I did a book report on Anne Frank back in 6th grade in 2005, and my teacher tried to tell me it was “not appropriate” for my age group. I feel that, if Anne was old enough to go through this, then we are old enough to read it.
@@dunker982 it honestly depends on what version was used. The unaltered version has a lot of sexual content. But then again The Color Purple was on the reading list for Junior year at my VERY conservative Christian high school.
@@sarahpersonalexcellenceguide I agree. And it never ceases to amaze me that the same people who fly confederate flags will tell someone their child shouldn't read the diary of Anne Frank. They're proud of a heritage of rape, abuse, murder, dog mauling, family separations, and all manner of cruelty that would make their Jesus weep, but nah, can't read about a vagina. This world is so backwards. Beware the fascist book burners. That's my prayer
@@sdfghgtrew Ah yes, totally was money when Otto was planning to actually keep the diary private in the family till one of his friends convinced him it should be out there in the world.
@@sdfghgtrewI'm sure he would have preferred having his family back rather than being left only with the diary of his youngest daughter who died in awful circumstances.
Otto is the definition of a true father, he did everything he could to protect his family and do whatever it takes. It's so horrible that he ended up being the only survivor after all the effort he went through to keep them alive through hiding. It's no wonder Anne wrote so fondly of him, he seriously was the best father. Even after all this he did everything in his power to bring out Anne's diary to the world to let her legacy live on. This man will forever be a legend, and I hope now he's reunited with his family after he passed. God bless you, Otto.
I can see why Anne loved her father so much. His kind and gentle spirit is palpable, even after experiencing the most horrible nightmare imaginable. May his and his family's memories be a blessing.
At 64, I have finally read the Diaries. They have had a profound impact on me. My heart goes out to this poor man, and of course to Anne. She was an exceptional young lady. Full of life, hope, positivity, and so mature for her age. And she did ultimately get her wish to be an influential writer. If only she knew. May she rest in peace. May the all rest in peace.
As a father to 2 girls the eldest being 8 who keeps a diary this has reduced me to tears. I cant imagine the suffering during that time and for her father afterwards.
@@slipnpitch1894 I think you should read it. I was thinking I'd like to visit as well. But I couldn't walk in there. Definitely not worthy, and I don't feel it would be appropriate to walk through the same rooms she did. I feel it's sacred, in a way.
Today is 30 Oct, 2022. Just yesterday, Anne's best friend Hannah died. 😥😥May be they are now together in heaven. Rest in peace Hannah Goslar. Prayers from India🇮🇳
@@rwwilson21 INDEED, she did. Plus CONTEXT, perhaps this is why her authentic writing FROM THE HEART ♥ SPEAKS TO THE HEART ♥ of all men, women and children, who read it... Many were PERSECUTED by the nazi regime. . invalids . the elderly . homosexuality . handicapped . teenagers . Russians . performer's A lot of Jewish people came to Australia, Melbourne has a large Jewish population. A lot of Nazi families came to Australia....... Crystal 🏙/The City of Churches ...... ADELAIDE, SOUTH AUSTRALIA 🇦🇺 STRAYA, has a large German population and a very dark undercurrent. I wonder how the Nazi population of Australia was IN JOY, during LOCK UP AUSTRALIA. Dreadful unsolved crimes in Adelaide....... I think it's about time, everyday people in Adelaide dobbed these people in.
@carolinegodden4364 Yes, it was totally horrific. Gypsies were persecuted too. Also, Jehovah's Witnesses and some Roman Catholics. Also, some Freemasons. Also, trade unionists. Also, some black people and mixed race. Also, people with mental illness and other disabilities. Also, some children and babies. Some Jewish Europeans left Europe for the USA and Israel. I didn't know about Australia.
An amazing man, Otto Frank, with an amazing daughter Anne. I am not ashamed to say as a young boy when I read the diary, that it touched me. I think of her often.
the stress of living indoors with fear of capture outside must have been horrendous. You rarely see strong, proud and decent people like Otto on TV these days, to have lost 2 daughters and a wife in concentration camps would have wrecked all the people I know for good.
Yes. And having endured the concentration camp himself. It fills me with anger and resentment just to know that stuff happened never mind to have all those things happen directly to me as he did.
The bookcase was made by JOHAN VOSKUIJL. He was the COUSIN of my Grandfather THEO VOSKUIJL. Johan Voskuijl's daughter, BEP VOSKUIJL, also worked there and spoke to Anne regularly. Bep Voskuijl was a second cousin of my Mother TINE VOSKUIJL. This Johan was very ill when he made this bookcase, Johan died a year later. Anne's Father was at his funeral. 😞 I still have many photos of the Frank Family. I will never forget this history ❤️ Love from the Netherlands 🇳🇱
Your cousins were so brave and have my utmost admiration. I can’t imagine the fear they lived with, yet still helped the 8 in the annex have over 2 more years together 🩷
@vlinder6329. Bedankt voor deze toevoeging. Het verhaal van Anne Frank en haar familie en hun naasten die hielpen zullen nooit worden vergeten. Ik ben in het Anne Frank huis geweest en was erg onder de indruk van alles. Maar tegelijkertijd ook verdrietig. Mag door dat het nu een museum is geworden nooit vergeten worden. komen duizenden bezoekers daar.van over de wereld.
@@jannydegraaf267 Dankjewel voor je lieve woorden. Ben zelf met mijn moeder in het Anne Frank huis geweest, was zeker indrukwekkend. Heb zoveel mooie dierbare documenten van mijn neef Hugo Voskuijl gekregen, ben daar heel erg dankbaar voor! Laten we nooit vergeten hoe belangrijk deze bijzondere mensen waren in de Oorlog. Liefs en groetjes uit Volendam ❤️
Not even just that. They listened to the BBC day in and day out on the radio when they were in Holland. For him to make it to the BBC himself, it’s almost like Anne’s soul is there in that annex, listening to her father on the radio like any other day. Just ready to scribble down in her diary how wonderful it must be to have such a father who cared so deeply for his family after so many years apart from them. If there’s an afterlife, they’re all there in their home together again. Whether that be the annex or the homes they lived in before the war, they’ve long embraced each other with their warmth
As a teenage girl reading her diary 50 years after it was written, it moved me very much but also seemed in the far distant past. Strange how as you get older, the past somehow seems closer. Seeing her father "in living colour" like this on TV just six years before I was born, it hits home just how recently these horrors occurred. "The past is never dead. It's not even past." - William Faulkner
Do you know from which book is that phrase of W.Faulkner's; I've read the "Sound and Fury",but i don't remember that quote. So thought provoking & true in its essence....
What an absolutely noble, strong, patient and just such a powerful man. As a father, I struggle to read the diaries, though I have bought my daughter the book. How Mr Frank showed strength through such rerrible grief is just beyond me. God bless him and his family and may they all RIP
When children's television was at its best. Lesley Judd was so honoured to have met Otto Frank. So sad that these kinds of programs are no longer made.
The 70's was a great era for quality children's t.v in both Britain BBC and Australia ABC. Both stations produced and created some iconic T,V viewing for children back then. Unlike much of the poor ,lazy and cheap fodder kids are fed now sadly.
