Friday, March 04, 2005

The Anne Frank House

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Today we took a long walk past the Anne Frank House (Ann Frankhuis). We toured the house on our last trip to Amsterdam. It was quite an amazing experience. The Frank family hid from the Nazis on the top two floors of this building, overtop of the spice factory where Otto Frank (Anne's father) worked. We were able to walk through the exact rooms that Anne and her family stayed in. We were able to look out the same windows, climb the same steep Dutch staircase... On the top floor we were able to look at the actual pages of Anne's diaries (there were actually three books full of her writings) and look up the names of Holoucast victims in a large remembrance book.

Pictures of the interior of the house were not permitted. Today we took some pictures of the area. I will describe them below....

The first picture is of the West Church (Westerkerk). The church is just a few houses down from the Anne Frank House. Anne mentions in her diary how the ringing sound of the church bells would soothe her. Unfortunately, after a time the large bells were taken down and melted and the metal was used for war weaponery. The bells were replaced sometime in the 1950's.

The second picture shows the view as if you were looking out of the window of the spice factory (the first floor of where Anne and her family were hiding) at 263 Prisengracht.

The third picture is of Justice and Journey standing with a statue of Anne Frank in the Westerkerk courtyard.

The fourth picture is of the outside of the Anne Frank house. The outside has been restored, but the inside still has the original structure and some of the original furnishings. The house to the left of this was purchased and contains information about the Holoucast and the role that the Dutch played. It also contains a bookstore, restrooms, and reception area.

1 comments:

Jennifer said...

They don't allow photos in a lot of the museums. Over the years they have found that the camera flash causes the paintings and artwork to deteriorate. Some museums allow cameras but no flash, but people don't read the signs or forget to turn the flash off, so it's just easier to say NO cameras!