Sunday, February 1, 2026

Nazi-era teen girl’s diary charts unravelling of France — and her prominent Jewish family

From timesofisrael.com

By Robert Philpot

Released in the UK on Jan. 22, ‘Ninette’s War’ by journalist John Jay examines darkest chapter in French history through a Dreyfus scion’s diary entries, family papers and interviews

LONDON — On the morning of June 23, 1940, 12-year-old Ninette Dreyfus’s family learned that Hitler had forced France into a humiliating armistice the previous evening.

Her father’s reaction to the news was visceral and physical. Edgar Dreyfus collapsed on the stairs, suffering an asthma attack and struggling to breathe. “I had never seen him show weakness before. For a moment, I feared he was going to die,” Ninette later recalled. “The whole world of my childhood was falling apart.”

But unbeknownst to Ninette, her father, or France’s Jews, much worse was to come.

Released in paperback in the UK on January 22, “Ninette’s War: A Jewish Story of Survival in 1940s France” tells the remarkable wartime odyssey of one of France’s most prominent Jewish families — and the Vichy regime’s knowing complicity in the Nazis’ crimes.

The story has been painstakingly pieced together — like “restoring a mosaic” — by British journalist John Jay, drawing on Ninette’s youthful diary entries, family papers, and interviews she gave to the author in the years before her death in 2021.

As Jay makes clear, Edgar’s reaction to news of the armistice did not reflect a sense of foreboding about the likely fate awaiting his family.

“He was completely dumbfounded that the mighty French army could collapse in the way that it had done,” he tells The Times of Israel. “French Jews at that point had no idea of what subsequently was going to hit them.”

                    Ninette Dreyfus at home in her father’s Paris study, 1939. (Courtesy of John Jay and Lady Swaythling and her family)

Jay’s book tracks Edgar’s growing sense of disbelief and horror at Vichy’s brutal betrayal of France’s Jews.

The Dreyfus family — second only in influence to the Rothschilds in Parisian Jewish society — were, Jay says, a “classic cosmopolitan, Jewish Western European family, a mixture of Bohemians, Germans and Frenchmen.”

They were also fiercely patriotic and loyal to the French state, which, by and large, had treated French Jewry well. Edgar ran a bank owned by the family firm, La Maison, which had provided loans to help France’s war effort after 1914. A decade later, Edgar acceded to the government’s request to help fight off an inflation-induced run on the franc. He was made an officer of the Légion d’honneur in recognition of his services.

In their grand 16th arrondissement townhouse — which had once been owned by composer Claude Debussy — Ninette, her elder sister Viviane and parents Edgar and Yvonne lived a life of plenty and privilege. The family were secular and, until the outbreak of war, Ninette barely knew what being a Jew was. Occasional antisemitic playground slurs had little meaning for her.

Life as an ‘exode’

Hitler’s May 1940 blitzkrieg against France changed all that. One month later, with the sound of artillery growing closer and German forces crossing the Seine, the Dreyfus family joined the “exode” — one of the largest movements of people in history — as 6 million people took to the roads to flee the Nazi advance, among them some 100,000 to 200,000 Jews.

Refugees in the French ‘exode’ flee the invading Germans on June 19, 1940. (Bundesarchiv, Bild 146-1971-083-01 / Tritschler / CC-BY-SA 3.0)

After a three-week, 1,700-kilometer (roughly 1,050-mile) journey via Nantes, Bordeaux and Perpignan, Ninette and her family arrived in Marseille, where they took up residence in a hotel full of fellow exodians and Jews.

Already, the poisonous atmosphere caused by France’s defeat and humiliation had sparked a wave of antisemitism. Nonetheless, even as they travelled through Perpignan close to the Spanish border, Edgar, who had ties to the new Francoist regime, did not attempt to flee France.

