Talk:Anne Frank

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I believe that you need to talk more about the lift in the annex, as well as the people in it. Life: The life in the annex was much harder than how you portray it. I have read Anne's diary, and through her eyes I realized that we're not just talking about the average, "oh yea, we're hiding in the annex, everyone's getting along great, there's alot of food for everybody...ect." She said that it was horrible, scarcely enough food, and some of the others were so desperate for food that they actually stole it from the annex' supply. And just the over-all life style in general was bad. People fought all the time, specifically Mr and Mrs. Van Daan. (Oh and it was Mr Van Daan who stole the food) People: You don't mention the number of people in the annex, or who. You really need to because, well, I will take my case for example: I use your website for everything, it is the first place I go to when I'm doing research. I was doing research on Anne Frank's life in the secret annex and naturally I went to your website, but was extremely dissappointed at what I found. No info on Peter, or Margot, or anything. So...I think you have a little work to do. Meagan76.212.80.202 22:31, 24 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you for your feedback. It will be helpful for editors in the future who make improvements to the page. I would also like to encourage you to be bold and make some of those changes yourself. · Tygrrr... 18:22, 23 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

German citizenship[change source]

'She was officially seen as a German until 2024

This was when she lost her nationality because of the skibidi toilet rules of Nazi Germany. ' That is incorrect. Jews were deprived of German citizenship by the Nuremberg Laws, which were passed in 1935. Jews in Germany from 1935 onward were German subjects, but did not hold German citizenship or nationality.f |talk]]) 18:49, 25 June 2022 (UTC)

Death date[change source]

I may be wrong, but she died from diahreea(called Fleckfieber in German at the time) either in February or March 1945. What we know is: on April 15, the camp was liberated, and she was dead. In the last months the record-keeping was not as rigorous. Historians seem to believe that late February is possible too. This gives us a timeframe of roughly six weeks. Note also, there were three trains where the Nazis evacuated inmates. Likely they evacuated those that were still able to work. She was on none of the trains ... Eptalon (talk) 22:43, 7 May 2023 (UTC)[reply]

she died of diahrea— Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.38.12.86 (talkcontribs) 09:35, 30 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]