Anne Frank Tree to be Planted on US Capitol Lawn

Anne Frank Tree to be Planted on US Capitol Lawn

A sapling grown from the tree that Holocaust victim Anne Frank wrote about while in hiding will be planted this month on the US Capitol grounds, congressional leaders announced Tuesday.

The tree “grew outside of the Amsterdam building where she and her family hid from the Nazis during World War II,” they explained.

The planting on the Capitol’s west front lawn will occur during a ceremony April 30.

The young tree is among several saplings created from the original tree, which collapsed outside the Amsterdam annex in 2010.

Frank wrote her observations from June 1942 to August 1944, while the Jewish girl and her family remained in hiding during the German occupation of the Netherlands.

She was captured August 4, 1944, and she died seven months later at age 15 at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.

Her diary was rescued by a family friend, and through the help of Anne’s father Otto Frank was published and eventually translated into more than 60 languages, including in English as “The Diary of a Young Girl.”

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