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Anne Frank, ICE, and Gaza: Why her diary is more urgent than ever

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Anne Frank was 15 years old when she died in a Nazi concentration camp. Yet her words outlived her body. Words scribbled in a diary from a secret attic in Amsterdam became one of the world’s most powerful mirrors.

This summer, I found myself in Amsterdam for Mindvalley U. By chance, my Airbnb was on the street next to Anne Frank’s house. Each morning, I’d step outside and see the same canals, the same cobblestones, and the same rooftops Anne may have glimpsed in stolen moments when she dared peek out from her hiding place.

A few mornings later, I opened the news and froze. The Diary of Anne Frank had just been banned in Florida schools under new book-ban laws. Imagine that. In 2025, one of the most important human documents ever written—the testimony of a teenage Jewish girl hiding from Nazi genocide—was deemed “inappropriate” for children to read.

The synchronicity hit me hard. I was standing before the building where those words were written. Words that survived Anne, even though she did not. Words that outlived war, genocide, and cruelty—only to be silenced again today by politicians who fear truth more than hatred.

And this got me thinking.

If Anne Frank were alive today, what would she say about America? About Israel & Gaza?

What I’m about to share may feel uncomfortable—but Anne’s words demand we face discomfort.

Who was Anne Frank

Anne Frank was born in Frankfurt in 1929. When the Nazis rose to power, her family fled to Amsterdam, hoping to escape persecution. In 1942, when deportations began, they went into hiding in a small annex behind her father’s office. For over two years, Anne, her sister Margot, her parents Otto and Edith, and four others lived in silence, relying on the courage of Dutch friends who smuggled them food and news.

Anne wasn’t just a symbol. She was a teenager—funny, sharp, sometimes rebellious, and always observant. She dreamed of being a journalist. She once wrote, “I want to go on living even after my death.” And, tragically, she did—not through her life, but through her words.

In August 1944, they were betrayed. The Gestapo stormed the annex. The Franks were deported to Westerbork, then Auschwitz, and finally Anne and Margot to Bergen-Belsen. In early 1945, both sisters died of typhus—just weeks before liberation. Anne was 15.

Only Otto Frank survived. After the war, Miep Gies, one of the helpers, handed him Anne’s diary. He published it, fulfilling her dream. Today, it has sold over 30 million copies and been translated into more than 70 languages.

Anne’s body was silenced. But her voice became immortal.

Anne’s words in today’s world

Anne once wrote:

“Terrible things are happening outside. Poor, helpless people are being dragged out of their homes. Families are torn apart. Children come home from school to find that their parents have disappeared.”

She was describing Nazi roundups in Amsterdam.

But doesn’t that sound eerily like ICE raids in America today? Parents taken in the middle of the night. Children left crying, bewildered, abandoned. Different time, different uniforms—but the same cruelty.

Anne also wrote:

“We are chained to one spot, without rights, a thousand obligations… waiting for the inevitable end.”

That could be the voice of Gaza today. Entire families locked in. Starved. Bombed. Denied freedom of movement. Children asking, “Why must we suffer simply because of who we are?”

Her words, written 80 years ago, read like dispatches from the present. History is not past. It is a loop—unless we break it.

A hard, controversial mirror

Anne’s diary teaches us to look at cruelty honestly, no matter where it comes from. And one thing history proves: atrocities don’t start with bullets. They start with words. 

Dehumanizing language always comes first.

So let’s talk about Gaza, as uncomfortable as this may seem. 

Consider the echoes:

  • Nazi leadership (1943): Heinrich Himmler at Posen: “I am referring here to the evacuation of the Jews, the extermination of the Jewish people….”
  • Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (2023): On the Palestinian town of Huwara: “[Huwara] should be wiped out. I think the State of Israel should do it.”
  • Hitler, Mein Kampf: Jews as “the typical parasite, a sponger who, like an infectious bacillus, keeps spreading.” Nazi propaganda routinely cast Jews as vermin.
  • Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant (2023): Announcing a siege of Gaza: “There will be no electricity, no food, no fuel… We are fighting human animals and we are acting accordingly.”
  • Nazi propaganda (Goebbels echoing Hitler): Jews blamed collectively for war, threatened with “extermination.”
  • Israeli President Isaac Herzog (2023): “It is an entire nation out there that is responsible….” — words widely criticized as endorsing collective punishment.
  • Nazi euphemisms: “Evacuation” as code for extermination.
  • Israeli Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu (2023): Suggesting a nuclear strike on Gaza was “one of the options.”

Different contexts. Different scales. But the same pattern.

Dehumanize → Justify → Destroy.

Anne Frank’s words remind us: when we hear this language, it is never “just rhetoric.” It is the runway to cruelty.

You see, cruelty always begins the same way: when leaders tell us to fear “the other.”

Fear the immigrant.

 Fear the refugee. 

Fear the neighbor who looks different. 

Fear the people beyond your border.

That is the oldest political trick in the book. And it works—unless we refuse to buy it.

Anne Frank didn’t write her diary so we could cry in museums. She wrote it so we could recognize her suffering in others—and have the courage to stop it.

Why giving people a chance matters

This message hit me with even greater force because, while in Amsterdam, I also had a chance encounter.