@@K-a-n-d-i-sRUclips isn't perfect, but it's what we got. Sadly, we can't revive Otto, Anne and the rest of the family, but getting to know him through a recorded interview is still a big way of learning about them from up close.
The fact that the horrible events in Ann's life ONLY had happened 30 years before this interview is unreal. These horrific events really aren't that far away. I am seeing an interview in COLOR of Mr. Frank a man that lived thru such horrors.
I think there is a difference between forgetting versus being strong, human and caring enough to stand up to the hate that led to the Holocaust. Never again is now. Otto Frank would shudder and feel heartbroken to see the same hate rising up again today. We do not forget. We will never let it happen again.
How blessed Margot and Anne were to have such a kind, wonderful father! I imagine their mother was the same. I read Anne's diary in junior high. I want to read it again. My mother and I visited their hiding place. I used to think, "What a shame she didn't get the chance to be a great writer." One day it dawned on me, she IS a great writer! After she passed on, she became world-famous and highly influential, contributing greatly to mankind. ❤
Actually Anne says in her diary that she hated her mother and she never understood her. She has very strongly articulated this throughout her diary. However, she may have been just a normal anxious nagging mother for any teenage girl under normal circumstances. When you are cooped up with other people 24/7, even if it’s one’s own family, with no one or no outside place to vent your frustrations, emotions are bound to turn ugly, especially for a teenager. So i guess she may have been a normal caring mother despite how Anne portrays her as a heartless unempathetic character. Though there is no way to know for sure because it is just from Anne’s perspective, i am willing to give both of them benefit of the doubt because of the unusual circumstances!
Her father left out many disparaging things she wrote about her mother and the others she lived with.There is a unedited version which makes her even more human.
@@Govindaclass be honest who hasn’t a times thought that one of your parents was the enemy and you hated them. Especially during the teenage years when you’re parents are desperately trying to keep you in line. It is only with the benefit of hindsight once you’re an adult that you can see your parents meant well they just made mistakes. Anne and her mother were probably so much alike that they naturally butted heads. Bit like my mother and I. I had days I couldn’t stand the sight of her in my teens and I would write nasty stuff about her. The other thing you have to keep in mind is that a diary isn’t going to judge you. You can write all sorts of mean things and it won’t judge you for it. It is a healthy way to vent as well anyway as it stops you from saying it out loud. I imagine her mother was a nag and Anne didn’t have the patience to deal with it. Given the circumstances it was a stressful at best.
@@Govindaclass I don't think Anne's mother was bad, she seemed genuine and wanted the same for Anne like Otto did. I think Anne just had a really tough bond with her due to her teenage hormones and other personal reasons, plus it's really normal for mothers and daughters to really get on each other's nerves during that time period. It was pointed out later though as Anne got older she was starting to get along with her mother better, so I am more convinced it was due to Anne growing up. She had ups and downs with the other adults too, Anne was just a teenager who was dealing with a lot mentally while growing up and felt alone - while her mother tried to also support her, Anne took it more in a harsher way than Edith meant it. Otto seemed to have been the softer parent and was Good Cop hence why Anne got along with him better.
What breaks my heart the most about this story is how loveable and funny Anne really seemed to be as a person! In life she was denied the ability to live and see what amazing things she did for the world; and if she was still among us today, she would probably still be blessing us with her writings.
@@SR-iy4gg Nope, he's partially accurate. Meyer Levin wrote the polished copy and had to sue Otto for the money promised. Meyer got $50K for his efforts.
No !!!. Anne wrote that diary!!!. Sick to constantly hear so called individuals disclaim or say the Holocaust never happened. It's sick and disgusting! . Not too mention insulting the 6 million that were murdered !!!!.
Wow this is the first time I’ve seen her father being interviewed and didn’t even know video interviews of him existed. Truly amazing and he seems like such a sweet man. I’m glad Anne’s diary helped changed lives and gave him daily inspiration as well.
I’m born in the 70’s in Canada and the Diary of Ann Frank was required reading. In the early 2000’s I had the opportunity to visit the attic and it was one of the most profound and memorable experiences I have ever had. Gratitude to Mr. Otto for sharing this tragically won gift with the world and may we never forget.
Hearing Otto speak about his daughter, hearing the love and adoration absolutely breaks my heart, he lost his whole family in the most horrific of ways, I’m so glad he was able to find peace and happiness again ♥️♥️♥️
I’m so glad Mr. Frank agreed to the interview. He is such an amazing and inspirational person. To go on despite losing his family and for a time his freedom is superhuman. Bless him for sharing Anne Frank with the rest of us to celebrate her life and legacy.
Learning Dutch, I thought I’d start with Dutch literature by reading Anne Frank’s Diary. A classic, that might be easily accessible to a learner of the language, I thought, since it was penned by a young teenager? How very wrong I was about the latter. Her writing is brilliant, flourishing, imaginative, eloquent, blossoming to the point where I had to give up until I’d learned more Dutch so that I could follow it. Anne Frank wasn’t only a gifted teenage diary writer who happened to be published because of her fate. Anne Frank was a gifted *writer*, in her own right, and would have been able to become a successful author had her life not been so brutally ended by the fanatical hate that drove the Nazis to continue their war on the Jews even as the Allied forces were literally on their doorstep. I say this as a writer myself, a journalist since 30+ years. The world truly lost a great contributor to literature and culture by her death. How I wonder what she would have become had she been allowed to enjoy her right to life.
Can I ask why you're learning Dutch? I'm half Dutch myself and my one regret in life is not being fluent, as I grew up speaking English at home, but still surrounded by it. But unlike other languages, Dutch is kinda useless, it's spoken in very few places and everyone speaks English there anyway. What are your thoughts?
@@jj-if6it Yeah if you would go to the Netherlands most people would be able to speak English, but without speaking Dutch you'll never fully understand everything that's going on around you. In my experience, understanding a culture and becoming part of a society is not possible if you don't know the local language. Also, locals treat you differently (better) when they hear you speaking their language. As for Dutch it might not be spoken by billions but knowing Dutch makes it also easier to understand Afrikaans, German, Swedish, Norwegian and Danish :) And I think that it's in general nice to be able to speak at least more than one language, especially when your first one is English. But that's my experience and opinion, you might have another view on it :)
@@jj-if6itwhenever I plan on visiting a country that isn’t my native tongue, I always study the language for a few months even though they might speak English, I just think it’s polite but that’s just me 😊
@@xragdoll5662 I've been to 25 different countries, I learn basics like hello and thank you but that's it. I studied french and Italian for four years but have forgotten most of it!
@@user-qu1yp8bh8c I would love to speak my mother's native tongue but it's hard for me. When I go to Holland I say things like thank you in Dutch and people appreciate it. They think I'm dutch anyway because I'm very tall and fair, so people are nice to me and sometimes try to speak Dutch to me haha. It's a shame but I think I'm too old to learn a language I would hardly ever use or have a chance to practise
It's very strange to see Otto Frank speak so professionally about an atrocity he personally experienced in an environment of brutal racism as if it was a cake walk for him. People were stoich those days but this man really is made of steel. I am in awe how his sanity is still in tact and he can sit through an interview. Even if it was 30 yrs ago for him, still it appears he does not have anger of bitterness in his heart.
And yet he never spoke about the suffering he endured in the concentration camp, only about Anne's diary and her legacy. A truly selfless and noble man.
