German-born diarist and Holocaust victim
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RHLSTP Book Club #167 - Life is Rosi - Rich chats to impressionist and actor Jess Robinson about her terrific debut book, (which she describes as Anne Frank meets Bridget Jones), Life is Rosi, an ambitious true story combining the diaries of 20 something Jess with the diaries of her grandmother, Rosi. They discuss the slightly forgotten first stages of the Holocaust where Polish Jews were expelled from Germany in 1938 and how Rosi's positivity helped her to survive this turbulent period, also the echoes of history that resonate for Jewish people now (even those who are not deemed Jewish enough by Jewish dating services). Plus the similarities and differences between these two young women, the unpleasant things that a hopeful though naive Jess had to endure on her own journey (but how all of us were susceptible to creeps in our younger years), how writing about experiences that we're uncomfortable about can help others (and ourselves), why Jess wanted to apply for citizenship of a country that had treated her grandmother so badly, the universality of family and how we often fail to learn the lessons of history. Plus the huge technical achievement of combining all these stories and managing to find the humour in it all.Buy the book here - https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/rosi-jess-robinson/7840560SUPPORT THE SHOW!See details of the RHLSTP LIVE DATES Watch our TWITCH CHANNELBecome a badger and see extra content at our WEBSITE Buy DVDs and books from GO FASTER STRIPE Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Barry Markson joined Bruce & Gaydos and shared his thoughts on Minnesota Governor Tim Walz's comments equating the experiences of children with immigration enforcement to the struggles of Holocaust victim Anne Frank. Markson shared the story of his father who is a Holocaust survivor.
The Judge Jeanine Tunnel to Towers Foundation Sunday Morning Show
Joe Concha takes on the Arctic freeze and the political heat in this no-holds-barred episode. Joe dissects the suspicious "attack" on Ilhan Omar, asks why the media is mourning an armed agitator in Minneapolis, and rips into Tim Walz for comparing illegal immigrants to Anne Frank. Plus, a defense of ICE against "Swatsi" slurs, the absurdity of Bill Belichick's Hall of Fame snub, and why Jimmy Kimmel is crying on air again. Common sense isn't dead—it's just listening to Concha. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
To commemorate Holocaust Remembrance Day, The Learning Curve guest host Andrea Silbert, President of the Eos Foundation, speaks with Ruth Franklin, former editor of The New Republic and author of The Many Lives of Anne Frank. Ms. Franklin reflects on the enduring literary significance of Anne Frank's diary while providing an overview of her life […]
The Judge Jeanine Tunnel to Towers Foundation Sunday Morning Show
Joe Concha is back and "at war with woke". After surviving a massive 16-inch snowstorm in New Jersey, Joe digs into the "new reality" of extreme weather and extreme politics. He rips into Minnesota Governor Tim Walz for offensively comparing criminals to Anne Frank and exposes the media's bias in covering attacks on ICE agents. Joe cheers on Scott Bessent for delivering a rhetorical "TKO" to ABC News, calls out Amy Klobuchar's flip-flop on border security, and laughs at Jamal Bowman's unhinged rant. Plus, hear Joe Rogan's hilarious pitch for Donald Trump's next job and Joe's winning bet about a socialist photo-op in the snow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the 5 AM hour, Larry O'Connor and Cassie Smedile discussed: STORM TRACKER: A deep freeze follows a winter blast that brought up to 9 inches of snow and sleet to the DMV region. DEEP FREEZE CLOSURES: A massive list of school closings across DC, Maryland, and Virginia as temperatures plummet to near zero. HOCHUL'S HUBRIS: New York Governor Kathy Hochul refuses DHS assistance during the storm, demanding that ICE "back off" instead. INCITEMENT WATCH: Minnesota Governor Tim Walz is under fire for evoking Anne Frank and the Nazis while attacking federal agents enforcing immigration law. Where to find more about WMAL's morning show: Follow Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Audible and Spotify Follow WMAL's "O'Connor and Company" on X: @WMALDC, @LarryOConnor, @JGunlock, @PatricePinkfile, and @HeatherHunterDC Facebook: WMALDC and Larry O'Connor Instagram: WMALDC Website: WMAL.com/OConnor-Company Episode: Monday, January 26, 2026 / 5 AM HourSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Join Jim and Greg on the Monday 3 Martini Lunch as they break down Saturday's fatal Minnesota shooting involving federal immigration agents & President Trump's frustration with the Homeland Security response, Gov. Tim Walz making everything worse by comparing immigration officials to the Nazis, and the despicable Slate attack on Second Lady Usha Vance.First, they piece together the facts surrounding the Customs and Border Protection-involved shooting of anti-ICE protester Alex Pretti in Minneapolis and some of the bad decisions Pretti made that morning. They also highlight clearly incorrect statements from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem that ascribed sinister motives to Pretti. President Trump appears unhappy with het response and is putting Border Czar Tom Homan in charge of the operation.Next, they unload on Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz for comparing illegal immigrants fearing arrest and deportation by immigration officials to Anne Frank hiding from the Nazis. Jim and Greg argue this reckless and historically ignorant comparison only inflames tensions by equating lawful federal agents with history's greatest monsters.Finally, they hammer a Slate author for her ugly, unhinged essay ripping Second Lady Usha Vance for having another baby with Vice President JD Vance. Jim comments on the unhealthy obsession many seem to have with the Vance marriage and other high-profile political couples.Please visit our great sponsors:Protect your future with Noble Gold Investments — visit https://NobleGoldInvestments.com/3ML to download your free Gold & Silver Guide and learn how to build lasting financial security.Try QUO for free, PLUS get 20% off your first 6 months when you visit https://Quo.com/3MLTake your personal data back with Incogni. Go to https://Incogni.com/3ML to get 60% off an Annual Plan. New episodes every weekday.
Dana breaks down her perspective from what she saw from the tragedy in Minneapolis between ICE and Alex Pretti with political commentary. Some Trump Administration officials were using anti-gun language to defend ICE. How was this situation different from Kyle Rittenhouse? Tim Walz compares ICE raids to Anne Frank. Minnesota Leftists are following everyday citizens in suspicion that they may be ICE. The White House makes a statement on the Alex Pretti case in Minneapolis. Democrats are already threatening to shut the government down over ICE. Tom Homan heads to Minneapolis as Tim Walz has a phone conversation with President Trump. Minneapolis creates their own version of Portland's CHAZ/CHOP. Kanye West takes a page out in the Wall Street Journal apologizing for his history of anti-Semitic rhetoric and music.Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…Bank on Yourselfhttps://BankOnYourself.com/Dana Bank on Yourself offers tax-free retirement income, guaranteed growth, and full control of your money. Receive your free report.Relief Factorhttps://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFTry Relief Factor's 3-week Quickstart for just $19.95—tell them Dana sent you and see if you can be next to control your pain!Patriot Mobilehttps://PatriotMobile.com/DANA or call 972-PATRIOTSwitch to Patriot Mobile in minutes—keep your number and phone or upgrade, then take a stand today with promo code DANA for a free month of service!Humannhttps://HumanN.comKick off the New Year with simple, delicious wellness support—pick up Humann's Turmeric Chews at Sam's Club next time you're there and see why they're such a fan favorite!Byrnahttps://Byrna.com/DanaMake 2026 the year you protect your family with solid options—Get the Byrna today.WebRootTake your cybersecurity seriously! Get 60% off Webroot Total Protection at https://Webroot.com/Dana Noble Goldhttps://NobleGoldInvestments.com/DanaThis is the year to create a more stable financial future. Open a qualified account with Noble Gold and receive a 3 oz Silver Virtue coin free. Subscribe today and stay in the loop on all things news with The Dana Show. Follow us here for more daily clips, updates, and commentary:YoutubeFacebookInstagramXMore InfoWebsite
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz tries to compare ICE raids to Anne Frank, the Jewish girl hiding from Nazis during WWII. Meanwhile, Minneapolis creates their own version of Portland's CHAZ/CHOP. Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…Bank on Yourselfhttps://BankOnYourself.com/Dana Bank on Yourself offers tax-free retirement income, guaranteed growth, and full control of your money. Receive your free report.Relief Factorhttps://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFTry Relief Factor's 3-week Quickstart for just $19.95—tell them Dana sent you and see if you can be next to control your pain!Patriot Mobilehttps://PatriotMobile.com/DANA or call 972-PATRIOTSwitch to Patriot Mobile in minutes—keep your number and phone or upgrade, then take a stand today with promo code DANA for a free month of service!Humannhttps://HumanN.comKick off the New Year with simple, delicious wellness support—pick up Humann's Turmeric Chews at Sam's Club next time you're there and see why they're such a fan favorite!Byrnahttps://Byrna.com/DanaMake 2026 the year you protect your family with solid options—Get the Byrna today.WebRootTake your cybersecurity seriously! Get 60% off Webroot Total Protection at https://Webroot.com/Dana Noble Goldhttps://NobleGoldInvestments.com/DanaThis is the year to create a more stable financial future. Open a qualified account with Noble Gold and receive a 3 oz Silver Virtue coin free. Subscribe today and stay in the loop on all things news with The Dana Show. Follow us here for more daily clips, updates, and commentary:YoutubeFacebookInstagramXMore InfoWebsite
Join Jim and Greg on the Monday 3 Martini Lunch as they break down Saturday's fatal Minnesota shooting involving federal immigration agents & President Trump's frustration with the Homeland Security response, Gov. Tim Walz making everything worse by comparing immigration officials to the Nazis, and the despicable Slate attack on Second Lady Usha Vance. First, […]
Re-releasing Episode 65 with three unsolved mysteries from the Holocaust: the fate of Raoul Wallenberg, who betrayed Anne Frank, and the wartime actions of Pope Pius XII.