The Riviera fell under the non-occupied “Free Zone,” which was governed from Vichy by the World War I hero Marshal Philippe Pétain. As Jay details, there was little to suggest Pétain — a onetime supporter of Alfred Dreyfus — harboured antisemitic inclinations. Indeed, alongside members of the International League Against Antisemitism, Edgar’s cousin, Louis, a senator, voted to grant Pétain authoritarian powers soon after the armistice.

But Pétain swiftly promoted antisemites to lead his new regime, creating a “permissive environment for antisemitism to flourish,” says Jay. In October 1940, the first antisemitic legislation barred Jews from certain professions, including teaching, journalism and the civil service, while sharply curtailing their role in the medical and legal professions. At Montgrand, Marseille’s grandest girls’ school, Ninette’s math teacher, Odette Valabrègue, was fired. Like the chief rabbi and French communal organizations, Edgar clung to the importance of the rule of law, even if the publication of now-infamous images of Pétain shaking hands with Hitler at Montoire in October 1940 led him to weep.

Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, right, shakes hands with head of Vichy France Philippe Petain, in occupied France, October 24, 1940. (AP)

Any lingering illusions about Pétain ended with the passage of further, sweeping antisemitic legislation in 1941, which, in a sharp break with the Third Republic’s avowed secularism, required Jews to register in a special census and expanded the list of professions, including banking, closed to them. The measures, which forced Edgar to relinquish his role as chief executive of La Maison, came as a “personal hammer blow,” writes Jay.

“Pétain’s first statute drove his friends from public service and the media and limited their participation in law and medicine, but he was not directly affected,” he says. “Now, Pétain was depriving him of his career and driving his family into a legal ghetto.”

Ninette later captured the psychological impact of the measures on her father, recalling: “Work was everything to Daddy, and it was torture for him to contemplate life without work.” Nor was the future much brighter for Edgar’s daughters, with university places and professional work all but closed to Jews.

The legal assault, the establishment of the new Commissariat Général aux Questions Juives, which began to plunder Jewish wealth, and the promotion of antisemitism in the media were accompanied by, and fed, rising Jew-hate on the streets. Ninette’s family heard the thud of the bomb that exploded in Marseille’s synagogue in May 1941.

Joining the resistance

No longer needing to be in Marseille, where La Maison had offices, Edgar moved his family to Cannes, which, although no less antisemitic, was filled with family and friends. Their new home, Villa Rochelongue, was a Belle-Époque seafront house near the Palm Beach Casino staffed with butlers and a cook, cleaner and gardener. Despite the war and food rationing — which led the family to keep a cow and rabbits — life “felt like the old Côte d’Azur,” says Jay. When not obsessing over her upcoming 15th birthday, Ninette penned diary entries about clothes, accessories and cosmetics, ballet, cinema trips, school and social life, sailing in the baie de Cannes, and her “passion” for football and volleyball.

Although somewhat cocooned by her parents, Ninette was not oblivious to the pernicious forces imperilling Vichy’s Jews. Her school headteacher, Marcelle Capron, was a résistante who later sheltered Jews and helped them flee. However, the school had its share of antisemitic teachers and pupils. Ninette, a self-described tomboy, fought girls who were members of Avant-Garde, the Pétainist youth movement.

Edgar, too, chose to resist, crossing what his daughter termed a “personal Rubicon” in spring 1943 by refusing to obey an order requiring all Jews to have the word “Juif” stamped in their ID and ration cards. While most French Jews followed their communal leaders’ advice to continue obeying Vichy’s laws, Edgar’s decision was, Ninette said, “the most significant moment of the war.”

‘Ninette’s War,’ by journalist John Jay. (Courtesy of Pegasus Books)

“He was defining himself as an outlaw, no easy decision for a man in late middle age with teenage daughters and a position in society,” she said. Decades later, Ninette discovered files in France’s Archives Nationales revealing that he been denounced, triggering a police investigation. Six months late, Edgar led his family to the mairie to have their papers stamped.

Both Edgar — who joined a coastal reception committee for a Royal Navy boat carrying British agents and collecting résistants — and Vivian began to engage in secret resistance activities.