Thank you BBC Archive. Hearing the story set out in a simple Blue Peter way and then the interview with Otto Frank are both more revealing than many documentaries
yes i didnt expect to see an interview of her father, afterall he was already 87 by this time..ironically by the time he turned 130, the world would see Corona Virus attacks all over the world 🤔
WOW, I have been to the ‘Achterhuis’ many times, and obviously have read the diary several times. I haven’t seen a proper interview like this with Otto before. I often walk or cycle past the house on the Prinsengracht and every single time I have to think of Anne and her family. And also think of the amazing helpers, especially Miep Gies. To be honest helped by the long queue of people visiting the house. Great to have seen this video.
He was so strong to still be standing after all he endured. I read her diary in school and was depressed for an entire week. It makes me so emotional to see this. This is why we must remember this atrocity so we don't keep repeating it ❤️❤️❤️❤️
Mr Frank was such a lovely gentleman.After all he lived through with the camps and losing his family.The anger and hatred you would think he would have doesn't seem to be there. May all the victims rest in peace.
This man experienced 2 horrors of the 20th century- Trench warfare in WW1 and the holocaust. I read his biography and was impressed at his noble character and his resilience to carry on despite his utter desolation and the horrors he had witnessed.
Mr. Frank was so brilliant and classy, what a polished man, a gentlemen. Thank you for sharing your daughter’s diary sir. May you RIP with your family members.
How touching and moving. So thoughtful. Otto was a very strong man. What torment he had to endure after it all. How he went on without his wife and daughters. Letting the world 🌎 know about her diary and read it. How brave. Anne Frank was an amazing girl. She had inner strength.
I just visited the Anne Frank House and was deeply moved learning of the plight of her family and so many Jews. I almost could not breathe standing in her room, where she hid for 2 years. May she rest in peace ❤
I just finished "The diary of a young girl" Anne Frank - It touched me deeply and I don't suppose I will ever forget the courage and delightful personality of this young girl! To listen to her father and witness his courage is beyond words! God bless you Anne and may you rest in peace +
She wasn't murdered, at least not directly, she died of typhus before she could be taken to the gas chambers but she's still a victim of the Nazis so it's pretty much the same thing.
Have you ever read Tales from the Annex? It is a collection of stories and essays and other things that Anne Frank wrote while in hiding. She had a real talent. If she has lived, maybe she would have pursued writing.
Anne’s legacy became his mission. What a beautiful thing to share something so personal & precious with the world. I’m glad he got to see the diary’s impact.
When I was 14 I received this book from my parents as a Christmas present in 1958 I also started a diary and also addressed it to ‘ dear Kitty ‘ like Anna did .
I am reading Anne's diary now its very moving and powerful. I read it in HS over 40 years ago Thank you Anne for giving us your thoughts of what you went through and thank you Otto Frank for sharing your story and letting the world see for themselves what a beautiful young woman your daughter was
This is one of those interviews that stuck with me as a kid. I can remember it as though it was yesterday. Another such interview on Blue Peter happened that same year on the 100th Anniversary of the Battle of the Little Big Horn a Native American man who witnessed the battle appeared on the programme. Incredible to think that the past is actually just within touching distance.
I first saw this interview with Mr Frank as a 16 year old in 1976. He struck me then as being a very special man. His dignity, his strength & his love stayed with me and remains to this day as does the interviews with Miep Gies, Mr Frank's Secretary that helped hide & care for those in the attic for so long. Noble & very special people..
What awful grief and trauma this man endured in losing all his family and friends, plus his own trauma in the camp. This is what courage and love look like. He returned and was somehow able to continue on , and publish her work etc. He seems such a gentle and well spoken man. No wonder Anne loved him so
I remember watching this programme when it was broadcast on the BBC. I was a month short of my 11th birthday and at school in London. I was moved by it then. Now, after all those years, and at the age of 57, I am still deeply and profoundly moved by it.
@@SR-iy4gg Video and audio recordings degrade quickly if not stored appropriately. Obviously this recording had been meticulously cared for. Simmer down, little teakettle.
I also did a report in the 6th grade, as I was reading it I began to cry , my mother came in the room and asked , what's wrong why do you cry, I showed her the book, she had never read the book , however when I told her what it was about she helped me finish the report. My mom also cried. R.I.P. mom
oh he is just so lovely. it is so evident why Anne wrote so fondly of 'Pim'. very bittersweet to hear him say that he only truly came to know his daughter after her death, through her diary. such a wonderful family who did not deserve such tragedy.
What an amazing piece of history. Well done to the bbc for keeping this interview safe and posting it on yt. Otto Frank passed away four years after this interview took place
Thank you very much for posting this incredibly touching video!! As others have said in their comments, it is my very first time actually HEARING Mr. Frank speak!! Anne’s descriptions and others’ descriptions of him , were so accurate of him being such a gentleman and yet to actually hear him, and seem him just filled my heart with awe In just how MUCH of a gentleman he was!! What a kind and caring and very smart man he was and what a wonderful father he must have been!!! To lose his wife and beautiful daughters so horrifically and then to be able to go on with such grace and give the gift of his daughter’s writings to the world… it just takes my breath away!!! Thank you for sharing this, and I hope that others who have not read Anne’s diary may become interested to do so!! Thank you again!! ❤️
The diary is so moving and beautiful. I re-read it again this past week. I cannot get over how wise, and mature, articulate, and self aware Anne was at her young age and limited life experiences. Her analyses of her psyche and relationships with her family and Peter, are just so rich and detailed. I can't help but think that this talent was given to her by her parents. Otto seems to be a lot like her based on this interview. I'm so glad that he got to know his daughter's inner world and what a marvel she was, through the diary.
As I have been going to college (I'm 35 years old), I started getting interested in History. So I bought Anne Frank's book. It's amazing. It was so cool to see how she was in her writing in 1942 vs. 1944 when she was all about boys and the Peter who was living with them. It was beautiful because it reminded me when I was 14 years old and felt that way about boys. I also loved it because of her relationship with her mother she talks about. It wasn't good. I could relate since the relationship with my mother isn't good either. It's such a beautiful story and I wish she would have lived.
I remember watching this as a child. What a dignified man with great courage was Mr Frank who suffered the loss of his family but was able to give the world the powerful diary of his daughter.
I had a homeschool teacher in the early 90s who introduced her story to me. A copy of the book and my first diary to accompany it. I still have both. I was 13 at the time, and I’m nearly 45 now.
What was so stunningly beautiful is how she never wrote a word thinking it was ever going to be read or studied by anyone, yet was compelled to write so lovingly and selflessly
Not initially. But when she learned there was an interest in accounts during the occupation, she revised her diary for that purpose, changing some names, one rather unfavorably.