Fluent Fiction - Dutch: Whispers of Hope: Embracing Stories at Anne Frank Huis Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/nl/episode/2026-01-25-23-34-02-nl Story Transcript:Nl: De lucht was grijs en koud, het seizoen koude adem over de grachten van Amsterdam uitblazend.En: The sky was gray and cold, the season exhaling cold breath over the canals of Amsterdam.Nl: De straten waren bedekt met een dunne laag sneeuw die zacht kraakte onder de voetstappen van bezoekers.En: The streets were covered with a thin layer of snow that softly crunched under the footsteps of visitors.Nl: Sanne had altijd al de Anne Frank Huis willen zien.En: Sanne had always wanted to see the Anne Frank Huis.Nl: Haar hart klopte iets sneller van opwinding terwijl ze de rij naderde.En: Her heart beat a bit faster with excitement as she approached the line.Nl: Binnen was het stil.En: Inside, it was quiet.Nl: De muren ademden historie en het verleden hing als een deken boven de bezoekers.En: The walls breathed history, and the past hung like a blanket above the visitors.Nl: Sanne nam plaats aan de zijkant van de groep, haar ogen scherend langs de oude foto's en voorwerpen die verhalen vertelden van moed en beperkingen.En: Sanne took a place at the side of the group, her eyes skimming along the old photos and objects that told stories of courage and limitations.Nl: Ze voelde een warme gloed van respect en bewondering.En: She felt a warm glow of respect and admiration.Nl: De gids, Bram, begon met de rondleiding.En: The guide, Bram, began the tour.Nl: Hij had een warme stem en een glimlach die de koude tentakels van de winter buiten leek te verdrijven.En: He had a warm voice and a smile that seemed to dispel the cold tentacles of winter outside.Nl: “Welkom,” zei hij, “hier, waar geschiedenis en heden samenkomen.”En: "Welcome," he said, "here, where history and the present meet."Nl: Zijn woorden werden gedragen door het tintelende geluid van winterwind.En: His words were carried by the tingling sound of winter wind.Nl: Bram vertelde de groep over Anne's dagboek, haar dromen en gedachten.En: Bram told the group about Anne's diary, her dreams, and thoughts.Nl: Sanne luisterde, maar voelde ook de woorden die ze zelf wilde uitspreken, gevangen ergens diep van binnen.En: Sanne listened but also felt the words she wanted to speak herself, caught somewhere deep within.Nl: Ze wilde delen wat dit alles voor haar betekende, maar ze aarzelde.En: She wanted to share what all of this meant to her, but she hesitated.Nl: Ze was bang voor de stilte die zou kunnen volgen, voor een moment van onhandigheid.En: She was afraid of the silence that might follow, of a moment of awkwardness.Nl: Terwijl ze door de nauwe trappen en kleine kamers liepen, voelde Sanne een groeiende behoefte om iets te zeggen.En: As they walked through the narrow stairs and small rooms, Sanne felt a growing need to say something.Nl: Bram's verhalen voedden haar geest, en toen de groep stil was in de kamer waar Anne haar brieven schreef, sprak Sanne zachtjes.En: Bram's stories fed her mind, and when the group was silent in the room where Anne wrote her letters, Sanne spoke softly.Nl: “Anne herinnerde me eraan... dat zelfs in de donkerste tijden, kleine daden van hoop een groot verschil kunnen maken.”En: "Anne reminded me... that even in the darkest times, small acts of hope can make a big difference."Nl: Bram keek op, zijn ogen ontmoetten de hare.En: Bram looked up, his eyes meeting hers.Nl: Er was iets in haar stem, een emotie die hij herkende.En: There was something in her voice, an emotion he recognized.Nl: “Inderdaad,” zei hij, “en door haar woord te blijven delen, blijft die hoop voortbestaan.”En: "Indeed," he said, "and by continuing to share her words, that hope endures."Nl: In dat moment, voelde Sanne de kikker in haar keel verdwijnen.En: In that moment, Sanne felt the frog in her throat disappear.Nl: Na de rondleiding stonden Sanne en Bram buiten het museum.En: After the tour, Sanne and Bram stood outside the museum.Nl: Hun adem vormde wolkjes in de koude lucht.En: Their breath formed clouds in the cold air.Nl: “Zou je zin hebben om verder te praten?” vroeg Bram, zijn stem warm te midden van de winterkou.En: "Would you like to continue talking?" Bram asked, his voice warm amid the winter chill.Nl: “Ja, dat lijkt me heel fijn,” antwoordde Sanne.En: "Yes, I'd really like that," answered Sanne.Nl: De eerste stap was gezet en het voelde goed.En: The first step was taken, and it felt good.Nl: Ze wisselden telefoonnummers uit en spraken af om elkaar later voor een kop koffie te ontmoeten.En: They exchanged phone numbers and agreed to meet later for a cup of coffee.Nl: Sanne glimlachte terwijl ze wegwandelde.En: Sanne smiled as she walked away.Nl: Haar introspectieve aard had haar niet meer opgesloten.En: Her introspective nature had no longer kept her trapped.Nl: Door te spreken had ze een nieuw verhaal begonnen.En: By speaking, she had begun a new story.Nl: En terwijl de sneeuw zachtjes naar beneden dwarrelde, voelde Sanne hoe haar eigen verhaal verder groeide, verbonden met dat van Bram en de geschiedenis die zich binnen de muren van de Anne Frank Huis bevond.En: And as the snow softly fluttered down, Sanne felt how her own story continued to grow, connected with Bram's and the history within the walls of the Anne Frank Huis. Vocabulary Words:layer: laagexhaling: uitblazendcanals: grachtencovered: bedektsoftly: zachtcrunched: kraakteapproached: naderdequiet: stilbreathed: ademdenblanket: dekenskimming: scherendcourage: moedlimitations: beperkingenglow: gloedadmiration: bewonderingdispel: verdrijventingling: tintelendethoughts: gedachtenhesitated: aarzeldeawkwardness: onhandigheidnarrow: nauwefed: voeddendifference: verschilendures: voortbestaanfrog: kikkertrapped: opgeslotenfluttered: dwarreldeconnected: verbondenmuseum: museumintrospective: introspectieve
Fluent Fiction - Dutch: Unlocking History: A Hidden Letter Alters Anne Frank's Legacy Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/nl/episode/2026-01-25-08-38-20-nl Story Transcript:Nl: De wind blies ijzig door de straten van Amsterdam.En: The wind blew icily through the streets of Amsterdam.Nl: Sanne klopte haar handen warm voor de deur van het Anne Frank Huis.En: Sanne clapped her hands warm in front of the door of the Anne Frank Huis.Nl: Als geschiedenisliefhebber had dit bezoek altijd op haar lijst gestaan.En: As a history enthusiast, this visit had always been on her list.Nl: Maar vandaag zou meer onthuld worden dan ze ooit had gedacht.En: But today, more would be revealed than she ever thought possible.Nl: Ze stapte de smalle gang in, de houten vloeren kraakten zachtjes onder haar voeten.En: She stepped into the narrow hallway, the wooden floors creaking softly under her feet.Nl: Terwijl Sanne zich tussen de andere bezoekers door manoeuvreerde, voelde ze een vreemd soort spanning in de lucht.En: As Sanne maneuvered through the other visitors, she felt a strange kind of tension in the air.Nl: Alsof er iets onverwachts op haar wachtte.En: As if something unexpected was waiting for her.Nl: Samen met haar vriend, Jeroen, en hun gezamenlijke vriendin Anouk, verkende