The describes of Anne Frank's history are clear: the retreat with her household from Germany; resettlement in 1933 in Amsterdam where her papa Otto Frank had an organization; German profession of The Netherlands in May, 1940; the family members's flight in 1942 into concealing in the attic above Otto Frank's workplace; creating in her journal; betrayal and capture in August 1944; jail time in Westerbork, a transit camp; deportation to Auschwitz in September 1944; fatality in Bergen-Belsen a couple of weeks before freedom in March 1945; Otto Frank's return as the sole enduring participant of the family; magazine, in the early 1950s, of the diary discovered by Miep Gies after the police arrested the Franks; posthumous popularity for Anne and also her family. The German line of work sorely tested typical Dutch partnerships, attitudes and actions built on a seemingly solid exterior of tolerance as well as compromise. The Germans urged that the Jews develop a Jewish Council to make the Jewish community react to significantly vindictive German needs. And it is a mark of the extent to which they can create an authentically Dutch-Jewish identity that a number of the mysteries and conflicts in which the neighborhood was caught shown mysteries and problems that lay within the heart of Dutch culture itself.