Second World War Diary Diary on April 8, 1940, Dear Diary lives the same as Rotterdam. My wife Lisa and her son Jack are doing very well, and my job at the port is going well. However, it seems that a new threat is lurking in the distance. That is a war that we have not had to deal with for a long time.
Perhaps one of the most famous diaries in history, Anne Frank: The girl's diary is a story of the struggle of the Jewish girls during World War II. Ann's diary talks about her two year hidden trip during the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam. When the family was finally found and caught in 1944, Ann was taken away at the Bergen - Belsen concentration camp. However, family longtime guardian Miep Gies discovered the diary and saved it to Ann's father and Otto Frank, the only survivor of the family, to recover it.
Anne Frank 's "Diary of the Young Girls" and "Night of Erie Weissel" are records of an unforgettable youth during the Second World War. Frank's diary states the life of the Nazis, and the work of Wiesel is a fictitious explanation of the fear of Nazi concentration camps. Both books provide the reader with a brilliant portrait of the life of the Jews during the war, indicating the hero's courage and hope.
The night setting, the time and place of young girls of Anne Frank and Elie Wiesel are similar. Both works were done during the Second World War, but Anne Frank 's diary explained the events in Amsterdam and in Wessel' s night in Nazi concentration camps in Hungary and Poland. Anne Frank was hiding during the war era, and Wiesel's "night" mainly occurred in concentration camps. Anne Frank's diary is a memoir written about the fact that her family is obliged to hide in order not to be caught by the Nazis in Amsterdam. Henry Frank's family is Jewish like Erie Weissel. Wessel 's night expresses the artist' s own experience, so it 's like a memoir, but in the evening it is a fictitious explanation of these experiences. Wiesel hired a narrator named Eliezer to tell the story. And it provided the writer an emotional distance from the traumatic event he experienced in the Polish Auschwitz concentration camp.