ze de historische kamers van het huis.En: Together with her friend, Jeroen, and their mutual friend Anouk, she explored the historical rooms of the house.Nl: Ze stonden stil bij Anne's kleine kamer, waar de silhouetten van de boeken nog zichtbaar waren op het afgestripte behang.En: They paused at Anne's small room, where the silhouettes of the books were still visible on the stripped wallpaper.Nl: "Moet je dat zien," zei Anouk opgewonden terwijl ze naar een hoek van de kamer wees.En: "You have to see this," said Anouk excitedly as she pointed to a corner of the room.Nl: Er was iets los aan de muur.En: There was something loose on the wall.Nl: Een houten paneel dat niet goed vast leek te zitten.En: A wooden panel that didn't seem to be fastened properly.Nl: Een geheim, verborgen achter, wachtte om gevonden te worden.En: A secret, hidden behind, waiting to be discovered.Nl: Sanne's nieuwsgierigheid was gewekt.En: Sanne's curiosity was piqued.Nl: Samen met Jeroen trok ze voorzichtig aan het paneel.En: Together with Jeroen, she carefully pulled at the panel.Nl: Daarachter, gehuld in stof, lag een vergeeld stuk papier.En: Behind it, covered in dust, lay a yellowed piece of paper.Nl: Een brief.En: A letter.Nl: De woorden, in kleine nette handschrift, deden haar hart sneller slaan.En: The words, in small neat handwriting, made her heart race.Nl: "Wie zou deze hebben geschreven?"En: "Who would have written this?"Nl: vroeg Jeroen verbaasd.En: asked Jeroen surprised.Nl: Sanne fronste.En: Sanne frowned.Nl: "Dit moeten we onderzoeken," besloot ze vastberaden.En: "We need to investigate this," she decided resolutely.Nl: De brief leek een persoonlijk verhaal te vertellen, wellicht van een vriend van Anne.En: The letter seemed to tell a personal story, possibly from a friend of Anne.Nl: Maar was het echt?En: But was it real?Nl: Museumautoriteiten toonden hun zorgen.En: Museum authorities expressed their concerns.Nl: Het kon de geschiedenis verstoren, werden ze gewaarschuwd.En: It could disturb history, they were warned.Nl: Maar Sanne kon zich niet laten tegenhouden.En: But Sanne could not be stopped.Nl: Avonden in de studiezaal volgden.En: Evenings in the study room followed.Nl: Sanne dook in archieven, sprak met professoren en gebruikte elke bron die ze kon.En: Sanne dived into archives, spoke with professors, and used every source she could.Nl: De naam onderaan de brief bleek te behoren tot een minder bekende persoon die tijdens dezelfde periode ondergedoken was.En: The name at the bottom of the letter turned out to belong to a less known person who had gone into hiding during the same period.Nl: Het verband met Anne was er, en het verhaal had niet alleen de potentie om de geschiedenisboeken te veranderen, maar ook het museum.En: The connection with Anne was there, and the story had the potential not only to change the history books but also the museum.Nl: Na maanden van hard werk kwam het moment van de waarheid.En: After months of hard work, the moment of truth arrived.Nl: Sanne presenteerde haar bevindingen aan een select gezelschap in het museum.En: Sanne presented her findings to a select group in the museum.Nl: De brief was echt.En: The letter was real.Nl: Haar bewijs overtuigde de twijfelaars.En: Her evidence convinced the doubters.Nl: Het museum kreeg een nieuw hoofdstuk, een uitbreiding van het verhaal dat Anne Frank had verteld in haar dagboek.En: The museum received a new chapter, an extension of the story that Anne Frank had told in her diary.Nl: En Sanne?En: And Sanne?Nl: Zij vond een nieuwe passie in haar werk als historica, gesterkt door het geloof dat elke geschiedenis, hoe klein ook, het waard is om ontdekt te worden.En: She found a new passion in her work as a historian, strengthened by the belief that every history, no matter how small, is worth discovering.Nl: Het winterse licht viel door de ramen van het Anne Frank Huis, helder en rein.En: The winter light fell through the windows of the Anne Frank Huis, bright and pure.Nl: Sanne keek naar binnen en glimlachte.En: Sanne looked inside and smiled.Nl: De geschiedenis had gesproken, en zij had geleerd te luisteren.En: History had spoken, and she had learned to listen. Vocabulary Words:enthusiast: geschiedenisliefhebbernarrow: smallehallway: gangcreaking: kraaktenmaneuvered: manoeuvreerdesilhouettes: silhouettenstripped: afgestripteexcitedly: opgewondenunfastened: loscuriosity: nieuwsgierigheidpiqued: gewektdust: stofyellowed: vergeeldfrowned: fronsteresolutely: vastberadenwarned: gewaarschuwdarchives: archievenprofessors: professorensource: bronbelong: behorenhiding: ondergedokenconnection: verbandpotential: potentiefindings: bevindingenselect: selectdoubters: twijfelaarschapter: hoofdstukexpansion: uitbreidingstrengthened: gesterktlistened: luisteren
Mark sits down with founder and director of the Anne Frank Center at the University of South Carolina, Dr. Doyle Stevick, as they discuss his teaching journey, an in-depth guide to the center, and a deeper look at the story of Anne Frank.#podcast #annefrank #holocaustmemorialday #history
How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world. –Anne Frank Check out John Lee Dumas' award winning Podcast Entrepreneurs on Fire on your favorite podcast directory. For world class free courses and resources to help you on your Entrepreneurial journey visit EOFire.com
Fluent Fiction - Dutch: The Case of Anne Frank's Vanished Diary: Mystery in Amsterdam Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/nl/episode/2026-01-18-08-38-20-nl Story Transcript:Nl: Het was een koude winterdag in Amsterdam.En: It was a cold winter day in Amsterdam.Nl: De sneeuwvlokken dwarrelden zachtjes naar beneden, bedekkend de straten met een witte glans.En: The snowflakes gently drifted down, covering the streets with a white sheen.Nl: Binnen in het Anne Frank Huis, was het warm en rustig.En: Inside the Anne Frank Huis, it was warm and quiet.Nl: Bezoekers stapten voorzichtig door de smalle gangen, hun stemmen gedempt uit respect voor het verleden.En: Visitors stepped carefully through the narrow corridors, their voices hushed out of respect for the past.Nl: Bastiaan, de toegewijde museumconservator, liep bezorgd door de tentoonstellingsruimte.En: Bastiaan, the dedicated museum curator, walked worriedly through the exhibition room.Nl: Zijn ogen zochten voortdurend naar het belangrijkste object in de collectie: het dagboek van Anne Frank.En: His eyes constantly searched for the most important object in the collection: Anne Frank's diary.Nl: Tot zijn schrik ontdekte hij dat het verdwenen was uit de vitrine.En: To his shock, he discovered that it had disappeared from the display case.Nl: Maartje, een oplettende bezoeker met een scherpe blik, merkte Bastiaans bezorgdheid op.En: Maartje, an observant visitor with a keen eye, noticed Bastiaan's concern.Nl: Ze was al gefascineerd door het verhaal van Anne Frank en voelde een prikkel van nieuwsgierigheid.En: She was already fascinated by Anne Frank's story and felt a twinge of curiosity.Nl: Ze besloot Bastiaan te benaderen.En: She decided to approach Bastiaan.Nl: "Is er iets mis?"En: "Is something wrong?"Nl: vroeg ze rustig.En: