Anne Frank is believed to have died from typhus fever in March 1945, possibly contracted from poor sanitation and close quarters in the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen, where she was sent with her family and other Jewish prisoners. She was only 15 years old at the time of her death. Her father, Otto Frank, was the only member of her immediate family to survive the Holocaust.
Anne Frank's diary, written during her time in hiding in Amsterdam, has become an important symbol of the human cost of war and oppression, and a powerful reminder of the importance of promoting respect, empathy, and tolerance towards all individuals, regardless of their background, ethnicity, or religion.