Otto Frank, although he remarried, his heart always belonged to his first wife and two daughters. I’ve seen images and videos of him back in that attic room, the pain in his eyes took my breath away. I have no doubt he loved his second wife, but such trauma will always bond you closely to your first family, & I believe Anne’s book to have been a blessing for him for many reasons, including keeping her memory alive right up until he sadly passed. Anne’s story is just remarkable.. & funnily enough, zooming into the presenters heeled clogs, all I could think of was ‘Anne never got to learn to walk in heels, such a frivolous and materialistic thing as a teen.. but something I have no doubt, she would’ve relished in like many young girls did’. Wearing make up for the first time..going shopping for your very first dress for the first time.. silly things we as teens growing up, all took for granted. I know she spoke of such coming of age matters in her diary. Breaks my heart even more every time I learn they were one of the last Jewish family’s to be caught, so close to freedom yet so far. Doesn’t bear thinking about how terrified she, her sister, her mother and father would’ve been travelling to that concentration camp. Thoughts and prayers always to all impacted by the wars.
The thoughts, emotions, ideas, ideals, plans, and dreams in The Diary of Anne Frank all continue to hit me right in the feels today-four good decades after buying a copy of it (thanks to Mama for the money and her encouragement), back when I was about the same age as Anne when she started writing it.
For a girl of 13-15, she had great penmanship. I can’t understand the Dutch text, but I can see that she had better penmanship than most adults I know.
Cursive writing isn’t being taught anymore. It’s sad because it cuts people off from the past. Cursive has been shown to be helpful in brain development. It’s worth looking into it. And writing notes by hand helps people retain knowledge better than typing.
There is that. I read her diary as a middle school project when I was around her age and it occurred to me that Anne appeared more articulate, more sophisticated, and better educated than I was. I wondered why. Were European schools better than American ones? Then there's the matter of Anne's innate talent.
@@maryblaufuss7533schools in general had higher standards back then, even American schools. I’ve looked at old American textbooks from the 20s and 30s and middle schoolers were learning what high schoolers are learning now.
@@khfan4life365 Because I usually think so too, I was shocked when a friend of mine told me that her 12 year-old, sixth grade remedial math level daughter was obliged to study geometry and trigonometry. WTF!!!
Wonderful Blue Peter from the 70s. They did proper reports. Later in the 90s and 2000's Blue Peter got cool and with it and pandered to the youth to keep their ratings and frankly dishonoured their past as a brilliant informative kids tv show.
I did a book report on Anne Frank back in 6th grade in 2005, and my teacher tried to tell me it was “not appropriate” for my age group. I feel that, if Anne was old enough to go through this, then we are old enough to read it.
I made my school librarian get it from the middle school library when I was in kindergarten.
Oh dear. Maybe your teacher needs to look for a different job.
@@dunker982 it honestly depends on what version was used. The unaltered version has a lot of sexual content.
But then again The Color Purple was on the reading list for Junior year at my VERY conservative Christian high school.
@@sarahpersonalexcellenceguide I wouldn't call that 4th grade gifted material. More 1st-2nd.
@@sarahpersonalexcellenceguide I agree. And it never ceases to amaze me that the same people who fly confederate flags will tell someone their child shouldn't read the diary of Anne Frank. They're proud of a heritage of rape, abuse, murder, dog mauling, family separations, and all manner of cruelty that would make their Jesus weep, but nah, can't read about a vagina. This world is so backwards. Beware the fascist book burners. That's my prayer
This man lost his wife and 2 children. To go on after that takes almighty amount of courage. I have nothing but respect for him.
@@sdfghgtrew Ah yes, totally was money when Otto was planning to actually keep the diary private in the family till one of his friends convinced him it should be out there in the world.
@@sdfghgtrewI'm sure he would have preferred having his family back rather than being left only with the diary of his youngest daughter who died in awful circumstances.
Especially after everything that they endured!!!
You have no idea how he survived, he can read his murdered daughters words with zero emotion.
@@chiefswife1212 What are you trying to say?
Otto is the definition of a true father, he did everything he could to protect his family and do whatever it takes. It's so horrible that he ended up being the only survivor after all the effort he went through to keep them alive through hiding. It's no wonder Anne wrote so fondly of him, he seriously was the best father. Even after all this he did everything in his power to bring out Anne's diary to the world to let her legacy live on. This man will forever be a legend, and I hope now he's reunited with his family after he passed. God bless you, Otto.
I was🎉born in 1944 when world war was about over.i knew nothing about this but I wished I had read the book
❤❤❤
Margot had a diary too.
@@bronsonmejia1794 she did but wasn’t it lost?
@@lavoniaholloway1245 That makes sense. But Anne was the one otto spoiled.
I can see why Anne loved her father so much. His kind and gentle spirit is palpable, even after experiencing the most horrible nightmare imaginable. May his and his family's memories be a blessing.
@@MarkHarrison733 gargle my load
@@MarkHarrison733 gargle a fat load
@@MarkHarrison733the voices in your head aren't trustworthy sources
thats the devil in your head talking to you
liar you lie like your daddy the devil where is your proof ???
Kudos to BBC Archive for preserving this powerful interview.
It was Biddy Baxter herself who demanded that thousands of BP editions weren't wiped.
ההודעה הזו הייתה צריכה להישמר
Both Valerie Singleton and Lesley Judd were excellent presenters. So much better than today's.
@@292Nigel What on earth does this scribble signify?
50 percent made-up, and 50 percent complete lie
At 64, I have finally read the Diaries. They have had a profound impact on me. My heart goes out to this poor man, and of course to Anne. She was an exceptional young lady. Full of life, hope, positivity, and so mature for her age. And she did ultimately get her wish to be an influential writer. If only she knew. May she rest in peace. May the all rest in peace.
Otto talking about Anne's diary:
ruclips.net/video/AWRBinP7ans/видео.html
@@aveline2446 While that's not the point, I'll bite. So who did? And can you share your evidence?
I read the Diary at age 11, it had a profound impact on me also I am now 66.
I was 13 when I read her diary, I'm 19 now :)
She knows.
As a father to 2 girls the eldest being 8 who keeps a diary this has reduced me to tears. I cant imagine the suffering during that time and for her father afterwards.
Right there with you. I finally-- at 64-- read the Diaries. Devastating.
@@livenhfree I actually rewatched this yesterday and decided I must read the diary. I also wajt to visit the house In Amsterdam this year
@@slipnpitch1894 I think you should read it. I was thinking I'd like to visit as well. But I couldn't walk in there. Definitely not worthy, and I don't feel it would be appropriate to walk through the same rooms she did. I feel it's sacred, in a way.
@@livenhfree yes thats definitely something to consider and I suspect I will reach that conclusion also after reading the diary.
Otto talking about Anne's diary:
ruclips.net/video/AWRBinP7ans/видео.html
Today is 30 Oct, 2022. Just yesterday, Anne's best friend Hannah died. 😥😥May be they are now together in heaven. Rest in peace Hannah Goslar. Prayers from India🇮🇳
@@loughton57 yes...typo.. corrected
God Bless Hannah. Mat she rest in peace. Caroline x Australia 🇦🇺 STRAYA SOUTHERN Cross ➕ Southern HEMISPHERE
I didn't know that. Sad, but at least she got to live a full life
Poor woman. I hope God lead her to the real truth before her death and saved her soul.
@@EmilyGloeggler7984 shut up, and go away
Reading this book is like going through a time portal she really documented life in that era so well.
what Anne really gave through her diary is perspective. And that's why I think it's an important WWII historical document.
@@rwwilson21 INDEED, she did. Plus CONTEXT, perhaps this is why her authentic writing FROM THE HEART ♥ SPEAKS TO THE HEART ♥ of all men, women and children, who read it...