she asked quietly.Nl: Bastiaan zuchtte en legde de situatie uit.En: Bastiaan sighed and explained the situation.Nl: "Het dagboek is verdwenen, en met het beveiligingssysteem onderweg met een upgrade, weet ik niet zeker wat er is gebeurd."En: "The diary is missing, and with the security system undergoing an upgrade, I'm not sure what happened."Nl: Maartje's ogen glinsterden van interesse.En: Maartje's eyes sparkled with interest.Nl: "Misschien kan ik helpen," bood ze aan.En: "Maybe I can help," she offered.Nl: Ondanks zijn aanvankelijke aarzeling, stemde Bastiaan in.En: Despite his initial hesitation, Bastiaan agreed.Nl: Hij had hulp nodig en misschien kon Maartje iets zien dat hij over het hoofd had gezien.En: He needed help, and maybe Maartje could see something he had overlooked.Nl: De twee begonnen hun onderzoek.En: The two began their investigation.Nl: Bastiaan nam Maartje mee langs de werkplekken van het personeel, terwijl ze met elkaar stille hints en indrukken uitwisselden.En: Bastiaan took Maartje along the staff work areas, as they exchanged subtle hints and impressions with each other.Nl: Maartje's aandacht werd getrokken door tegenstrijdige verhalen van medewerkers.En: Maartje's attention was drawn to conflicting stories from staff members.Nl: Ze ontdekte dat sommige niet overeenkwamen.En: She discovered that some of them didn't match up.Nl: "Er is iets vreemds aan de hand," fluisterde ze aan Bastiaan.En: "There's something strange going on," she whispered to Bastiaan.Nl: Ze besloten om de minder bezochte delen van het museum te onderzoeken.En: They decided to investigate the less frequented parts of the museum.Nl: In een stoffige opslagruimte, troffen ze een medewerker die zich vreemd gedroeg aan.En: In a dusty storage room, they encountered a staff member behaving oddly.Nl: Met een beetje speurwerk vonden ze het dagboek, zorgvuldig verborgen.En: With a bit of detective work, they found the diary, carefully hidden.Nl: De medewerker had het plan om het te verkopen.En: The staff member had planned to sell it.Nl: Bastiaan voelde zowel woede als opluchting.En: Bastiaan felt both anger and relief.Nl: Ze hadden hun man.En: They had their culprit.Nl: Het dagboek werd veilig teruggebracht naar zijn rechtmatige plaats.En: The diary was safely returned to its rightful place.Nl: Bastiaan realiseerde zich dat hij anderen kon vertrouwen en voelde een last van zijn schouders vallen.En: Bastiaan realized he could trust others and felt a weight lift off his shoulders.Nl: Hij beloofde de beveiliging te verbeteren en leerde te vertrouwen op de inzichten van anderen.En: He promised to improve the security and learned to rely on the insights of others.Nl: Maartje voelde een sprankeling van trots.En: Maartje felt a spark of pride.Nl: Ze had het mysterie opgelost.En: She had solved the mystery.Nl: Deze ervaring gaf haar de moed om haar nieuwsgierigheid verder te volgen, misschien zelfs in een carrière in de recherche.En: This experience gave her the courage to pursue her curiosity further, perhaps even into a career in detective work.Nl: Zo hielp een ijverige curator en een oplettende bezoeker elkaar niet alleen een museum te beschermen, maar ook om te groeien in hun persoonlijke reizen.En: Thus, a diligent curator and an observant visitor not only helped protect a museum but also grew in their personal journeys.Nl: Terwijl de sneeuw bleef vallen op Amsterdam, schitterde het dagboek weer veilig achter glas, klaar om de wereld opnieuw te inspireren.En: As the snow continued to fall on Amsterdam, the diary shone securely behind glass again, ready to inspire the world anew. Vocabulary Words:gently: zachtjessheen: glanscorridor: ganghushed: gedemptcurator: conservatorexhibition: tentoonstellingshocked: geschrokkendisplay case: vitrineobservant: oplettendtwinge: prikkelsituation: situatieundergoing: onderwegupgrade: upgradesparkled: glinsterdeninitial: aanvankelijkehesitation: aarzelingsubtle: stilleimpressions: indrukkenconflicting: tegenstrijdigestrange: vreemdsfrequented: bezochtestorage: opslagoddly: vreemddetective work: speurwerkculprit: daderrightful: rechtmatigeinsights: inzichtenresolved: opgelostcourage: moedinspire: inspireren
Matthew Bannister onThe colourful life of artist, fashion editor, sex columnist and bonkbuster author Molly Parkin. Her daughter shares the highs and lows of living with Molly.Kristina Gjerde, the maritime lawyer who fought to protect the high seas.Michael Barton, the BBC executive who oversaw the expansion of English local radioEva Schloss, the holocaust survivor who became Anne Frank's stepsister.Producer: Ed Prendeville Assistant Producer: Ribika Moktan Researcher: Jesse Edwards Editor: Glyn TansleyArchive used Breakfast Time, BBC 1, 12/02/1986; Outlook, BBC World Service,27/01/2022; BBC Sound Archive, Murrow, Edward R, CBS Recording, 13/03/1938; BBC Sound Archive, Sinclair W.A.,19/05/1940; Learning about the Past to Make a Better Future, YouTube Upload, Anne Frank Trust UK, 24/03/2021; News – Gulf War special, BBC 1, 20/01/1991; Neighbours Shall Speak, BBC Archives; Archive on 4 : Close to Home - The Story of Local Radio, BBC Radio 4, 12/11/2017; The Time of your life – Molly Parkin, BBC 1, 08/06/1984; Molly Parkin – Desert Island Discs, BBC Radio 4, 13/05/2011; The Seven Ages of Man : Molly Parkin, BBC 2, 12/08/1996; Wogan, BBC 1, 03/12/1990; Dr Harriet Harden-Davies' personal recording of Kristina Gjerde, 2024
The ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro is transferred by armed forces to make his first appearance in a US court on drug trafficking and weapons charges, alongside his wife Cilia Flores. Both were seized by American forces from their compound in Caracas and flown to detention in New York, before being led in handcuffs into a Manhattan courtroom. The UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres says he's "concerned rules of international law have not been respected", as nations discuss the US actions at a UN Security Council meeting. And we learn more about Delcy Rodriguez, Maduro's right-hand woman, who is due to be sworn in as acting president of Venezuela.Also: a court in Paris convicts 10 people of cyberbullying France's first lady, Brigitte Macron, over false claims about her gender and sexuality; China and South Korea reaffirm their ties at a summit in Beijing; and we look back at the life of Eva Schloss, Holocaust survivor and Anne Frank's step-sister, who has died at the age of 96.The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
In our news wrap Monday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued a letter of censure against Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, who retired from the Navy with a rank of Captain, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz dropped his bid for a third term, jury selection began in the first criminal trial over the slow law enforcement response to the Uvalde school shooting and Eva Schloss, the stepsister of Anne Frank, has died. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy
AP correspondent Charles de Ledesma reports Auschwitz survivor and educator Eva Schloss has died in London at the age of 96.
