice, which to my mind tastes a bit like wine (after all, wine is made from grapes), a puzzle, a jar of cold cream, 2.50 guilders and a gift certificate for two books. I got another book as well, Camera Obscura (but Margot already has it, so I exchanged mine for something else), a platter of homemade cookies (which I made myself, of course, since I've become quite an expert at baking cookies), lots of candy and a strawberry tart from Mother. And a letter from Grammy, right on time, but of course that was just a coincidence. Then Hanneli came to pick me up, and we went to school. During recess I passed out cookies to my teachers and my class, and then it was time to get back to work. I didn't arrive home until five, since I went to gym with the rest of the class. (I'm not allowed to take part because my shoulders and hips tend to get dislocated.) As it was my birthday, I got to decide which game my classmates would play, and I chose volleyball. Afterward they all danced around me in a circle and sang "Happy Birthday." When I got home, Sanne Ledermann was already there. Ilse Wagner, Hanneli Goslar and Jacqueline van Maarsen came home with me after gym, since we're in the same class. Hanneli and Sanne used to be my two best friends. People who saw us together used to say, "There goes Anne, Hanne and Sanne." I only met Jacqueline van Maarsen when I started at the Jewish Lyceum, and now she's my best friend. Ilse is Hanneli's best friend, and Sanne goes to another school and has friends there. They gave me a beautiful book, Dutch Sasas and Lesends, but they gave me Volume II by mistake, so I exchanged two other books for Volume I. Aunt Helene brought me a puzzle, Aunt Stephanie a darling brooch and Aunt Leny a terrific book: Daisy Goes to the Mountains. This morning I lay in the bathtub thinking how wonderful it would be if I had a dog like Rin Tin Tin. I'd call him Rin Tin Tin too, and I'd take him to school with me, where he could stay in the janitor's room or by the bicycle racks when the weather was good. 望采纳,谢谢!