O Google Arts & Culture, in partnership with the Foundation Anne Frank, launched an online exhibition with 360° images of the house where the Frank family lived. The novelty is a tribute to Anne Frank, a Jewish girl who wrote stories about the Nazism.
The exhibition has five images made with Google Street View. It is possible to see, in detail, Anne's property, including her room, with details typical of decorations from the 30s.
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On the site it is also possible to find historical documents, in addition to the only photo of Anne Frank with her parents and her sister, Margot.
Currently, the Anne Frank House is owned by the Dutch Literature Foundation. Since 2006, the space has housed foreign writers who are not allowed to work in their home countries.
Ronald Leopold, director of the Anne Frank Foundation, says that both tolerance and freedom of expression are fundamental here.
Anne Frank and her family fled Germany for Amsterdam, the Netherlands, in 1933. In 1942, they had to hide in the back of Anne's father's company, Otto Frank. Two years later, they were found by Nazi soldiers and taken to concentration camps.
Otto was the only survivor of the family. After a few years, he published the diary in which Anne described her views on Nazism. Anne Frank's diary it has been translated into over 70 languages and has sold over 35 million copies.
Check out the virtual exhibition of Anne Frank's House.
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