In our news wrap Monday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued a letter of censure against Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, who retired from the Navy with a rank of Captain, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz dropped his bid for a third term, jury selection began in the first criminal trial over the slow law enforcement response to the Uvalde school shooting and Eva Schloss, the stepsister of Anne Frank, has died. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy
Buddying up to see the sights of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Also, a look at "Anne Frank The Exhibition". Plus, an Inside the Game segment as Craig learns to be the SNF timeout coordinator. And, a former teacher builds a real-life "Magic School Bus". Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Queerness remains one of the most stigmatized and overlooked aspects of Holocaust history, often erased due to the lingering homophobia of survivors. People Without History Are Dust: Queer Desire in the Holocaust (U Toronto Press, 2025) challenges this silence, weaving together compelling stories of German, Dutch, Czech, and Polish Jewish Holocaust victims and survivors – including Anne Frank, Molly Applebaum, Margot Heuman, and Gad Beck – whose experiences help illuminate the hidden history of queerness in a time of genocide. Drawing on extensive archival research, this groundbreaking book uncovers the lives of those who were doubly marginalized, not only persecuted as Jews but also as queer individuals. In doing so, it confronts the ways in which history has excluded or minimized their experiences, urging us to question normative accounts of the Holocaust. By shedding light on these long-overlooked stories, People Without History Are Dust deepens our understanding of identity, survival, and memory, reminding us why an inclusive and complex approach to history is essential – not just for the sake of the past, but in service to the present and the future as well. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Queerness remains one of the most stigmatized and overlooked aspects of Holocaust history, often erased due to the lingering homophobia of survivors. People Without History Are Dust: Queer Desire in the Holocaust (U Toronto Press, 2025) challenges this silence, weaving together compelling stories of German, Dutch, Czech, and Polish Jewish Holocaust victims and survivors – including Anne Frank, Molly Applebaum, Margot Heuman, and Gad Beck – whose experiences help illuminate the hidden history of queerness in a time of genocide. Drawing on extensive archival research, this groundbreaking book uncovers the lives of those who were doubly marginalized, not only persecuted as Jews but also as queer individuals. In doing so, it confronts the ways in which history has excluded or minimized their experiences, urging us to question normative accounts of the Holocaust. By shedding light on these long-overlooked stories, People Without History Are Dust deepens our understanding of identity, survival, and memory, reminding us why an inclusive and complex approach to history is essential – not just for the sake of the past, but in service to the present and the future as well. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/jewish-studies
Queerness remains one of the most stigmatized and overlooked aspects of Holocaust history, often erased due to the lingering homophobia of survivors. People Without History Are Dust: Queer Desire in the Holocaust (U Toronto Press, 2025) challenges this silence, weaving together compelling stories of German, Dutch, Czech, and Polish Jewish Holocaust victims and survivors – including Anne Frank, Molly Applebaum, Margot Heuman, and Gad Beck – whose experiences help illuminate the hidden history of queerness in a time of genocide. Drawing on extensive archival research, this groundbreaking book uncovers the lives of those who were doubly marginalized, not only persecuted as Jews but also as queer individuals. In doing so, it confronts the ways in which history has excluded or minimized their experiences, urging us to question normative accounts of the Holocaust. By shedding light on these long-overlooked stories, People Without History Are Dust deepens our understanding of identity, survival, and memory, reminding us why an inclusive and complex approach to history is essential – not just for the sake of the past, but in service to the present and the future as well. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/genocide-studies
Queerness remains one of the most stigmatized and overlooked aspects of Holocaust history, often erased due to the lingering homophobia of survivors. People Without History Are Dust: Queer Desire in the Holocaust (U Toronto Press, 2025) challenges this silence, weaving together compelling stories of German, Dutch, Czech, and Polish Jewish Holocaust victims and survivors – including Anne Frank, Molly Applebaum, Margot Heuman, and Gad Beck – whose experiences help illuminate the hidden history of queerness in a time of genocide. Drawing on extensive archival research, this groundbreaking book uncovers the lives of those who were doubly marginalized, not only persecuted as Jews but also as queer individuals. In doing so, it confronts the ways in which history has excluded or minimized their experiences, urging us to question normative accounts of the Holocaust. By shedding light on these long-overlooked stories, People Without History Are Dust deepens our understanding of identity, survival, and memory, reminding us why an inclusive and complex approach to history is essential – not just for the sake of the past, but in service to the present and the future as well. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/lgbtq-studies
A TSA worker in Virginia sues to allow transgender officers to perform pat-downs in airports. A flight from Sky Harbor to DCA makes an emergency stop in Kansas City to remove a disruptive passenger who called Reps Gosar, Biggs and Crane, “fascists”. Sharon Osborne breaks down after playing a heartfelt voicemail that President Trump left her to give condolences to her family after the death of Ozzy. The AP puts out an embarrassing report claiming that tribes across the Great Plains are only killing bison to feed people as the government shutdown interrupted SNAP payments. A now deleted social media post shows House Candidate, Jack Schlossberg, repeatedly performing a N*zi salute. The queer hookup app Grindr debuted a knitwear collection created with wool culled from the world's “first flock of gay sheep” in Germany. Dana reacts to an uber-viral list of “Green Flags In A Man's Apartment”. Pete Buttigieg's DOT spent $80 BILLION on DEI grants and delayed air traffic control upgrades. Gavin Newsom claims “anti-woke” is racist because it's just “anti-Black”. Dana reacts to a musical called “Slam Frank” centering on Anne Frank seen through the lens of intersectional multi-ethnic genderqueer and Afro-Latin hip-hop.Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…Patriot Mobilehttps://PatriotMobile.com/Dana OR CALL 972-PATRIOTWhat are you waiting for? Switch today during the Red, White, and Blue sale. Use promo code DANA for a Samsung A16 5g smartphone. Sale ends soon.Relief Factorhttps://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFDon't let pain stop you from living the life you want with Relief Factor. Get their 3-week Relief Factor Quick Start for only $19.95 today! PreBornhttps://Preborn.com/DANAYou have the power to help save a life. Donate today by dialing #250 and say “Baby,” or give securely online. Make your end of year gift today.Subscribe today and stay in the loop on all things news with The Dana Show. Follow us here for more daily clips, updates, and commentary:YoutubeFacebookInstagramXMore Info