Many were PERSECUTED by the nazi regime.
. invalids
. the elderly
. homosexuality
. handicapped
. teenagers
. Russians
. performer's
A lot of Jewish people came to Australia, Melbourne has a large Jewish population.
A lot of Nazi families came to Australia....... Crystal 🏙/The City of Churches ......
ADELAIDE, SOUTH AUSTRALIA 🇦🇺 STRAYA, has a large German population and a very dark undercurrent.
I wonder how the Nazi population of Australia was IN JOY, during LOCK UP AUSTRALIA.
Dreadful unsolved crimes in Adelaide....... I think it's about time, everyday people in Adelaide dobbed these people in.
@carolinegodden4364 Wow you bought the propaganda oy vey
Always a misogynist smarta*ss in any thread.
@carolinegodden4364 Yes, it was totally horrific. Gypsies were persecuted too. Also, Jehovah's Witnesses and some Roman Catholics. Also, some Freemasons. Also, trade unionists. Also, some black people and mixed race. Also, people with mental illness and other disabilities. Also, some children and babies. Some Jewish Europeans left Europe for the USA and Israel. I didn't know about Australia.
An amazing man, Otto Frank, with an amazing daughter Anne. I am not ashamed to say as a young boy when I read the diary, that it touched me. I think of her often.
It still touches me..i feel so bad for them. And this is when it was pre arranged and provides a tiny look into the Jews lives
Probably the most famous Jewish family ever.
@@kevinprior3549 yeah cause nobody heard of the Jewish family of Jesus Mary and Joseph have they ,
@@da90sReAlvloc who?
@@kevinprior3549 I don’t know about the most famous ever but they are definitely pretty famous!
the stress of living indoors with fear of capture outside must have been horrendous. You rarely see strong, proud and decent people like Otto on TV these days, to have lost 2 daughters and a wife in concentration camps would have wrecked all the people I know for good.
Yes. And having endured the concentration camp himself. It fills me with anger and resentment just to know that stuff happened never mind to have all those things happen directly to me as he did.
I find it hard to imagine if you saw Otto or chatted to him without knowing beforehand you wouldn’t be able to tell what he went through ❤
Different times. Otto was not the only one to have lost an entire family. He was surrounded by similar stories unfortunately. A horrible time.
Absolutely agree 😢
@Ellie5621 *falling in love
The bookcase was made by JOHAN VOSKUIJL. He was the COUSIN of my Grandfather
THEO VOSKUIJL.
Johan Voskuijl's daughter, BEP VOSKUIJL, also worked there and spoke to Anne regularly. Bep Voskuijl was a second cousin of my Mother TINE VOSKUIJL.
This Johan was very ill when he made this bookcase, Johan died a year later. Anne's Father was at his funeral. 😞
I still have many photos of the Frank Family.
I will never forget this history ❤️
Love from the Netherlands 🇳🇱
Your cousins were so brave and have my utmost admiration. I can’t imagine the fear they lived with, yet still helped the 8 in the annex have over 2 more years together 🩷
@vlinder6329. Bedankt voor deze toevoeging. Het verhaal van Anne Frank en haar familie en hun naasten die hielpen zullen nooit worden vergeten. Ik ben in het Anne Frank huis geweest en was erg onder de indruk van alles. Maar tegelijkertijd ook verdrietig. Mag door dat het nu een museum is geworden nooit vergeten worden. komen duizenden bezoekers daar.van over de wereld.
@@jannydegraaf267
Dankjewel voor je lieve woorden. Ben zelf met mijn moeder in het Anne Frank huis geweest, was zeker indrukwekkend.
Heb zoveel mooie dierbare documenten van mijn neef Hugo Voskuijl gekregen, ben daar heel erg dankbaar voor! Laten we nooit vergeten hoe belangrijk deze bijzondere mensen waren in de Oorlog.
Liefs en groetjes uit Volendam ❤️
You should be really proud of your lineage comrade.😊
The father of Anne Frank in the BBC studios only 46 years ago. This is an important historical document.
Literally 💚
Not even just that. They listened to the BBC day in and day out on the radio when they were in Holland. For him to make it to the BBC himself, it’s almost like Anne’s soul is there in that annex, listening to her father on the radio like any other day. Just ready to scribble down in her diary how wonderful it must be to have such a father who cared so deeply for his family after so many years apart from them. If there’s an afterlife, they’re all there in their home together again. Whether that be the annex or the homes they lived in before the war, they’ve long embraced each other with their warmth
As a teenage girl reading her diary 50 years after it was written, it moved me very much but also seemed in the far distant past. Strange how as you get older, the past somehow seems closer. Seeing her father "in living colour" like this on TV just six years before I was born, it hits home just how recently these horrors occurred.
"The past is never dead. It's not even past." - William Faulkner
So so true!
Do you know from which book is that phrase of W.Faulkner's;
I've read the "Sound and Fury",but i don't remember that quote.
So thought provoking & true in its essence....
I feel the same, I was born in 1984.. I read the diary in 1995 and it seemed like a very distant impossible past.
What an absolutely noble, strong, patient and just such a powerful man. As a father, I struggle to read the diaries, though I have bought my daughter the book. How Mr Frank showed strength through such rerrible grief is just beyond me. God bless him and his family and may they all RIP
Otto talking about Anne's diary:
ruclips.net/video/AWRBinP7ans/видео.html
When children's television was at its best. Lesley Judd was so honoured to have met Otto Frank. So sad that these kinds of programs are no longer made.
The 70's was a great era for quality children's t.v in both Britain BBC and Australia ABC. Both stations produced and created some iconic T,V viewing for children back then. Unlike much of the poor ,lazy and cheap fodder kids are fed now sadly.
RUclips is the replacement
100% FAKE. HE WAS A TOTAL LIER. THE BOOK WAS WRTTEN BY OTTO FRANK IN BALLPOINT PEN, WHICH DID NOT EXIST UNTIL AFTER THE WAR ENDED.
@@K-a-n-d-i-sRUclips isn't perfect, but it's what we got. Sadly, we can't revive Otto, Anne and the rest of the family, but getting to know him through a recorded interview is still a big way of learning about them from up close.
No kid is gonna sit through this.
The fact that the horrible events in Ann's life ONLY had happened 30 years before this interview is unreal. These horrific events really aren't that far away. I am seeing an interview in COLOR of Mr. Frank a man that lived thru such horrors.
We must never forget.
@@57andstillkicking, never forget.
I think there is a difference between forgetting versus being strong, human and caring enough to stand up to the hate that led to the Holocaust. Never again is now. Otto Frank would shudder and feel heartbroken to see the same hate rising up again today. We do not forget. We will never let it happen again.
How blessed Margot and Anne were to have such a kind, wonderful father! I imagine their mother was the same. I read Anne's diary in junior high. I want to read it again. My mother and I visited their hiding place. I used to think, "What a shame she didn't get the chance to be a great writer." One day it dawned on me, she IS a great writer! After she passed on, she became world-famous and highly influential, contributing greatly to mankind. ❤
Actually Anne says in her diary that she hated her mother and she never understood her. She has very strongly articulated this throughout her diary. However, she may have been just a normal anxious nagging mother for any teenage girl under normal circumstances. When you are cooped up with other people 24/7, even if it’s one’s own family, with no one or no outside place to vent your frustrations, emotions are bound to turn ugly, especially for a teenager. So i guess she may have been a normal caring mother despite how Anne portrays her as a heartless unempathetic character. Though there is no way to know for sure because it is just from Anne’s perspective, i am willing to give both of them benefit of the doubt because of the unusual circumstances!