However, perhaps the most powerful example of the family’s resistance came in its evolving relationship to Judaism. As the atmosphere darkened, Yvonne recognized her daughters would be more resilient in the face of societal antisemitism if they felt pride in their heritage. She taught them that they should be both proud of Jews’ traditions and achievements, and recognize that with success came a responsibility to those in need. Those lessons bore fruit. Ninette remembered that her reaction to having her ID stamped with “Juif” was not one of humiliation, but pride.

“My parents became more interested in Judaism,” Ninette recalled. “Others ran away; we moved closer.” During Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur in 1942, Edgar and his wife and children attended services for the first time since participating in family bat mitzvahs in the 1930s. “For Mummy and Daddy,” Ninette believed, “taking part in a service after decades of non-observance was an act of defiance.”

However, back in Paris, which was occupied by the Germans, tragedy was enveloping members of the family — including Edgar’s sisters, Louise and Alice, Alice’s daughter, Maryse, and her husband, disabled veteran André Schoenfeld. André, a holder of the Croix de guerre and Légion d’honneur, was arrested in 1941 by French police at a reunion dinner for World War I wounded and sent to the notorious Drancy internment camp.

News of André’s arrest hit Edgar and his family hard. “Nothing would ever be the same again,” believed Vivianne; France was treating its Jews as “abject rot, putrid larvae to be crushed.” The family also learned of the horrors which had unfolded during the Val d’Hiv roundup in July 1942, when some 8,000 Jews, almost 4,000 of whom were children, were held together in the sports arena in appallingly overcrowded conditions for five days before being deported. “It is horrible, demonic, something that grabs you round the throat so you can’t cry out,” a letter from an eyewitness, a social worker, circulating on the Riviera revealed. “I’ll try to describe what it looks like, but if you multiply whatever you understand by 1,000, it will still be only part of the reality.”

But, even at this moment, elements of the family’s past life continued: That August, Edgar took his family on holiday to Mont-Revard’s Grand Hôtel, a luxury Alpine retreat they had visited before the war. In her diary, Ninette recorded she had “a fantastic time” riding horses and playing tennis, croquet, golf and ping-pong.

As Jay says, it is important to note that the family was “in ignorance of a lot of what was going on in the north and … didn’t know what was happening once the transports [took] people to the east.” As late as 1943, most exodians, he suggests, believed that forced labour was the worst fate awaiting French Jews. When two Auschwitz escapees, Haïm Salomon and M. Honig, returned to Nice looking for their families and detailed the horrors they had witnessed to a local Jewish committee, their testimony was dismissed. The men, it was decided, must have lost their minds, with one of Edgar’s pre-war friends, who chaired the committee, telling a colleague: “Such atrocities… are not conceivable… in the middle of the 20th century.”

Ninette (right) and Viviane Dreyfus outside the Martinez Hotel in Marseille. (Courtesy of John Jay and Lady Swaythling and her family)

However, even as a series of Allied victories in 1942 pointed to defeat for the Nazis, it was clear that the danger had by no means passed. Indeed, for the family, the moment of maximum peril came in autumn 1943 when the Germans occupied the Riviera and, to prevent it from deserting the Axis, invaded Italy.

Going into hiding

Having acquired false identification papers forged by a former employee of La Maison, Edgar, his wife and daughters travelled by train from Cannes to Marseille and then onto Pau, close to the Pyrenees. “It was exciting to hold those false papers,” Ninette recalled. “I felt like a character in a book.”

Their escape highlights that, amid the betrayals and collaboration perpetrated by Vichy and its friends, there were also those who attempted to assist their fellow Jewish citizens. As the Germans searched for Edgar, the family’s neighbours in Cannes provided them with shelter.