Picture this: you're fifteen years old, excited about your future, dreaming of becoming a doctor or engineer. Then overnight, armed men tell you your dreams don't matter because you're a girl. This is the reality for millions of Afghan girls since August 2021, when the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan. While the world watched in horror as girls were banned from schools, one woman refused to accept this fate. Her name is Khadija Haidary, and what she did will restore your faith in human courage. When the Taliban took power, they systematically dismantled an entire generation's future. Over three million girls were suddenly told they couldn't learn. Universities became ghost towns. Women professors lost their jobs overnight. While others fell silent, Khadija chose to fight back in the most powerful way possible. Khadija, an Afghan educator, activist and writer understood that knowledge couldn't be destroyed by decrees. It could only be hidden, protected, and passed on in secret. What she did next was both dangerous and brilliant. Instead of accepting defeat, Khadija became part of an underground network of educators who refused to let Afghan girls lose their right to learn. These brave women created secret schools, hidden classrooms, and clandestine education networks that operated under the Taliban's nose. While international headlines focus on politics and military situations, there's an entire shadow education system operating in Afghanistan. Women like Haidary have created mobile schools that move locations constantly to avoid detection. They teach in basements, private homes, and hidden corners of buildings. They use coded language and secret signals to communicate with students and parents. The methods are ingenious and heartbreaking at the same time. Teachers disguise themselves as housekeepers or relatives visiting homes. They carry books hidden under traditional clothing. Students attend classes pretending to be at social gatherings. These educators have turned resistance into an art form. Khadija's work represents something bigger than just education. It's about preserving hope in the darkest of times. People like her remind us that resistance takes many forms and that change doesn't always come from governments or international organizations. Sometimes it comes from ordinary people, other times from teachers and sometimes it comes from students who refuse to stop learning, no matter what obstacles they face. Every day, brave women like Haidary are writing new chapters of resistance and hope. They're proving that while you can close schools, you can't close minds. While you can ban books, you can't ban the human spirit's desire to grow and learn. That's the real story of Afghanistan's education crisis, and that's why Khadija Haidary's courage matters more than any political headline you'll ever read. Watch this interview and hear about Khadija's decision to walk from Afghanistan to Pakistan so she could write freely, and fight for girls education back home. Here Khadija speak about her love of the Jewish people, and similarities between her and Anne Frank. Khadija is so incredibly impressive. Be inspired Pay homage to humankind through her. Well done, Khadija. Well done!!! ——
Picture this: you're fifteen years old, excited about your future, dreaming of becoming a doctor or engineer. Then overnight, armed men tell you your dreams don't matter because you're a girl. This is the reality for millions of Afghan girls since August 2021, when the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan. While the world watched in horror as girls were banned from schools, one woman refused to accept this fate. Her name is Khadija Haidary, and what she did will restore your faith in human courage. When the Taliban took power, they systematically dismantled an entire generation's future. Over three million girls were suddenly told they couldn't learn. Universities became ghost towns. Women professors lost their jobs overnight. While others fell silent, Khadija chose to fight back in the most powerful way possible. Khadija, an Afghan educator, activist and writer understood that knowledge couldn't be destroyed by decrees. It could only be hidden, protected, and passed on in secret. What she did next was both dangerous and brilliant. Instead of accepting defeat, Khadija became part of an underground network of educators who refused to let Afghan girls lose their right to learn. These brave women created secret schools, hidden classrooms, and clandestine education networks that operated under the Taliban's nose. While international headlines focus on politics and military situations, there's an entire shadow education system operating in Afghanistan. Women like Haidary have created mobile schools that move locations constantly to avoid detection. They teach in basements, private homes, and hidden corners of buildings. They use coded language and secret signals to communicate with students and parents. The methods are ingenious and heartbreaking at the same time. Teachers disguise themselves as housekeepers or relatives visiting homes. They carry books hidden under traditional clothing. Students attend classes pretending to be at social gatherings. These educators have turned resistance into an art form. Khadija's work represents something bigger than just education. It's about preserving hope in the darkest of times. People like her remind us that resistance takes many forms and that change doesn't always come from governments or international organizations. Sometimes it comes from ordinary people, other times from teachers and sometimes it comes from students who refuse to stop learning, no matter what obstacles they face. Every day, brave women like Haidary are writing new chapters of resistance and hope. They're proving that while you can close schools, you can't close minds. While you can ban books, you can't ban the human spirit's desire to grow and learn. That's the real story of Afghanistan's education crisis, and that's why Khadija Haidary's courage matters more than any political headline you'll ever read. Watch this interview and hear about Khadija's decision to walk from Afghanistan to Pakistan so she could write freely, and fight for girls education back home. Here Khadija speak about her love of the Jewish people, and similarities between her and Anne Frank. Khadija is so incredibly impressive. Be inspired Pay homage to humankind through her. Well done, Khadija. Well done!!! ——
Was hat der Ukraine-Gipfel von Berlin gebracht? Sind die Europäer auf den Diplomatiezug von Donald Trump aufgesprungen? Hören Sie eine Einschätzung von Thomas Fasbender, Journalist der „Berliner Zeitung“. In Deutschland protestieren die Bauern gegen die zu niedrigen Butterpreise. Unser Gast zu diesem Thema ist der deutsch-britische Landwirt und Agrar-Influencer Anthony Lee. Wie ist die Lage in Syrien ein Jahr nach dem Ende des Assad-Regimes? Kann man syrischen Flüchtlingen in Europa eine Rückkehr zumuten? Darüber berichtet der Ex-Diplomat und Islamwissenschaftler Dr. Alfred Schlicht. Und Cora Stephan widmet sich im Kommentar einer Ausstellung in Potsdam, in der die Jüdin Anne Frank mit Palästinensertuch gezeigt wird.
This powerful exploration of significance challenges us to reconsider how we measure value in our lives. Through the story of Jesse from 1 Samuel 16, we encounter a shepherd from an insignificant town who becomes central to God's redemptive plan. Jesse wasn't famous for his accomplishments—he's remembered simply as David's father, and he wasn't even an exceptional parent by worldly standards. Yet God chose this ordinary man's family line to bring forth both King David and ultimately Jesus Christ himself. The message confronts our tendency to measure importance by worldly standards—appearance, position, wealth, or achievements—when God measures the heart. We're reminded that God doesn't create spare parts; every person has divine purpose. The story of Miep Gies, who sheltered Anne Frank, illustrates how history-changing impact often comes from faithful obscurity. As we approach Christmas, we're invited to see ourselves as God sees us: not as insignificant nobodies, but as beloved children with kingdom purpose. The prophecy in Isaiah 11 about a shoot coming from Jesse's stump reminds us that God specializes in bringing life from what appears dead or diminished. When we feel overlooked or past our prime, we're actually in prime position for God to work—because in our weakness, His strength shines brightest.
Fluent Fiction - Dutch: A Winter's Tale: Finding Meaning at Anne Frank's House Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/nl/episode/2025-12-08-23-34-02-nl Story Transcript:Nl: De sneeuwvlokken vielen zachtjes op de grachten van Amsterdam.En: The snowflakes fell gently on the grachten of Amsterdam.Nl: Het was een koude winterdag, een perfecte tijd om het Anne Frank Huis te bezoeken.En: It was a cold winter day, a perfect time to visit the Anne Frank Huis.Nl: Bram en Sanne stonden hand in hand voor de ingang, hun adem zichtbaar in de ijskoude lucht.En: Bram and Sanne stood hand in hand at the entrance, their breath visible in the frigid air.Nl: Ze voelden een mengeling van spanning en respect voor de geschiedenis die ze gingen ontdekken.En: They felt a mix of excitement and respect for the history they were about to discover.Nl: Binnen in het museum waren de gangen smal en vol met bezoekers.En: Inside the museum, the corridors were narrow and filled with visitors.Nl: De stilte was voelbaar, iedereen leek diep in gedachten verzonken.En: The silence was palpable; everyone seemed deep in thought.Nl: Sanne stond regelmatig stil, starend naar de oude foto's en voorwerpen uit een andere tijd.En: Sanne frequently paused, staring at the old photos and artifacts from another era.Nl: Ze had altijd een diepgaande interesse in geschiedenis gehad, vooral in de verhalen van mensen die onder moeilijke omstandigheden hadden geleefd.En: She had always had a deep interest in history, especially in the stories of people who had lived under difficult