Her father left out many disparaging things she wrote about her mother and the others she lived with.There is a unedited version which makes her even more human.
@@Govindaclass be honest who hasn’t a times thought that one of your parents was the enemy and you hated them. Especially during the teenage years when you’re parents are desperately trying to keep you in line. It is only with the benefit of hindsight once you’re an adult that you can see your parents meant well they just made mistakes. Anne and her mother were probably so much alike that they naturally butted heads. Bit like my mother and I. I had days I couldn’t stand the sight of her in my teens and I would write nasty stuff about her. The other thing you have to keep in mind is that a diary isn’t going to judge you. You can write all sorts of mean things and it won’t judge you for it. It is a healthy way to vent as well anyway as it stops you from saying it out loud. I imagine her mother was a nag and Anne didn’t have the patience to deal with it. Given the circumstances it was a stressful at best.
@@Govindaclass I don't think Anne's mother was bad, she seemed genuine and wanted the same for Anne like Otto did. I think Anne just had a really tough bond with her due to her teenage hormones and other personal reasons, plus it's really normal for mothers and daughters to really get on each other's nerves during that time period. It was pointed out later though as Anne got older she was starting to get along with her mother better, so I am more convinced it was due to Anne growing up. She had ups and downs with the other adults too, Anne was just a teenager who was dealing with a lot mentally while growing up and felt alone - while her mother tried to also support her, Anne took it more in a harsher way than Edith meant it. Otto seemed to have been the softer parent and was Good Cop hence why Anne got along with him better.
Amazingly, the book was on a banned book table at Barnes and Noble today. I read it repeatedly as a schoolgirl!!
Only Blue Peter could do something like this. Nothing glossed over, telling it completely straight to the audience.
Aimed at a youth audience as well.
Now the state of blue Peter today…
@@Mike-gd4zd So you hate Blue Petter because most of the presenters are anti Fascists
She talks over him though.
Old Blue Peter episodes should be aired to today's young people. Not today's version...woke and broke! Valerie Singlton was brilliant.
The grief he must have felt for Anne, Margo and his wife must have been tremendous. His strength is very admirable
What breaks my heart the most about this story is how loveable and funny Anne really seemed to be as a person! In life she was denied the ability to live and see what amazing things she did for the world; and if she was still among us today, she would probably still be blessing us with her writings.
@@MarkHarrison733 Lies
@@SR-iy4gg Nope, he's partially accurate. Meyer Levin wrote the polished copy and had to sue Otto for the money promised. Meyer got $50K for his efforts.
No !!!. Anne wrote that diary!!!. Sick to constantly hear so called individuals disclaim or say the Holocaust never happened. It's sick and disgusting! . Not too mention insulting the 6 million that were murdered !!!!.
Wow this is the first time I’ve seen her father being interviewed and didn’t even know video interviews of him existed. Truly amazing and he seems like such a sweet man. I’m glad Anne’s diary helped changed lives and gave him daily inspiration as well.
I’m born in the 70’s in Canada and the Diary of Ann Frank was required reading. In the early 2000’s I had the opportunity to visit the attic and it was one of the most profound and memorable experiences I have ever had. Gratitude to Mr. Otto for sharing this tragically won gift with the world and may we never forget.
Hearing Otto speak about his daughter, hearing the love and adoration absolutely breaks my heart, he lost his whole family in the most horrific of ways, I’m so glad he was able to find peace and happiness again ♥️♥️♥️
I’m so glad Mr. Frank agreed to the interview. He is such an amazing and inspirational person. To go on despite losing his family and for a time his freedom is superhuman. Bless him for sharing Anne Frank with the rest of us to celebrate her life and legacy.
Learning Dutch, I thought I’d start with Dutch literature by reading Anne Frank’s Diary. A classic, that might be easily accessible to a learner of the language, I thought, since it was penned by a young teenager?
How very wrong I was about the latter. Her writing is brilliant, flourishing, imaginative, eloquent, blossoming to the point where I had to give up until I’d learned more Dutch so that I could follow it.
Anne Frank wasn’t only a gifted teenage diary writer who happened to be published because of her fate. Anne Frank was a gifted *writer*, in her own right, and would have been able to become a successful author had her life not been so brutally ended by the fanatical hate that drove the Nazis to continue their war on the Jews even as the Allied forces were literally on their doorstep.
I say this as a writer myself, a journalist since 30+ years. The world truly lost a great contributor to literature and culture by her death. How I wonder what she would have become had she been allowed to enjoy her right to life.
Can I ask why you're learning Dutch? I'm half Dutch myself and my one regret in life is not being fluent, as I grew up speaking English at home, but still surrounded by it. But unlike other languages, Dutch is kinda useless, it's spoken in very few places and everyone speaks English there anyway. What are your thoughts?
@@jj-if6it Yeah if you would go to the Netherlands most people would be able to speak English, but without speaking Dutch you'll never fully understand everything that's going on around you. In my experience, understanding a culture and becoming part of a society is not possible if you don't know the local language.
Also, locals treat you differently (better) when they hear you speaking their language. As for Dutch it might not be spoken by billions but knowing Dutch makes it also easier to understand Afrikaans, German, Swedish, Norwegian and Danish :) And I think that it's in general nice to be able to speak at least more than one language, especially when your first one is English. But that's my experience and opinion, you might have another view on it :)
@@jj-if6itwhenever I plan on visiting a country that isn’t my native tongue, I always study the language for a few months even though they might speak English, I just think it’s polite but that’s just me 😊
@@xragdoll5662 I've been to 25 different countries, I learn basics like hello and thank you but that's it. I studied french and Italian for four years but have forgotten most of it!
@@user-qu1yp8bh8c I would love to speak my mother's native tongue but it's hard for me. When I go to Holland I say things like thank you in Dutch and people appreciate it. They think I'm dutch anyway because I'm very tall and fair, so people are nice to me and sometimes try to speak Dutch to me haha. It's a shame but I think I'm too old to learn a language I would hardly ever use or have a chance to practise
Wow, what a moving, poignant and respectful interview by Lesley Judd.
Indeed it was. Indeed.
💯
I think there‘s nobody on earth I feel more for & have more respect than Otto Frank .
It's very strange to see Otto Frank speak so professionally about an atrocity he personally experienced in an environment of brutal racism as if it was a cake walk for him. People were stoich those days but this man really is made of steel. I am in awe how his sanity is still in tact and he can sit through an interview.
Even if it was 30 yrs ago for him, still it appears he does not have anger of bitterness in his heart.
Otto talking more about Anne's diary:
ruclips.net/video/AWRBinP7ans/видео.html
And yet he never spoke about the suffering he endured in the concentration camp, only about Anne's diary and her legacy. A truly selfless and noble man.
@@arizonaskies6607 yes indeed
@@Irishjay_94 Thank you. Enjoyed watching the video of a much younger Otto Frank speaking about his daughter Anne.