In Pau, Pierre Barthe, a horse breeder who knew the family, hid them in his villa while hatching the audacious plan that would see them safely guided across the mountains to Spain by Henri Delhiart, one of the Pyrénées’ great smugglers. The escape was hardly without incident. Barthe purloined an ambulance and had Ninette pose as a tuberculosis patient to speed their passage to the French spa town Cambo-les-Bains, where Delhiart took the reins. He chose a bar frequented by German border guards as their rendezvous point, correctly calculating, as Jay writes, that “the one place Germans would not suspect as a starting point for an evasion would be their own watering hole.” And Ninette remembered later hiding in a ditch from Germans troops who passed so close that she felt as if their dogs were breathing on her. Luckily, as Delhiart had planned, the wet night ensured the dogs couldn’t pick up her scent.

An undated photo of smuggler Henri Delhiart, who guided the Dreyfus family across the Pyrénées mountains from France into a safer Spain. (Courtesy of John Jay and Lady Swaythling and her family)

After reaching the safety of Spain, the family spent the final months of the war lodging at Madrid’s luxurious Palace Hotel, socializing with Anglophile monarchists and dodging the attentions of German spies and fascist sympathizers.

In April 1945, nearly five years after her departure, Ninette returned to Paris. But the occupation had shattered the family forever. As they slowly discovered, André and Maryse were murdered at Auschwitz in August 1943. With her possessions and property expropriated by the Nazis, Aunt Louise died alone in her attic room in Paris in May 1943, while, alongside 327 children, Aunt Alice was deported to Auschwitz four weeks before the city’s liberation.

Later in life, Ninette worked to ensure that those who had helped the family were recognized. Thanks to her efforts, in 1980 Yad Vashem declared Barthe and his wife Righteous Among the Nations.

But she would never shake the feeling that French Jews had been betrayed by their own.

“Her disdain for her countrymen was even greater than her abhorrence of German Nazis,” Jay writes. “The Germans were foreigners; the French were her people, yet they had turned their backs on her and worse during the years in which she came of age.”

https://www.timesofisrael.com/nazi-era-teen-girls-diary-charts-unraveling-of-france-and-her-prominent-jewish-family/

Saturday, January 24, 2026

10-Year Diaries Track Life's Milestones, Personal Growth

From chosun.com

Domestic brands now produce multi-year diaries, replacing imports, as customers use them for parenting, anniversaries, and self-reflection 

“To everyone running the marathon of life, I present this diary. … Feel free to use it as a parenting diary, prayer notes, gratitude journal, or exercise log. Whatever it may be, please leave a 10-year record that only you can write. That story will become a book that no one can ever break.”

A 10-year diary with thickness comparable to an encyclopedia. The cover displays the numbers 2026-2035. /Courtesy of Bamui Seomjeong

When ordering a diary at the “Night Bookstore” in Daesin-dong, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, a letter like this is enclosed. The diary’s cover, as thick as an encyclopaedia, bears the numbers 2026–2035. This diary is a “10-year diary” to be used from this year until 2035. Opening the page marked January 24, there are sections listing 10 years from 2026 to 2035. As you fill the diary, you can glance at how you spent the same date last year, the year before, and so on, spanning a decade.

Kim Mi-jeong, 49 years old, the store manager, said, “As a ‘stationery deokhu’ (hardcore fan) who loves collecting notebooks and fountain pens, I always visit bookstores or stationery shops when traveling abroad, which is where I first encountered the 10-year diary.” She added, “When I opened this independent bookstore, I thought many customers would share my love for records and stationery, so I decided to produce the 10-year diary.” The store has been creating and selling 10-year diaries with different designs every year since 2018.

                        Interior pages of a 10-year diary. One date spans 10 years. /Courtesy of Bamui Seomjeong

A few years ago, multi-year diaries like the “10-year diary” were rarely sold domestically, so many people imported them directly from German stationery brands like “Rhodia” or Japanese brands such as “Midori,” “Hobonichi,” and “NU.” Things have changed recently. Various domestic brands now release diaries that allow recording over multiple years, such as “5-year diaries” and “10-year diaries.” This year, 5-year diaries are particularly popular among those who prefer round numbers, as they can be used until 2030. Comedian Kim Young-chul also sparked interest by introducing the “5-year diary” on his YouTube channel late last year, saying, “This is something I’ve been doing really well in my life.” Those seeking shorter-term records often choose “3-year diaries.”

