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This Happened

This Happened — June 25: Anne Frank’s Diary Is Published

Anne Frank's diary, titled "The Diary of a Young Girl" was first published on this day in 1947.

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Who published Anne Frank's diary?

Anne Frank's father, Otto Frank, published her diary. He survived the Holocaust and was given Anne's diary after the war. Recognizing the importance of her writings, he decided to fulfill Anne's wish of becoming a published writer.

How did Anne Frank's diary become widely known?

After the war, Otto Frank returned to Amsterdam and discovered that Anne's diary had been preserved. He decided to have it published in order to share her story and experiences with the world. The diary gained significant attention and became widely known, gradually becoming a symbol of hope and resilience in the face of the atrocities of the Holocaust. Her diary has been translated into more than 70 languages, making it one of the most widely circulated books in history.

 What impact did the publication of Anne Frank's diary have?

The publication of Anne Frank's diary had a profound impact on readers worldwide. It offered an intimate and poignant account of a young Jewish girl's life in hiding during the Holocaust, providing a human perspective on the horrors of that time. The diary's universal themes of hope, love, and resilience resonated with people, making Anne Frank an enduring symbol of courage and the consequences of hatred and discrimination.

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FOCUS: Israel-Palestine War

The Problem With Calling Hamas "Nazis"

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other top Israeli officials have referred to Hamas militants as "the new Nazis." But as horrific as the Oct. 7 massacre was, what does it really mean to make such a comparison 80 years after the Holocaust? And how can we rightly describe what's happening in Gaza?

photo of man wearing a kippah with a jewish star

A pro-Israel rally in Sao Paulo, Brazil

Paulo Lopes/ZUMA
Daniela Padoan

-OpEd-

TURIN — In these days of horror, we've seen dangerous equivalences, half-truths and syllogisms continue to emerge: between Israelis and Jews, between Palestinians and Hamas, between entities at "war."

The conversation makes it seem that there are two states with symmetrical power. Instead, on one side, there is a Sunni Islamic fundamentalist terrorist organization with both a political and a military wing; on the other, a democratic state — although it has elements in the majority that advocate for a mono-ethnic and supremacist society — equipped with a nuclear arsenal and one of the most powerful armies in the world.

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And in the middle? Civilians violated, massacred, and taken hostage in the horrific massacre of Oct. 7. Civilians trapped and torn apart in Gaza under a month-long siege and bombardment.

And then we also have Israeli civilians led into war and ideological radicalization by a government that recklessly exploits that most unhealable wound of the Holocaust.

On Oct. 17, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu referred to Hamas militants as "the new Nazis." On Oct. 24, he drew a comparison between Jewish children hiding in attics to escape terrorists and Anne Frank. On the same day, he likened the massacre on Oct. 7 to the Babij Yar massacre carried out in 1941 by the Einsatzgruppen, the SS operational units responsible for extermination. In the systematic elimination of Jews in Kyiv, they deceitfully gathered 33,771 men and women, forced them to descend into a ravine, lie down on top of the bodies of those who were already dead or dying, and then shot them.

The "Nazification" of opponents, or the "reductio ad Hitlerum," to use the expression coined in the 1950s by the German-Jewish political philosopher Leo Strauss, who fled Nazi Germany in 1938, is a symbolic strategy that has been abused for decades to discredit one's adversary.

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