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Rethinking relationships with loved ones after visiting Anne Frank Museum

Alyssa Homeniuk of Winnipeg, who is in Europe for the 70th anniversary of VE-Day, reflects on how well she knows her loved ones after a trip to the Anne Frank Museum.

Winnipeg student Alyssa Homeniuk reflects on what VE-Day and WW II means to her generation

Grade 10 and 11 students from St. John's-Ravenscourt School are in Europe for the 70th anniversary of VE-Day. (Matt Henderson)

Walking thoughthe Anne Frank Museum and seeing the various remnants of herfamily'stwo years of hiding from Nazis,I found that I wasn't affected most by the pictures or the sheer amount of space they livein, but by the video footage of Holocaust survivors.

As you exit the Annex, pages of her journal are displayed in glass cabinets,neatly written on fragile pink parchment.

On the left wall isan interview of Anne's father, Otto, as he talks about his daughter and his time in the concentrationcamps.

Alyssa Homeniuk is a tenth-grade student at St. John's Ravenscourt School in Winnipeg and a blogger, aspiring journalist and a self-described "history nerd." Alyssa is in the Netherlands with her school for the 70th anniversary of VE-Day. (Alyssa Homeniuk)
What struck me most about OttoFrank'sinterview was that after days of reading her journal, he realized that he didn't know his daughter.

Loving someone so much and spending all of your time together,you would like to think you know them,but we are forced to realize that our want for privacyas humans overtakes every aspect of our lives.

If you were in such a situation, would you know that this loved one felt trapped in their mind or longed to make as much noise as they wanted? Probably not.

We humans are an introspective bunch.Otto Frank was just one person to point this out. So here's my question: how well do we know one another?

Now, I'm not saying you should know everything about strangers, but certainly the people you're close to.

Even so,I won't spill all my beans.But maybe given the safe space of a journal torecord our thoughts, we let our candour run rampant and all of our walls go down.

Privacy is golden,but should we be like Otto not knowing whatwas important to his daughter, unable to talk about itor really knowAnne?

I wish that you know your loved ones like Otto wanted to,and I wish that Anne Frankknew that even in the Annex,her story would be as appreciated and iconic as it is.


Alyssa Homeniuk is one of two students blogging for CBC Manitobaabout theirtrip to Europe for the 70th anniversary of VE-Day.