Edith Frank, born on January sixteenth, nineteen hundred, was a devoted housewife and the mother of two remarkable daughters, Anne and Margot Frank. Her life was marked by the challenges of raising her children in a tumultuous time, as the family faced the harsh realities of the Holocaust.
During the German occupation of the Netherlands, the Frank family went into hiding in Amsterdam to escape persecution. This period of concealment was fraught with fear and uncertainty, yet it was also a time of profound familial bonds and resilience.
Tragically, their hiding place was discovered, leading to their arrest and subsequent transportation to Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. It was there that Edith succumbed to the ravages of weakness and disease, leaving behind a legacy intertwined with the poignant story of her daughter Anne, whose diary has touched millions around the world.