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Anne Frank is such an important figure in world history, literary history, women's history, and certainly children's history. Some other great resources as you put her life in a both a historical and currently relevant context for the modern classroom:
A link to the Anne Frank House and Museum in Amsterdam;
A link to the American Anne Frank Center;
The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center (Chicago Public School teachers, have you taken a field trip?);
The Teaching Tolerance website, full of great articles, lesson plans and resources for fostering compassion and anti-bias in your classroom community;
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KING MATT THE FIRST, by Janusz Korczak, the story of a boy who runs a country of children by a Polish pediatrician and educator who ran children's homes/orphanages during WWII and who wrote this cliffhanging read-aloud for his charges. He was ultimately lost at Treblinka, along with the children he refused to abandon;
Doris Orgel's classic THE DEVIL IN VIENNA, a realistic, relatable piece of intermediate fiction about two best friends who find division and danger grow between them as the war gains momentum;
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HANA'S SUITCASE by Becky Levine, the story of the past and present colliding a Japanese woman's seeks to discover the identity of a child killed at Auschwitz, and bring her back to "life" for the children who visit the Tokyo Holocaust Education Resource Center. The true story reads like a puzzle, solved through diligence and love;
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The movie PAPER CLIPS, an empowering and beautiful true story of children in a rural Tennessee school who create a moving Holocaust Memorial, suitable for classroom viewing;
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And for my young readers, I did write a novel on the subject, VIVE LA PARIS, about an African American girl who first learns about the Holocaust from her piano teacher, and has to use the lessons to be her brother's keeper in modern times.
Even though it's not about WWII, I want to remind you of Ruby Bridges' unforgettable photobiography for children, THROUGH MY EYES, candidly told from the point of view of one of the girls who desegregated American schools, who dealt with terrifying prejudice in her own time. Ruby and Anne...two great young women who fought for a better world! A memorable lesson plan might be to compare and contrast their times and their trials, and to celebrate both of their contributions.
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Hope these links are good for starters. The events of the historical period of WWII and any context of injustice are emotionally tough to teach, but as the adage goes, those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it, and that's the last thing we want for our children or any children. In the media, children are increasingly likely to hear degrading remarks in the adult interest of creating "the other." Help fortify children against the disease and dangers of hatred and bigotry with knowledge, and the ability to recognize it where it's born. In honor of Anne!!!