The show, which opens on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, recreates the annex where Anne and her family hid from the Nazis.
A full-scale replica of the secret annex where Anne Frank penned her famous diary has opened in New York City.
The secret annex – one of the most famous dwellings in history, thanks to Frank’s best-selling published diary – can now be explored remotely, in New York.
A full-scale replica of Anne Frank’s secret annex has opened in New York City, offering visitors a rare glimpse into the space where she wrote her famous diary. Veuer has the story!
The entire installation aims to examine Anne Frank’s life — and death — with a scope not often found in other treatments of this chapter in history.
Anne Frank House is bringing a recreation of the Secret Annex—where Anne Frank and her family hid during the Holocaust—to New York.
The Anne Frank annex recreation at the Center for Jewish History offers a rare opportunity for visitors unable to travel to Amsterdam where 1.2 million people visited the Anne Frank House in 2023. Demand for tickets to the New York exhibit is high, with weekend tickets already sold out through the exhibition’s April 30th closing date.
And yet, for all that, Anne Frank remains something of an abstraction, especially for the many who have never trekked to Amsterdam and the Anne Frank House museum, which houses hundreds of artifacts and personal items of the Frank family. It also contains the infamous secret annex hidden behind a bookcase, which has been carefully preserved.
Replica: How do you recreate a world-famous symbol? An exhibition on the life of Anne Frank will open in New York on January 27, 2025, eighty years after the liberation of Auschwitz. The rooms of the people in hiding are impeccably recreated.
When it comes to teaching kids about the Holocaust, New York City parents and teachers have a new tool at their disposal: Anne Frank The Exhibition, which opens today at the Center for Jewish History.
“Anne Frank: The Exhibition” features a replica of the hidden annex where eight Jewish people, including Anne and her family, lived for two years between July 1942 and August 1944 before they were discovered and sent to death camps.
BRANCHBURG — A traveling exhibition honoring the life and legacy of Anne Frank is now on display at Raritan Valley Community College in Branchburg. The “Anne Frank in Translation,” presented by the Institute of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at RVCC will be on display at the college’s library until May 15.