Ms. Jo, 45 years old, who recently left her 20-year career and is exploring new work, said, “In 10 years, I’ll be in my mid-50s, and I want to record and reflect on how I’ve changed over the decade.” She added, “Though there aren’t many entries yet in the first year, I feel excited and hopeful thinking that in three or five years, I’ll be able to look back at my past self.”

Ms. Lee, 35 years old, a working mother who had a child two years ago, purchased a “10-year diary” to document her growing child’s daily life. She said, “Even without special writing skills, the accumulation of daily life naturally becomes a splendid ‘parenting diary.’” She added, “Reading past entries, I can see not only my child’s growth but also how I’ve grown as a mother each year.”

Mr. Kim, 44 years old, who celebrated his 10th wedding anniversary this year, recently bought a 10-year diary as an anniversary gift. He said, “I gave the diary to my wife as a promise to do our best for the next 10 years.” He added, “When we look back on it during our 20th anniversary, it will hold great meaning.”

Kim Mi-jeong, who has been a long-time diary user before becoming a seller, said, “The charm of the 10-year diary is discovering your own patterns over time.” She explained, “In January and February, I actively use my mornings with many plans and resolutions, while in autumn, I often get sentimental. During busy periods, I sometimes leave the diary blank.” She added, “The 10-year diary offers an experience where the past, present, and future versions of myself continuously converse.”

https://www.chosun.com/english/national-en/2026/01/24/PXFKGSSTPBHIZCTFLZPHNMYDVI/

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Want to Keep Your Cool in 2026? Start a Parenting Journal

From psychologytoday.com

By J. Timothy Davis, Ph.D.

Why you keep repeating the same fight with your kid and a tool to help you stop


Key points

  • Parents and kids get stuck repeating the same fights because they can't see patterns when emotionally flooded.
  • A parenting journal reveals conflict patterns, what triggers struggles, and what works to calm them down.
  • The journal reveals your blind spots, helps you plan ahead to break the cycle, and processes painful emotions.
  • After a conflict, wait until calm, then write: What happened? What triggered you both? What helped? What hurt?

It’s January and many of us have made resolutions for 2026. If you have a challenging child, maybe you’ve made resolutions like: “This year I’m not going to yell. I’m going to keep my cool. We’re going to have a more peaceful home.”

Unfortunately, without calm parenting strategies and a plan, you’re probably going to find yourself having the same fights, feeling the same frustrations, and feeling like a bad parent because you keep losing your cool.

Why does this happen? Why do we get stuck in these repetitive, painful cycles? And more importantly, how do we finally break free?

Why Parents Keep Losing Their Cool

Years ago, I attended a talk where the speaker argued that happy couples have fewer than six big fights a year. A colleague next to me leaned over and quietly said, "I think most couples only have one fight.” He paused dramatically to set up his punch line: “They just repeat it over and over."

Family therapists understand that we tend to get swept up in the same bad patterns time and again. It may seem like a new fight, but if we look below the surface, it’s just the same old fight dressed up in different clothes.

In my work with challenging boys and their families, I see patterns of conflict repeated over and over.

Your kid melts down over being told to turn off the screen and do homework. You double down. They dig in harder. You raise your voice. Before you know it, everyone is feeling angry, upset, and bad about each other. You're left wondering how asking to put away the iPad turned into World War III. Again.

The details change, but the sequence is usually the same: you ask, your child resists, you hold firm, your child escalates, and soon everyone is emotionally flooded.

In my book Challenging Boys: A Proven Plan for Keeping Your Cool and Helping Your Son Thrive, I describe how to use a parenting journal to help you identify these painful patterns and understand what triggers them so you can finally begin to break free.

What Is a Parenting Journal?

