• Type: Culture
    • User Rating  
  • NileGuide Expert tip:

    Visit the museum in the late afternoon to avoid the massive queue. At around 4pm there's few people in line, and one hour is more than enough time to visit the house since it now stands empty.


  • Description:

    • In summer, you may have to wait an hour or more to get in, but you shouldn't miss seeing and experiencing this house. It's a typical Amsterdam canal house, with very steep interior stairs where eight people from three separate families lived together in silence for more than 2 years during World War II. The hiding place Otto Frank found for his family, the van Pels family, and Fritz Pfeffer kept them safe until, tragically, close to the end of the war, when it was raided by Nazi forces and its occupants were deported to concentration camps. It was in this house that Anne, whose ambition was to be a writer, kept her famous diary as a way to deal with both the boredom and her youthful array of thoughts, which had as much to do with personal relationships as with the war and the Nazi terror raging outside. Visiting the rooms in which she hid is a moving and eerily real experience.

      During the war, the building was an office and warehouse, and its rooms are still as bare as they were when Anne's father returned, the only survivor of the eight onderduikers (divers, or hiders). Nothing has been changed, except that protective Plexiglas panels now protect the wall on which Anne pinned up photos of her favorite actress, Deanna Durbin, and of the little English princesses Elizabeth and Margaret. As you tour the small building, it's easy to imagine Anne's experience growing up in this place, awakening as a young woman, and writing down her secret thoughts.

      To avoid lines, get there as early as possible -- and while this advice isn't as useful as it used to be, because everybody is giving and heeding it, it should still save you some waiting time. A better, strategy if you're in town from mid-March to mid-September, when the museum is open until 9pm, is to go in the evening; it's usually quiet then. Next door, at no. 265-267, is a modern wing for temporary exhibits. A bronze sculpture of Anne stands on nearby Westermarkt.

    • © Frommer's 2013

    Awards:

    Frommer's
    Frommer's
    •  Very Highly Recommended 2009
    •  Very Highly Recommended 2010
    • Details
      • Contact:

      • visit website
      • tel: 020/556-7105
      • fax: +31 020-6207999
      • Address:

      • Prinsengracht 263
      • At Westermarkt
      • Amsterdam 1000 AS
      • Neighborhood:

      • Jordaan
      • Hours:

      • Mid-Mar to June and 1st 2 weeks Sept Mon-Fri 9am-9pm, Sat 9am-10pm; July-Aug daily 9am-10pm; mid-Sept to mid-Mar daily 9am-7pm (Jan 1 noon-7pm; Dec 25 noon-5pm, Dec 31 9am-5pm)
      • Strenuousness:

      • No Sweat

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