Announcement
Supported by
New York Today
The show, which opens on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, recreates the annex where Anne and her family hid from the Nazis.
By lola fadulu
Nice day. It’s Monday. We will read about a new Anne Frank exhibition in the city today, which is International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
A new exhibition Anne Frank will open today the Jewish history center in New York, International Holocaust’s Sumo Day, and 3 months before passing other cities.
“Anne Frank the Exposition” is a giant scale recreation of the annex where Anne and her circle of relatives hid the Nazis from July 1942 to August 1944 in Amsterdam, and where she wrote her newspaper. The exhibit has over a hundred original artifacts and examines Anne’s life and death. This is the first time that the appendix has been absolutely reconstructed outside the Amsterdam gates, reported my colleague Laurel Graeber.
The exhibition aims to show “how this story, how this reminiscence is going in the 21st century,” said Ronald Leopold, executive director of Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, in an interview with Laurel. It comes to New York when anti -Semitism is expanding in the United States and abroad.
The reconstructed annex has five bedrooms. Each room has the precise main points and dimensions as a counterpart to Anne Frank House, which more than 1. 2 million people stop by each year. Unlike the original space, which has been deliberately left empty, the exhibition piece is filled with furniture and products, adding books and a board game. It also has a facsimile of the newspaper; The original is in Amsterdam.
We have recovered the content of the article.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.
Thank you for your patience as we review access. If you’re in reader mode, drop off and attach to your Times account, or subscribe to all the time.
Thanks for your patience while we review access.
Already a subscriber? Sign in.
Do you want all time? Subscribe.
Advertisement