The parenting journal is a positive discipline tool that helps you understand and interrupt these cycles. You're not writing a diary. You're collecting data on what actually happens so you can stop reacting and start planning. The parenting journal (which I detail extensively in Challenging Boys) works in three key ways.

It Reveals Hidden Patterns

While power struggles, explosions, and meltdowns occur in predictable circumstances and play out in very predictable ways, we often can’t see the patterns. This is because when we’re in them, we’re flooded with emotions that disrupt our thinking. Writing about bad events after they are over allows us to see the situation more objectively. The journal entries show:

  • What circumstances typically trigger our child
  • What triggers us during challenging moments
  • What things escalate the conflict
  • What calms the situation down

It Enables You to Plan

Identifying the patterns enables us to prepare for them. We can:

  • Proactively manage the situations that trigger our child in order to prevent a meltdown from occurring in the first place.
  • Do more of the things that our journal shows us help regulate our child, and less of what dysregulates them.
  • Proactively recognize and manage our own triggers, practicing emotion regulation so we don’t add fuel to the fire.

It Processes Painful Emotions

After a difficult interaction with our child, painful feelings linger, such as frustration, guiltanger, and helplessness. The journal allows us to process these emotions rather than bury them. Research on expressive writing (notably by James Pennebaker and colleagues) suggests that writing about upsetting experiences can help people process emotions and reduce stress.

Example: Tracy and Ryan

Here’s what this looks like in real life. Tracy, mom of a 14-year-old challenging boy, Ryan, used a parenting journal to get more objectivity on her repeated fights with Ryan over homework.

After writing about a few instances of the homework fight, Tracy was able to see that the meltdowns were triggered by Ryan’s executive functioning problems with working memory (he couldn’t remember his assignments) and organization (he didn’t get them recorded in his notebook), as well as intense anxiety about failing. Ryan’s strategy for dealing with this homework anxiety was to avoid doing it, which felt like defiance to Tracy.

Tracy also recognized her own "buttons" were being pushed. She could now see that Ryan reminded her of her brother. Tracy was terrified of Ryan having the lifelong struggles with work and relationships that her brother had. Her fear that Ryan would turn out like him was causing her to overreact in the present.

From her journal entries, she also discovered what doesn’t work. Her insistence on firm limits was actually intensifying Ryan’s anxiety and resistance. The limits also never led to homework getting done. Instead, they were leading to more undesirable behaviors. Ryan started lying that his homework was finished. He was also sneaking his laptop into his room at night and staying up late playing video games.

Tracy could now see what worked better. When she gave Ryan some time to unwind afterschool before asking him to do homework, she had more success.

Armed with information, Tracy was able to make her plan. Instead of taking a hardline with Ryan, she decided to give him time to unwind after school before suggesting that he start his homework. If he resisted, she was going to remind herself that he was probably anxious (not defiant) and, instead of setting a limit, she was going to offer to help. If she felt herself getting upset, she was going to remind herself that Ryan wasn’t her brother, that he was a 14-year-old boy having school problems. Finally, if a homework fight started up, she was going to drop her demand and let her husband, Bob, do the homework with Ryan later. Her journal entries revealed that Ryan often had an easier time getting work done with his dad.

This plan almost immediately led to less fighting, more homework getting done, and a better relationship between Tracy and Ryan.

How to Start Your Parenting Journal

After a challenging moment, wait until everyone's calm. Then take 5-10 minutes to jot down: What happened? What triggered your kid? What triggered you? What made it worse? What (if anything) helped?

Three entries are all it usually takes. By the third time you write about the homework battle or the morning meltdown, the pattern begins to emerge. That's when everything can start to change.

Your 2026 Resolution

This year, don't resolve to be perfect. Resolve to see clearly. Keep a parenting journal for the next month, because you can't change a pattern you can't see.

References

Davis, J. T. (2025). Challenging boys: A proven plan for keeping your cool and helping your son thrive. Rowman & Littlefield.

