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Update Notice: First published August 2025. Last updated November 10, 2025 with latest and updated content keeping in mind the helpfulness of the users.
Bio Sketch of Anne Frank edumantra.net
From the Diary of Anne Frank Class 10 – About the Author & Introduction Explained 4
Introduction of the lesson- From the Diary of Anne Frank edumantra.net
From the Diary of Anne Frank Class 10 – About the Author & Introduction Explained 5

1. Additional diary pages appeared after publication.

After the diary was published, five loose pages (not included originally) were found. These pages were also identified as written by Anne, and later editions included them. ([annefrank.org][3])

2. Her father fought legal battles to protect the diary’s authenticity.

Otto Frank, Anne’s father, defended the diary against claims of forgery. From the 1950s until his death, he used both legal and public efforts to show the diary was genuine. ([research.annefrank.org][4])

3. She lost her citizenship and became stateless.

Originally born German, Anne Frank lost her German citizenship in 1941 and became stateless under Nazi laws. ([Wikipedia][5])

4. She died just before the war’s end, likely of typhus.

Anne died in the Bergen-Belsen camp in early 1945, probably from typhus, less than a year before World War II ended. ([Wikipedia][5])

5. The “Secret Annex” was hidden behind a bookshelf.

The Frank family lived for more than two years in a small set of rooms behind Otto Frank’s office in Amsterdam. The entrance was cleverly covered by a moving bookshelf to keep them safe.

6. Her diary survived because of a family friend.

After the family was arrested, Miep Gies — one of the helpers — found Anne’s diary and kept it safe until Otto Frank returned after the war.

7. Her diary has been translated into more than 70 languages.

Millions of readers across the world have read her words, making it one of the most translated and widely read books ever written by a teenager.

8. Anne was fluent in several languages.

She spoke German and Dutch, and during her hiding years she tried to learn English, French, and even a little Italian. She loved reading books in all these languages.

1. Who betrayed Anne Frank and why?

Answer – The truth is still not fully known.There is no clear proof about who gave them away. The official Anne Frank House in Amsterdam says that the police raid on 4 August 1944 might not have come from a direct betrayal. It could have happened by chance when the officers were checking reports of illegal work or hiding Jews nearby.
(Source: [AnneFrankHouse–OfficialWebsite]
Still, some people have been named as possible suspects. One of them was Willem van Maaren, a worker in Otto Frank’s office. Otto Frank himself doubted his honesty, but no strong proof was ever found.
Another name that came up in recent research is Arnold van den Bergh, a Jewish businessman. A 2022 study suggested he might have shared the address of the hiding place to protect his own family from Nazi punishment. But experts say this theory is not fully proven.
(Source: [University of Connecticut Report – Who Betrayed Anne Frank?]
In simple words, no one knows for sure who betrayed Anne Frank. Historians believe the people hiding could have been found either by accident or because someone, under fear and pressure, revealed them. The mystery remains unsolved even after many years of research.

2. Was Anne Frank black?

Answer– No — Anne Frank was not Black. She was born on June 12, 1929, in Frankfurt, Germany, to a German-Jewish family. (en.wikipedia.org) Her parents, Otto and Edith Frank, came from German Jewish backgrounds and belonged to the broader Ashkenazi (Central/Eastern European) Jewish community.

Her identity as a Jewish girl during the Nazi era plays a central role in her diary and the significance of her story. When considering race and ethnicity, it’s important to understand she was persecuted because she was Jewish under Nazi laws, not because of skin colour.
“Anne Frank”
“The family history of Anne Frank – Jüdisches Museum Frankfurt”
“Anne Frank | Biography, Age, Death, & Facts | Britannica”

3. How was Anne Frank caught?

Answer- On the morning of 4 August 1944, Anne Frank, her family and six other people hiding with them in the “Secret Annex” at 263 Prinsengracht in Amsterdam were discovered by Nazi-German security forces.
At about 10:30 am they entered the building and found the group in hiding.
After the arrest, the occupants and their helpers were taken for questioning and later deported to concentration camps. Anne Frank died in 1945.
“Reconstruction: the arrest of the people in hiding | Anne Frank House”
“Arrest of Anne Frank 80 years ago”
“The people in hiding are discovered: They are arrested and put in …”

4. Why didn’t Anne Frank write her diary in German?

Answer- Anne Frank’s family spoke German when she was born in Frankfurt, Germany, but when they moved to Amsterdam in 1934, Anne’s everyday life became Dutch-speaking. She attended school in the Netherlands, socialised with Dutch friends and quickly used Dutch as her main language. (en.wikipedia.org)
By the time Anne began her diary in June 1942, she wrote in Dutch because that felt natural and immediate to her at age 13 in hiding. The choice of Dutch also meant her writing was directly rooted in the culture she lived in at the time, not in her earlier German background. (doublespeakdojo.com)

5. Where is Anne Frank’s “real” diary now? (not the facsimile of it)

Answer- The original red-and-white checkered diary that Anne Frank used while in hiding is preserved and on display at the Anne Frank House museum in Amsterdam. (annefrank.org)
For authenticity and public access, the museum safeguards these original items under controlled conditions.
“Inside the museum | Anne Frank House”

6. How did Anne Frank die?

Answer- Anne Frank died in February 1945 in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. She was only 15 years old. After being arrested, Anne and her sister Margot were first sent to Auschwitz, and later moved to Bergen-Belsen, where thousands of people were kept in terrible conditions.
There was almost no food, clean water, or medical help in the camp. Because of the dirt and overcrowding, many prisoners got sick with typhus, a disease spread by lice. Both Anne and Margot caught this disease and died within a few days of each other.
[Anne Frank House]
Her death was not caused by violence but by the terrible living conditions and disease in the camp. Her story remains one of the saddest and most powerful reminders of the suffering during the Holocaust.
[Britannica]