“I can shake off everything as I write. My sorrows disappear, my courage is reborn” (Anne Frank)
Nothing to argue with here. It isn’t a quote given as advice to others, it is Anne Frank talking about herself. Considering the conditions under which she wrote most of her work, it is incredible that she packed in so much of life, of emotion, of philosophy.
She had done considerable rewriting of her diaries with a view to publishing them after the war but of course the job was left unfinished. Happily for future generations the numerous notebooks were not destroyed. Less happily, and fewer than a hundred years later, we are living in a world where too many people seem to thirst for war – maybe they have no imaginations, maybe they never read, maybe they believe that war will never touch them. And whilst they thirst for the bloodshed of others they justify the starving and brutalising of children Anne Frank’s age and younger.
I don’t believe there can be a serious argument that says we don’t all have much to learn from Anne Frank – I don’t just mean this quote and I don’t just mean writers and writing – but looking around the world today it is distressingly easy to find people who have learnt nothing at all.
An interesting and possibly prophetic post, Penny. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteHistory is riddled with civilisations that have arisen, reached a peak of development, and then vanished when overused resources have run out. Our current technological civilisation is rapidly running out of certain essential resources. How long, I wonder, before those shortages result in war? Perhaps the signs you observe in those who apparently seek war are the first indications of the eventual disintegration of our era of civilisation.