Pennebaker, J. W., & Smyth, J. M. (2016). Opening up by writing it down: How expressive writing improves health and eases emotional pain. Third edition. Guilford Press.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/challenging-kids/202601/want-to-keep-your-cool-in-2026-start-a-parenting-journal

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Quote of the Day by Anne Frank: ‘In the long run, the sharpest weapon of all is a kind and gentle spirit’

From economictimes.indiatimes.com

Synopsis

Anne Frank, a Jewish teenager in hiding during the Holocaust, documented her experiences in a diary filled with remarkable clarity and emotional intelligence. Despite the constant fear and confinement, her writings reveal an unwavering belief in humanity's moral strength. Her words, surviving her tragic death, continue to inspire with a message of kindness as a powerful force.


Despite her all-too-brief life, Annelies “Anne” Frank remains one of the most enduring voices of the 20th century. A teenager forced into hiding during the Holocaust, Anne became the human face of an unspeakable tragedy through the pages of her diary, written not as a historical document, but as the honest reflections of a young girl trying to make sense of a cruel world.

Anne and her family spent more than two years concealed in the “Secret Annex” in Amsterdam, a space that has since become one of the world’s most visited memorial sites. In confinement, under constant fear of discovery, Anne wrote with remarkable clarity, wit and emotional intelligence. She described herself as a “chatterbox,” often sounding like any other teenager, even as history closed in around her.

Anne never lived to see her 16th birthday. She died in a Nazi concentration camp, one among nearly six million Jews murdered during the Holocaust. Yet her words survived—carrying with them not hatred or vengeance, but an unwavering belief in the moral strength of humanity.

Today’s quote of the day by Anne Frank, the writer of The Diary of a Young girl: “In the long run, the sharpest weapon of all is a kind and gentle spirit.”

Meaning of the Quote

Written during one of the darkest chapters of human history, this line captures Anne Frank’s extraordinary optimism. At a time when violence, cruelty, and injustice defined daily life, she believed that kindness was not weakness but strength.

Anne’s “weapon” was not force or anger, but compassion—an inner resilience that refused to be destroyed by fear. The quote suggests that while hatred may dominate moments in history, it is empathy, decency, and moral courage that endure over time. For Anne, kindness was an act of quiet resistance.

Decades later, her words continue to resonate, reminding the world that even in the face of overwhelming darkness, a gentle spirit can leave a lasting mark—one stronger than any form of violence.

About Anne Frank and The Diary of a Young Girl


The Holocaust remains one of the darkest chapters in human history, documented through countless books and accounts. Among them, The Diary of a Young Girl stands apart for its honesty and emotional clarity. Written by Anne Frank, a 13-year-old Jewish girl in hiding, the diary offers a deeply personal view of life under Nazi persecution.

Anne began writing her diary on June 12, 1942, after receiving it as a birthday gift. The entries end abruptly on August 1, 1944, shortly before she and her family were arrested. Through her words, Anne records the fear, confinement, and daily struggles of living in hiding in Amsterdam after fleeing Nazi Germany.

What makes Anne’s writing remarkable is her ability to remain observant, thoughtful, and hopeful despite constant danger. She writes with the curiosity of a teenager, slowly growing aware of the hatred and violence surrounding her. Her reflections reveal both the innocence of youth and a striking emotional maturity shaped by war and intolerance.

Anne and her family were eventually captured and deported to concentration camps. She died before her 16th birthday. Her father, Otto Frank, the only family member to survive, later published her diary in 1947.

Today, The Diary of a Young Girl is regarded as one of the most important first-hand accounts of World War II, translated into more than 60 languages and read by millions worldwide. Anne Frank’s voice continues to remind readers of the human cost of hatred—and the enduring strength of hope.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/us/news/quote-of-the-day-by-anne-frank-in-the-long-run-the-sharpest-weapon-of-all-is-a-kind-and-gentle-spirit/articleshow/126475058.cms?from=mdr
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