Excavation On A Nazi Concentration Camp Discovers Necklace That Links To The Late Anne Frank

A Nazi concentration camp has recently been excavated by Archaeologists, and there they have discovered a pendant to a necklace that is similar to the one that belonged to Anne Frank. It has been discovered that there were only two of those pendants ever made, and the owner might have been connected to Anne Frank in some way.

Necklace Identical To Anne Frank's Discovered; Belonged To Another Young Jewish Girl

Archaeologists have been digging up and excavating the previously known Nazi concentration camps in hopes to find more information about that time. Upon excavation, they have discovered a pendant that was wildly identical to the necklace that was owned by Anne Frank, the young teenage girl famous for writing a diary about the time she and her family hid from the Nazis. The pendant that was discovered was engraved with three stars of David and an initial for God in Hebrew. It is believed to belong to a young Jewish girl by the name of Karoline Cohn, who also died in the camp. She is believed to be connected to Anne Frank since upon study, Cohn was also from where Anne Frank originated, in Frankfurt.

Now, the researchers are continuing to figure out the family tree or the connection between the two, which would explain why they had identical necklaces during the time they were captured before being tortured to death in the Nazi concentration camp. Nevertheless, there is a big possibility that those two are definite related in more ways than one. Thus, the researchers continue to dig up more findings in the area that could answer their questions.

Archaeologists Continue To Dig Up Information During The Holocaust In 1943

The archaeologists have been digging up the former camp in Poland, in the interest of creating a novel on the research about the Holocaust. Even though there has already been information gathered on the subject, there are still more findings to be discovered every time that have not yet been known before. The Nazis have tried their best to cover up their crimes when the camp was destroyed in 1943, yet researchers up until now are determined to find out more about their vicious ways during their time.

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