circumstances.Nl: Bram daarentegen was hier met een speciale missie.En: Bram, on the other hand, was there with a special mission.Nl: Hij wilde een bijzonder Sinterklaasgeschenk voor Sanne vinden.En: He wanted to find a special Sinterklaas gift for Sanne.Nl: Iets dat hun gedeelde herinneringen en waarden weerspiegelde.En: Something that reflected their shared memories and values.Nl: Dat was niet eenvoudig, vooral niet in de drukte van de cadeauwinkel, waar veel mensen op zoek waren naar een aandenken aan hun bezoek.En: That was not easy, especially not in the crowded gift shop, where many were searching for a souvenir of their visit.Nl: Terwijl Bram door de winkel liep, omringd door boeken, posters en souvenirs, voelde hij zich een beetje verdwaald.En: As Bram wandered through the shop, surrounded by books, posters, and souvenirs, he felt a bit lost.Nl: Sanne was ergens anders in het museum, verdiept in de verhalen.En: Sanne was somewhere else in the museum, absorbed in the stories.Nl: Hij wilde iets vinden dat zowel persoonlijk als betekenisvol was, maar alles leek zo gewoon.En: He wanted to find something both personal and meaningful, but everything seemed so ordinary.Nl: Plotseling viel zijn oog op een hoek met dagboeken.En: Suddenly, his eye caught a corner with diaries.Nl: Eén ervan leek op het beroemde dagboek van Anne Frank.En: One of them resembled Anne Frank@'s famous diary.Nl: Het was eenvoudig, met een bruine omslag.En: It was simple, with a brown cover.Nl: Een idee flitste door Bram's hoofd.En: An idea flashed through Bram's mind.Nl: Dit kon meer zijn dan een cadeau.En: This could be more than a gift.Nl: Het kon een uitnodiging zijn om samen hun eigen verhalen en herinneringen op te schrijven.En: It could be an invitation to write their own stories and memories together.Nl: Met het dagboek stevig in handen zocht hij naar Sanne.En: With the diary firmly in hand, he searched for Sanne.Nl: Hij vond haar in de laatste kamer, nog steeds verdiept in de geschiedenis.En: He found her in the last room, still immersed in the history.Nl: Voorzichtig tikte hij op haar schouder.En: Carefully, he tapped on her shoulder.Nl: “Kijk eens,” zei hij zachtjes en overhandigde het dagboek.En: “Take a look,” he said softly, handing her the diary.Nl: Sanne opende het en glimlachte.En: Sanne opened it and smiled.Nl: “Dit is prachtig, Bram,” zei ze.En: “This is wonderful, Bram,” she said.Nl: Haar ogen straalden warmte uit.En: Her eyes shone with warmth.Nl: “Laten we vandaag onze eerste herinnering opschrijven.” Samen zochten ze een rustig hoekje op, weg van de drukte.En: “Let's write our first memory today.” Together, they found a quiet corner away from the crowd.Nl: De dag eindigde met schrijven, lachen en het delen van verhalen.En: The day ended with writing, laughing, and sharing stories.Nl: Bram leerde die dag dat de waarde van een cadeau in het persoonlijke gebaar lag, niet in de traditie.En: Bram learned that day that the value of a gift lay in the personal gesture, not in tradition.Nl: En Sanne merkte hoe belangrijk haar liefde voor geschiedenis en verhalen voor Bram was.En: And Sanne realized how important her love for history and stories was to Bram.Nl: Terwijl ze het museum verlieten en de koude lucht weer begroetten, voelde alles warmer en betekenisvoller.En: As they left the museum and greeted the cold air once again, everything felt warmer and more meaningful.Nl: Ze hielden elkaars handen steviger vast, met een nieuw dagboek vol lege bladzijdes en oneindige mogelijkheden voor de avonturen die nog moesten komen.En: They held each other's hands more tightly, with a new diary full of blank pages and endless possibilities for the adventures yet to come. Vocabulary Words:snowflakes: sneeuwvlokkencanals: grachtenfrigid: ijskoudepalpable: voelbaarimmersed: verdieptartifacts: voorwerpencircumstances: omstandighedenmission: missiegift shop: cadeauwinkelsouvenir: aandenkencorner: hoekresemble: leek opdiary: dagboekinvitation: uitnodigingshoulder: schouderwarmth: warmtemeaningful: betekenisvolgesture: gebaartradition: traditiepossibilities: mogelijkhedenadventures: avonturennarrow: smalvisitors: bezoekersbreathe: ademdiscover: ontdekkenshared: gedeeldelost: verdwaaldgesture: gebaarquiet: rustigendless: oneindige
Bedtime story for grown ups and children about a brave little girl named Anne Frank. Make yourself comfortable, relax, close your eyes while listening to this true story which will help you to fall asleep faster.
How can we understand the extraordinary scope and magnitude of global fame and notoriety achieved by Anne Frank? The Anne Frank diary has been translated into over sixty languages and sold over twenty million copies. It has inspired everything from graphic novels and Japanese anime to movies and off-Broadway musicals. The Anne Frank House in Amsterdam has become a major tourist destination attracting over 1.2 million tourists in 2019. Dutch historian David Barnouw, world renowned Anne Frank specialist, explains the enduring memory of Anne Frank in his book, The Phenomenon of Anne Frank. A conservation with David Barnouw about the Anne Frank phenomenon and the Holocaust in the Netherlands.
Life is all about choices. Anne Frank wrote - "Our lives are fashioned by our choices. First we make our choices. Then our choices make us."Zig Ziglar said - "Destiny is no matter of chance. It is a matter of choice; it is not a thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved."Les Brown said - “Remember, you have the power to change your life by changing your choices."Choices are powerful. And there's one choice that's more powerful than the rest. In today's episode, I'm explaining one choice that can literally change everything for you. It's really as much of a mindset shift as it is a simple choice. Once you begin to think differently and see certain choices differently, you'll start to make different choices. And those new choices will lead to new results. It might seem hard or feel scary, but it will be more than worth it. Crank up the volume, grab a cup of coffee, and let's do it! JOIN COREY's EMAIL FAMILY: https://LoseFatList.comContact Corey: support@CoreyLittleCoaching.com
How did the diary of a thirteen year old girl transform Anne Frank into an international memory sensation? Dutch historian David Barnouw, the world's leading Anne Frank memory expert, has spent his career explaining the Anne Frank phenomenon. Find out more on the December 2nd episode of the Realms of Memory podcast.
Chris D'Elia joins Bryan as guest co-host and the guys talk Chris farting at Bryan's funeral, his Jersey roots and documentary on his shoulders, Bryan's documentary by Steven Spielberg, little boy outfit and bird heavy humor. Also, the guys go off on Constance Wu and Jussie Smollett and talk Steve Harvey, Harvard's Anne Frank controversy, the guy who called 911 on standup comedian Ahmed Ahmed, Uber's Quiet Driver mode and much more!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Met vandaag: - Twee Groningers over het vertrouwen na de zware beving: voormalig NSC-kamerlid Annemarie Heite en sociaal-psycholoog Tom Postmes; - NRC-journalist Hugo Logtenberg over de publicatie die tot opstappen van informateur Hans Wijers leidde; - Elli Bleeker van het Huygens Instituut onderzocht jarenlang het literaire talent van Anne Frank; - Aan ecoloog Wim Tegels vragen we: hoe kun je de probleemwolf lokken voordat de afschietvergunning verloopt? Presentatie: Simone Weimans.
On this week's episode, JP and Scott have their final discussion in the old house. Are you born gay or is it a choice? What would be the worst jobs for you and your friends to have and would you play hide and seek with Anne Frank? Enjoy the final episode in the old studio, and keep on laughing!
Anne Frank is one of the most widely read authors in history, although she did not live to see the publication of her book. Anne was a German teenager who happened to be Jewish as well. She and her family spent 2 years in seclusion in Amsterdam during World War II. Anne's diary describes the horrors of hiding from the Nazis - before eventually being sent to concentration camps. The Wannsee Conference was a clandestine meeting of Nazi leaders in 1942 to outline the systematic murder of Jews in Europe which became known as the Holocaust.
On Today’s Show: DV Community Texts & Voicemails (Highlights) 00:00:00 Shop.GetGoodFeels.Com – 20% Off Your Order – PROMO CODE FREAK 00:10:12 Introduction 02:15:12 Sponsor: Satan’s Porthole / Happy Birthday Special K! 04:09:20 Antifa Has Put A Hit Out On Meade Skelton 12:05:19 Upset Because She Isn’t Wifey Material 16:13:17 Old White People Will Call ICE […] The post From Holocaust to Holla-Back: Anne Frank Gets The Attic Popping first appeared on Distorted View Daily.
Abigail Pogrebin is joined by Ronald Leopold, longtime executive director of the Anne Frank House, one of Europe's most visited museums, which he recreated and brought to New York City for the first time this year.
