Fig 2. Happy and normal family life. Edith Frank takes seven-year-old Margot and three-year-old Anne on a trip to Frankfurt city centre in March 1933. Hitler has been in power for two months, and life for Germany’s Jews is about to change. Photo by Anne Frank Fonds – Basel via Getty Images.
Fig 3. In May 1941, the photographer Frans Dupont took a series of exquisitely posed studio images of eleven-year-old Anne. Photo by Frans Dupont/ Anne Frank Fonds – Basel via Getty Images.
Fig 4. (a) The front cover and (b) inside of Anne’s original diary with photos she pasted inside it. From the Anne Frank House collection.
Fig 5. The first Anne Frank traveling exhibition Anne Frank in the World 1929-1945 was monochrome and huge in scale. Here it is on show in Glasgow in 1990. From the Anne Frank House collection.
Fig 6. Otto Frank and his wife Fritzi visiting Audrey Hepburn at her home in Switzerland, circa 1957. A copy of this photo was given to me in Los Angeles by Audrey’s son, Sean Hepburn Ferrer. It was taken by his late father, the actor Mel Ferrer.
Fig 7. Anne Frank’s cousin Bernd ‘Buddy’ Elias reads the Anne Frank Declaration to United Nations General Secretary Kofi Annan at UN headquarters in New York in January 1999. Those watching include (from left) footballer and UN Ambassador John Fashanu; my late husband Tony Bogush; the UK’s Ambassador to the UN Sir Jeremy Greenstock; Eva Schloss; myself and at back right, Barry van Driel, who composed the Declaration. Photo: UN photographer, from the Anne Frank Trust collection.
Fig 8. A very special memory of attending the 1996 Academy Awards in Hollywood with Miep Gies. Jon Blair, the writer and director of the Oscar winning documentary feature Anne Frank Remembered is at the back on the right. Photo: Jerome Goldblatt.
Fig 9. Anne Frank House International Director Jan Erik Dubbelman greets Japanese children coming to the exhibition in Tokyo in 2010 Photo: Aaron Peterer, Anne Frank House collection.
Fig 10. Latvian and Russian teenagers performing together in The Dreams of Anne Frank Riga, 1998. For some it was their first opportunity to interact socially. From the Anne Frank House collection.
Fig 11. Student peer guides in the South African township of Orlando West with Aaron Peterer of the Anne Frank House education team (centre right back). Photo: Gift Mabunda, 2009 from the Anne Frank House collection.
Fig 12. Eva Schloss with a prisoner guide (face obscured) at Wormwood Scrubs Prison in London. On the right is Steve Gadd, the Anne Frank Trust prison tour manager. Photo: Mark McEvoy for the Anne Frank Trust.
Fig 13. Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen (with red tie) is shown around the Anne Frank, A History for Today exhibition at the CEU Paraisopolis School in Sao Paulo, 2010. His enthusiastic and knowledgeable guides are as young as ten and eleven. Photo: Riccardo Sanchez for the Instituto Plataforma Brasil.
Fig 14. Anne Frank Ambassadors show schools and members of the public around the Anne Frank + You exhibition at Bradford College in West Yorkshire in 2013. With thanks to Bradford Metropolitan District Council and the Anne Frank Trust.
Fig 15. Anne Frank peer guides at the Forest Gate School in London. From the Anne Frank Trust collection.
Fig 16. After the thirty-year-long Sri Lankan civil war, the Anne Frank, A History for Today exhibition gave students in Jaffna an opportunity to reflect on their recent past and future. From the Anne Frank House collection.