Or perhaps there really is something to the ballpoint pen theory
Thank you BBC Archive. Hearing the story set out in a simple Blue Peter way and then the interview with Otto Frank are both more revealing than many documentaries
yes i didnt expect to see an interview of her father, afterall he was already 87 by this time..ironically by the time he turned 130, the world would see Corona Virus attacks all over the world 🤔
It was made when the BBC was making great programs. Blue Peter didn't treat it's audience as kids.
Great archive footage.
@@fidelcatsro6948 Indeed, with THE LONGEST LOCK UP worldwide, being EPICENTRE MELBOURNE VICTORIA AUSTRALIA 🌏
Funny that!!!
I just went to the Anne Frank museum this past week! This place is so small, it is astonishing that they all lived in there.
@@MarkHarrison733???
Otto loved his little girls so much. And his beloved wife. The man lost his entire family. I can't imagine how much that destroyed him.
He fulfilled her daughter's wish of being a writer even after she died.Such aa brave and loving father❤.
WOW, I have been to the ‘Achterhuis’ many times, and obviously have read the diary several times. I haven’t seen a proper interview like this with Otto before.
I often walk or cycle past the house on the Prinsengracht and every single time I have to think of Anne and her family. And also think of the amazing helpers, especially Miep Gies.
To be honest helped by the long queue of people visiting the house. Great to have seen this video.
Wow so awesome of you.
He was so strong to still be standing after all he endured. I read her diary in school and was depressed for an entire week. It makes me so emotional to see this. This is why we must remember this atrocity so we don't keep repeating it ❤️❤️❤️❤️
Mr Frank was such a lovely gentleman.After all he lived through with the camps and losing his family.The anger and hatred you would think he would have doesn't seem to be there. May all the victims rest in peace.
This man experienced 2 horrors of the 20th century- Trench warfare in WW1 and the holocaust. I read his biography and was impressed at his noble character and his resilience to carry on despite his utter desolation and the horrors he had witnessed.
What a lovely last Q to ask of Otto whether finding Anne’s diary personally gave him inspiration and courage to overcome his ordeal 🤍
Mr. Frank was so brilliant and classy, what a polished man, a gentlemen. Thank you for sharing your daughter’s diary sir. May you RIP with your family members.
She named her diary Kitty. She used to write as if she was writing A letter to her friend. I always thought that was sweet.
Hello how are you doing?
100% FAKE. HE WAS A TOTAL LIER. THE BOOK WAS WRTTEN BY OTTO FRANK IN BALLPOINT PEN, WHICH DID NOT EXIST UNTIL AFTER THE WAR ENDED.
It’s such a privilege to see this video and see the annex before it was turned into a museum
Otto died in 1980 glad he did this interview
Absolutely
Nearly 80 years on, and we'll always remember Anne Frank and the memories she had. Otto should be proud to this day. 🙂😇🤝
He can't be. He's dead.
Right, I remember. But back when he was alive and up in heaven.
@@SR-iy4gg Sometimes it behooves a person to refrain from being quite so literal.
Charming man, loving father. Anna adored and admired him, and so do I
How touching and moving. So thoughtful. Otto was a very strong man. What torment he had to endure after it all. How he went on without his wife and daughters. Letting the world 🌎 know about her diary and read it. How brave. Anne Frank was an amazing girl. She had inner strength.
I just visited the Anne Frank House and was deeply moved learning of the plight of her family and so many Jews. I almost could not breathe standing in her room, where she hid for 2 years. May she rest in peace ❤
What a Kind Gentle man. Bless his heart
No wonder why she loves her father so much 😭❤️ he's so kind and calm when he speaks. 🥺
@@MarkHarrison733how?
I just finished "The diary of a young girl" Anne Frank - It touched me deeply and I don't suppose I will ever forget the courage and delightful personality of this young girl! To listen to her father and witness his courage is beyond words! God bless you Anne and may you rest in peace +
Otto Frank passed away in 1980. Rest in peace, Otto.😊
What a clever girl Anne Frank was. One wonders what she would have done with her life had she not been murdered. A tragic loss, as they all were.
Lets hope she would have stayed in the Netherlands
Wanted to be an actress like Jennifer tilly
She wasn't murdered, at least not directly, she died of typhus before she could be taken to the gas chambers but she's still a victim of the Nazis so it's pretty much the same thing.
Have you ever read Tales from the Annex? It is a collection of stories and essays and other things that Anne Frank wrote while in hiding. She had a real talent. If she has lived, maybe she would have pursued writing.
Anne Frank died of Typhus in the concentration camp Bergen-Belsen
This video is so special. I don't know if I've ever heard him speak before. What a strong and kind man
Blue Peter is the longest running children's television show in the world. This is the sort of content that makes you realise why.
Still breaks my heart when I hear this story. How humans can be so vicious to one another. May Anne and all who died have peace.
Anne’s legacy became his mission. What a beautiful thing to share something so personal & precious with the world. I’m glad he got to see the diary’s impact.
When I was 14 I received this book from my parents as a Christmas present in 1958 I also started a diary and also addressed it to ‘ dear Kitty ‘ like Anna did .
I am reading Anne's diary now its very moving and powerful. I read it in HS over 40 years ago Thank you Anne for giving us your thoughts of what you went through and thank you Otto Frank for sharing your story and letting the world see for themselves what a beautiful young woman your daughter was
A very admirable man. Respect and RIP to all.
@@MarkHarrison733 what is it with you and not providing proof?
This is one of those interviews that stuck with me as a kid. I can remember it as though it was yesterday. Another such interview on Blue Peter happened that same year on the 100th Anniversary of the Battle of the Little Big Horn a Native American man who witnessed the battle appeared on the programme. Incredible to think that the past is actually just within touching distance.
I first saw this interview with Mr Frank as a 16 year old in 1976. He struck me then as being a very special man. His dignity, his strength & his love stayed with me and remains to this day as does the interviews with Miep Gies, Mr Frank's Secretary that helped hide & care for those in the attic for so long. Noble & very special people..
Television for children doesn't get any better or more important than this.
Herr Frank always displayed considerable courage, humanity and dignity. Hope he rests in peace.
What awful grief and trauma this man endured in losing all his family and friends, plus his own trauma in the camp. This is what courage and love look like. He returned and was somehow able to continue on , and publish her work etc. He seems such a gentle and well spoken man. No wonder Anne loved him so
What a beautiful interview. Very moving to hear Mr. Frank speak about his amazing daughter and her diary.
Otto talking more about Anne's diary:
ruclips.net/video/AWRBinP7ans/видео.html
@@Irishjay_94 Thank you.
I remember watching this program all those years ago, and am pleased to see it still shown today, thank you
Blue Peter was such a good program as a kid growing up.
What an Intelligent, Classy,docile ,sweet man ……….. for all that happened….. we will NEVER forget…….
What a wonderful man. He was about 87 in this interview and died at 91. A very gentle gentleman despite the horrors of his life.
I'm almost 50, and I still enjoy reading the book!
I remember watching this programme when it was broadcast on the BBC. I was a month short of my 11th birthday and at school in London. I was moved by it then. Now, after all those years, and at the age of 57, I am still deeply and profoundly moved by it.
