In April 1940, a few months before Adolf Hitler ordered Jews in Germany to wear yellow stars, a 10-year-old girl in Amsterdam sent a postcard to her pen pal in Iowa.
“This picture shows one of the many old canals of Amsterdam,” she wrote. “But this is only one of the old city. There are also big canals and over all those canals are bridges. There are about 340 bridges within the city.”
In the annals of postcard writing, this one is not particularly memorable. Amsterdam, bridges, big canals. Standard pen pal fare. What makes this postcard noteworthy is the writer and the future she could not imagine.
It is signed … Anne Frank.
The postcard is included in a new book, “Anne Frank: The Collected Works,” a 733-page historical doorstopper that collects everything Anne wrote before her family was found hiding in an office annex in Amsterdam and taken to concentration camps. Only her father Otto survived.