Benefits for SNAP recipients are set to expire during the second longest government shutdown in US history. The Indian illegal alien truck driver who was charged with killing 3 in a DUI crash in Ontario on Tuesday, has a California CDL. Zohran Mamdani claims his aunt stopped taking the subway after 9/11 because she “did not feel safe in her hijab”. Do you remember when his dad said “America is the root of all evil”? Dana reacts to “The Poltergiest” house in Simi Valley being available on Airbnb. Gavin Newsom went on the “All The Smoke” podcast and debuted a new accent, fabricated a backstory claiming he was so poor while growing up that he had to eat bread and mac and cheese just to pay the bills. Townhall Columnist Michael Hout joins us to break down his piece, “Calling Out the Cancer Within the Right”, including the infighting, Charlie Kirk conspiracy theories, Israel and more. Zohran Mamdani says the quiet part out loud by stating, “It is the government's job to deliver dignity”. Dana rejects the narrative that “conservatism is dead”. Gavin Newsom claims “anti-woke” is racist because it's just “anti-Black”. Dana reacts to a musical called “Slam Frank” centering on Anne Frank seen through the lens of intersectional multi-ethnic genderqueer and Afro-Latin hip-hop.Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…Jones Road Beautyhttps://JonesRoadBeauty.comGet a free, Cool Gloss from Jones Road Beauty with your first purchase using code DANA.Bub's Naturalshttps://BubsNaturals.comGet 20% off your order at Bub's Naturals with code DANA. Support the show and tell them Dana sent you.PreBornhttps://Preborn.com/DANAAnswer the call and help save lives—dial #250 and say “Baby,” or give securely online. Make your gift today.AmmoSquaredhttps://AmmoSquared.comDon't get caught without ammo, and be sure to tell them you heard about Ammo Squared on this show. Keltec- KS7 Gen2https://KelTecWeapons.comKelTec builds every KS7 GEN2 right here in the USA with American materials and workers—upgrade your home defense today. Keltec- Peacekeepers Programhttps://KelTecWeapons.com/DanaThe KelTec Peacekeepers Program supports those who protect our communities. Learn more at KelTecWeapons.com/Dana today.All Family Pharmacyhttps://AllFamilyPharmacy.com/Dana Don't wait until flu season knocks at your door. Use code DANA10 at checkout to save 10%. Relief Factorhttps://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFTurn the clock back on pain with Relief Factor. Get their 3-week Relief Factor Quick Start for only $19.95 today! Byrnahttps://Byrna.com/danaGet your hands on the new compact Byrna CL. Visit Byrna.com/Dana to receive 10% off Patriot Mobilehttps://PatriotMobile.com/DanaDana's personal cell phone provider is Patriot Mobile. Get a FREE MONTH of service code DANAHumanNhttps://HumanN.comStart supporting your cardiovascular health with SuperBeets, now available at your local Walmart.
Gavin Newsom went on the “All The Smoke” podcast and debuted a new accent, fabricated a backstory claiming he was so poor while growing up that he had to eat bread and mac and cheese just to pay the bills. Meanwhile, Dana reacts to a musical called “Slam Frank” centering on Anne Frank seen through the lens of intersectional multi-ethnic genderqueer and Afro-Latin hip-hop.Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…Jones Road Beautyhttps://JonesRoadBeauty.comGet a free, Cool Gloss from Jones Road Beauty with your first purchase using code DANA.Bub's Naturalshttps://BubsNaturals.comGet 20% off your order at Bub's Naturals with code DANA. Support the show and tell them Dana sent you.PreBornhttps://Preborn.com/DANAAnswer the call and help save lives—dial #250 and say “Baby,” or give securely online. Make your gift today.AmmoSquaredhttps://AmmoSquared.comDon't get caught without ammo, and be sure to tell them you heard about Ammo Squared on this show. Keltec- KS7 Gen2https://KelTecWeapons.comKelTec builds every KS7 GEN2 right here in the USA with American materials and workers—upgrade your home defense today. Keltec- Peacekeepers Programhttps://KelTecWeapons.com/DanaThe KelTec Peacekeepers Program supports those who protect our communities. Learn more at KelTecWeapons.com/Dana today.All Family Pharmacyhttps://AllFamilyPharmacy.com/Dana Don't wait until flu season knocks at your door. Use code DANA10 at checkout to save 10%. Relief Factorhttps://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFTurn the clock back on pain with Relief Factor. Get their 3-week Relief Factor Quick Start for only $19.95 today! Byrnahttps://Byrna.com/danaGet your hands on the new compact Byrna CL. Visit Byrna.com/Dana to receive 10% off Patriot Mobilehttps://PatriotMobile.com/DanaDana's personal cell phone provider is Patriot Mobile. Get a FREE MONTH of service code DANAHumanNhttps://HumanN.comStart supporting your cardiovascular health with SuperBeets, now available at your local Walmart
In 2021, the University of South Carolina became home to the Anne Frank Center, the only such center in North America and one of only four in the world. Here is the story of how the center came to be at Carolina and the larger story of its message of hope and understanding.
Judith Thurman is a staff writer at "The New Yorker," and the author of many books, including "Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller" and "Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of Colette."------------Keep Talking SubstackSpotifyApple PodcastsSocial media and all episodes------------(00:00) “How'd you get to be that thing you are?”—origin story(02:18) Precocious reader, teacher mom, “foreordained” to write(04:52) Yes-and-no confidence; from drivel to good(07:10) Poet in Europe: barmaid, tutor, no money(09:48) 1970s NYC—dangerous, electric, cheap rent, first bylines(12:22) Nation → Ms. magazine → journalism takes off(14:05) Knocking on The New Yorker's door; Gottlieb says yes(16:40) How a New Yorker piece gets made—editors, rewrites, heat(19:12) Subjects and boundaries: strong & “lost” women(21:58) Emily Wilson to Vanessa Beecroft; fasting spa detour(24:41) Writing (against) Gertrude Stein; Handmaid's Tale hindsight(27:20) Why Stein's “cult” endures—salon as tourist attraction(29:58) Anne Frank's freedom to feel; the monumental annotation(32:36) Amelia Earhart—image-making, legend, and dying young(34:28) Biographies as marriages; choosing a life to live with(35:57) Isak Dinesen begins: Ms. piece, Denneny, the $10k “bride price”(38:43) Rethinking colonialism—Kenyan correspondent, mea culpa(41:52) Writing life: night vs. morning, momentum, humility; truth famine & journalism's role
LdN449 Was wird aus Trumps Gaza-Plan?, Zwei Jahre nach dem Oktober-Massaker (Meron Mendel, Leiter Bildungsstätte Anne Frank), Unruhe regiert Frankreich, Chat-Kontrolle gefährdet unnötig Bürgerrechte, Feedback Migration
The writer-composer behind the viral Slam Frank (an Anne Frank musical staged as if by the most social-justice-forward regional theater) explains why he pushes rules to their reductio ad absurdum and why “art should lift up the people who are beneath me.” Fox walks through a contentious table read, a Change.org backlash, and the joy/rage of crafting Hamilton-esque bangers like “The Day My Daddy Puts Us Into Hiding.” He argues the show's point is to expose how prescribed language and forced diversity can dehumanize artists and audiences alike. Also: a Gist etymology on “jawboning,” from Samson's weapon to Galbraith's 1960s coinage and today's First Amendment fights. Produced by Corey Wara Production Coordinator Ashley Khan Email us at thegist@mikepesca.com To advertise on the show, contact ad-sales@libsyn.com or visit https://advertising.libsyn.com/TheGist Subscribe to The Gist: https://subscribe.mikepesca.com/ Subscribe to The Gist Youtube Page: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4_bh0wHgk2YfpKf4rg40_g Subscribe to The Gist Instagram Page: GIST INSTAGRAM Follow The Gist List at: Pesca Profundities | Mike Pesca | Substack
One of life's biggest mysteries is what happens to us when we die—but the answer might lie in the early memories of small children. Some kids seem to remember specific and very detailed moments of a past life—leading many top researchers to wonder if this is evidence of reincarnation.For a full list of sources, please visit: sosupernaturalpodcast.com/the-unknown-reincarnationSo Supernatural is an audiochuck and Crime House production. Find us on social!Instagram: @sosupernatualpodTwitter: @_sosupernaturalFacebook: /sosupernaturalpod