I remember it too I remembered it quite clearly but didn’t realize I was only seven.
Remarkable image quality for a recording that is already 47 years old! Congratulations and thank you for this video!
Why? It's from the 1970s, not the 1870s! Are you 12 or something?
@@SR-iy4gg Video and audio recordings degrade quickly if not stored appropriately. Obviously this recording had been meticulously cared for. Simmer down, little teakettle.
Wow, the torture of outliving both your daughters and wife is something no man should have to go through, what a strong man.
Her writing looks so elegant.., nobody wrotes now in such way
I also did a report in the 6th grade, as I was reading it I began to cry , my mother came in the room and asked , what's wrong why do you cry, I showed her the book, she had never read the book , however when I told her what it was about she helped me finish the report. My mom also cried. R.I.P. mom
oh he is just so lovely. it is so evident why Anne wrote so fondly of 'Pim'. very bittersweet to hear him say that he only truly came to know his daughter after her death, through her diary. such a wonderful family who did not deserve such tragedy.
Lesly Judd was so delightful. She made an appearance at our local town hall at about this time. I went along after school. It was very exciting.
What an amazing piece of history. Well done to the bbc for keeping this interview safe and posting it on yt. Otto Frank passed away four years after this interview took place
Thank you very much for posting this incredibly touching video!! As others have said in their comments, it is my very first time actually HEARING Mr. Frank speak!! Anne’s descriptions and others’ descriptions of him , were so accurate of him being such a gentleman and yet to actually hear him, and seem him just filled my heart with awe In just how MUCH of a gentleman he was!! What a kind and caring and very smart man he was and what a wonderful father he must have been!!! To lose his wife and beautiful daughters so horrifically and then to be able to go on with such grace and give the gift of his daughter’s writings to the world… it just takes my breath away!!! Thank you for sharing this, and I hope that others who have not read Anne’s diary may become interested to do so!! Thank you again!! ❤️
Otto talking more about Anne's diary:
ruclips.net/video/AWRBinP7ans/видео.html
@@Irishjay_94 Thank you so much for your kindness in sharing!! I will watch as soon as I can!!
Bless him, what a brave and courageous daughter he had, and what a kind and loving father
It must have been so very hard for Anne’s father to speak about his daughters diary .. So much love to this lovely man ❤❤❤
This is amazing footage. I'm Australian and I was born in 1977 a year after this aired, but I've never seen this. I've read her book. So heartbreaking
What an incredible piece of history
Amazing that she got to touch it. What a wonderful child - she learned and influenced more in her short life than almost anyone in history.
Wow... What an amazing girl, with an equally amazing father. ❤
The diary is so moving and beautiful. I re-read it again this past week. I cannot get over how wise, and mature, articulate, and self aware Anne was at her young age and limited life experiences. Her analyses of her psyche and relationships with her family and Peter, are just so rich and detailed. I can't help but think that this talent was given to her by her parents. Otto seems to be a lot like her based on this interview. I'm so glad that he got to know his daughter's inner world and what a marvel she was, through the diary.
He didn't write it, he removed a few passages from it during the first few printings out of respect for the dead and his family, until his death.
This is so wonderful, that her charm, story, and essence got to live on.
As I have been going to college (I'm 35 years old), I started getting interested in History. So I bought Anne Frank's book. It's amazing. It was so cool to see how she was in her writing in 1942 vs. 1944 when she was all about boys and the Peter who was living with them. It was beautiful because it reminded me when I was 14 years old and felt that way about boys. I also loved it because of her relationship with her mother she talks about. It wasn't good. I could relate since the relationship with my mother isn't good either. It's such a beautiful story and I wish she would have lived.
I remember watching this as a child. What a dignified man with great courage was Mr Frank who suffered the loss of his family but was able to give the world the powerful diary of his daughter.
I had a homeschool teacher in the early 90s who introduced her story to me. A copy of the book and my first diary to accompany it. I still have both. I was 13 at the time, and I’m nearly 45 now.
I still now cry after reading Anne's diary. Respect for the father after all he had to go through and to save his family. 💔💔💔💔💔
What was so stunningly beautiful is how she never wrote a word thinking it was ever going to be read or studied by anyone, yet was compelled to write so lovingly and selflessly
Not initially. But when she learned there was an interest in accounts during the occupation, she revised her diary for that purpose, changing some names, one rather unfavorably.
Wow very moving..can’t believe I’ve never heard Mr. Frank speak before..wonderful man.
He seems very kind.
Otto talking more about Anne's diary:
ruclips.net/video/AWRBinP7ans/видео.html
I remember watching this at the time, powerful stuff to a child
Her handwriting was so beautiful!
Otto Frank, although he remarried, his heart always belonged to his first wife and two daughters. I’ve seen images and videos of him back in that attic room, the pain in his eyes took my breath away. I have no doubt he loved his second wife, but such trauma will always bond you closely to your first family, & I believe Anne’s book to have been a blessing for him for many reasons, including keeping her memory alive right up until he sadly passed. Anne’s story is just remarkable.. & funnily enough, zooming into the presenters heeled clogs, all I could think of was ‘Anne never got to learn to walk in heels, such a frivolous and materialistic thing as a teen.. but something I have no doubt, she would’ve relished in like many young girls did’. Wearing make up for the first time..going shopping for your very first dress for the first time.. silly things we as teens growing up, all took for granted. I know she spoke of such coming of age matters in her diary.
Breaks my heart even more every time I learn they were one of the last Jewish family’s to be caught, so close to freedom yet so far. Doesn’t bear thinking about how terrified she, her sister, her mother and father would’ve been travelling to that concentration camp.
Thoughts and prayers always to all impacted by the wars.
The thoughts, emotions, ideas, ideals, plans, and dreams in The Diary of Anne Frank all continue to hit me right in the feels today-four good decades after buying a copy of it (thanks to Mama for the money and her encouragement), back when I was about the same age as Anne when she started writing it.
I've not seen this for nearly 50 years. Thank you BBC.
For a girl of 13-15, she had great penmanship. I can’t understand the Dutch text, but I can see that she had better penmanship than most adults I know.
Cursive writing isn’t being taught anymore. It’s sad because it cuts people off from the past.
Cursive has been shown to be helpful in brain development. It’s worth looking into it. And writing notes by hand helps people retain knowledge better than typing.
I read the diary, & yes, she did
There is that. I read her diary as a middle school project when I was around her age and it occurred to me that Anne appeared more articulate, more sophisticated, and better educated than I was. I wondered why. Were European schools better than American ones? Then there's the matter of Anne's innate talent.
@@maryblaufuss7533schools in general had higher standards back then, even American schools. I’ve looked at old American textbooks from the 20s and 30s and middle schoolers were learning what high schoolers are learning now.
@@khfan4life365 Because I usually think so too, I was shocked when a friend of mine told me that her 12 year-old, sixth grade remedial math level daughter was obliged to study geometry and trigonometry. WTF!!!
Wonderful Blue Peter from the 70s. They did proper reports. Later in the 90s and 2000's Blue Peter got cool and with it and pandered to the youth to keep their ratings and frankly dishonoured their past as a brilliant informative kids tv show.
8:50
Yes she is still living in our heart... Thankyou sir for publishing.. And its very grateful for u being Ann's father