The University of South Carolina will open North America’s first Anne Frank partner site and the world’s fourth Anne Frank Center.
The Anne Frank Center on campus will be free of charge and open for guided group tours starting on Sept. 15, it was announced on Tuesday. Visitors will learn about the young Jewish diarist’s story and legacy through photos, videos and original artifacts, all supplied by the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam.
USC said the center “seeks to inspire our commitment to never be bystanders but instead to stand up together against anti-Semitism, bigotry and inequality wherever it may exist today.”
The new center will also mention the Jim Crow era and civil-rights movement in the United States, as well as the story of Emmett Till, an African-American 14-year-old who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955 at the same age as Frank when she was captured by the Nazi Germans.