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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

Here's Why Iran Might End Up Turning Its Back On Hamas

Iran's revolutionary regime insists it wants Israel destroyed and has threatened a regional war, but its actions are ambivalent, suggesting it may fear a regional war that would hasten its demise. As a result, it may decide to stop supporting Hamas in Gaza.

photo of women holding iranian and palestinian flags and photo of supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei

At a pro-Palestinian rally in Tehran on Nov. 4.

Rouzbeh Fouladi/ZUMA
Hamed Mohammadi

Updated Nov. 14, 2023 at 11:05 p.m.

-Analysis-

Urban warfare is an ugly mess even for high-tech armies, yet after weeks of bombing Hamas targets, Israel believed it had no choice but to invade Gaza and expose its troops to just this type of fighting. It is the only way of flushing out Hamas, it says, which has decided to fight Israel amid the wreckage of Gazan homes, schools and clinics.

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Meanwhile, attacks on U.S. forces in the Middle East by similar militias working in coordination with the Iranian regime have become a headache for the Biden administration, which is seen by some as taking a soft line with the Tehran. The administration insists there is no hard evidence yet of Iranian involvement in Hamas's attack on Israel on October 7, though it has hardened its tone, warning Tehran not to pour "fuel on fire."

As for the European Union, it remains cautious about listing the Iranian Revolutionary Guards as terrorists, even if in September the NATO parliamentary assembly advised members of the alliance to list them as such and aid the democratic aspirations of ordinary Iranians.

Whatever the details, the war in Gaza is intimately connected to the Iranian regime and its modus operandi.

Its officials have warned that the Gaza offensive, if continued, would open new fronts against Israel. The regime's foreign minister, Hussein Amirabdullahian, vowed Gaza would become an Israeli "graveyard" if its troops invaded, while the head of the Revolutionary guards, Hussein Salami, compared the strip to a "dragon" that would "devour" the invaders.

But so far we have seen nothing of Iran's more dramatic threats, made soon after the October attack, including the West Bank joining with Gaza or the Lebanese Hezbollah firing off 150,000 rockets. Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, while insisting Iran had nothing to do with the Hamas assault, urged regional states to starve Israel of fuel. That too has yet to happen.

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