I bumped into a young Syrian man who once worked for me back in 2016. At the time, he was a refugee in Malaysia. He and his friend had escaped a country torn apart by war. One had seen his home blown to rubble. The other had lost a brother when a bomb fell on the very place his brother was resting.

Both had lived through horrors most of us can barely imagine. And yet, when I met them, I didn’t just see refugees. I saw brilliant young minds. I saw hope, determination, and resilience.

That year, I had an idea for a new learning model called Quest and needed someone to build the app. These two young Syrians built it in record time. That app became the Mindvalley app—today used by millions worldwide and even featured in 200,000 Apple stores on the iPad.

Yes, our app was built by Syrians. Yes, it was built by refugees who were given a chance.

Anne never got her chance. But when we give people that chance, look what can happen.

This is why I am so adamant about this message. When politicians tell you to fear refugees, or immigrants, or minorities, they’re not just lying. They are robbing humanity of its future.

The rule we must all live by

If there’s one rule we must all live by, it’s this:

The moment a leader tells you to fear refugees, minorities, or immigrants, you are looking at a tyrant.

Do not believe them. Do not reward their fear with your silence—or your vote.

Because fear divides. And division always leads to cruelty.

What the world needs now is unity.

Unity across stripes, colors, races, and ethnicities. Unity across cultures, religions, and especially across borders.

Because the only way we solve the greatest challenges facing humanity—from climate change to war to poverty—is to remember this truth:

We are one humanity.

And kindness cannot stop at the invisible lines of race, religion, or border.

The higher vision

Anne Frank once wrote:

“In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.”

That may be the most extraordinary line ever written. She believed it while hiding from people who wanted her dead.

If Anne could believe in human goodness then, we can believe in it now.

Let’s prove her right.

Let’s choose compassion over cruelty.
Let’s stand up for one another across borders.
Let’s silence the voices of fear not by shouting back but by choosing unity again and again.

Because Anne’s diary isn’t just a warning.

It’s a torch.

And it’s in our hands now.

So here’s what we can collectively do. 

Stand for unity. Across color. Across race. Across borders. Across religions.

When you hear fear, answer with love.

When you hear division, answer with solidarity.

When a politician uses scapegoating, vote the other way. 

The only way to honor Anne is to prove her right—that humanity is good at heart. 

And that goodness becomes real when we act.

Because history doesn’t just happen to us. It is written by our choices—and our silence.

I’d like to hear from you: Drop a comment below—let’s create a conversation around unity, compassion, and what it means to stand for humanity in our time.

Vishen Lakhiani signature

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Founder and CEO of Mindvalley

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Vishen

Vishen is an award-winning entrepreneur, speaker, New York Times best-selling author, and founder and CEO of Mindvalley: a global education movement with millions of students worldwide. He is the creator of Mindvalley Quests, A-Fest, Mindvalley University, and various other platforms to help shape lives in the field of personal transformation. He has led Mindvalley to enter and train Fortune 500 companies, governments, the UN, and millions of people around the world. Vishen’s work in personal growth also extends to the public sector, as a speaker and activist working to evolve the core systems that influence our lives—including education, work culture, politics, and well-being.

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1,254 Responses

  1. Thank you for speaking out and saying what is on people’s mind. A lot don’t want to make these kind of statements for fear of retaliation etc. I am happy you did, it shows courage and bravery

  2. Thank you for standing up and publishing this article. Everything is completely true that you say and this is a very scary and tenuous time for the United States. I have to believe that we are going to come through this because of the level of consciousness on the planet now. However, we need to stand up and not think anybody else is going to do it for us.

  3. We need to turn their own weapons back on them — confusion itself. Confusion is one of the most powerful tools of control; when used with precision, it can make people act in ways they’d never expect. They already use it constantly, playing games on levels that most people can’t even see, let alone attempt to understand.

  4. Comparing Ice to Nazis is disgusting. Nothing similar in any way. I no longer want to be part of this community.

  5. Even more unfair is the comparison between the Israeli government and the Nazi regime. Israel has never, in its history, decided to start a war against its neighbors. Rather, when surrounding countries decided to wipe Israel out, it fought back. Not for revenge, but for survival, because Israel has no other land to protect its people, unlike its enemies.
    Now, you are speaking about the harsh reality of war, and I agree this is tragic. But what chance can Israel give to its enemy (Hamas, not the people of Gaza, not the innocent civilians) when that enemy’s only wish is to make Israel, and every single person living there, disappear?

  6. I have to say that, even though I agree that the atrocities of war, especially those against civilians, are unacceptable, I feel very uncomfortable with the confusion often made between Gaza’s people and the terrorist organization ruling Gaza, Hamas.

  7. YES! YES! YES! All of this, yes!! This kind of thinking and message is what the world needs more of right now more than ever. Thank you, Vishen, for being courageous enough to articulate and share your thoughts. Spread love, not hate.

  8. Only certain *versions are banned to certain *age groups. I wouldn’t want my Grammer school age children reading articles in Playboy magazine even if true.

  9. Amen! Thank you for speaking out about this. Thank you for finding positive action amidst all this craziness on both sides of the ocean with a rise in far right ‘acceptance’ and zero tolerance of protests and protesters peacefully demonstrating for the good of humanity. I’d love to hear your views on the arrests of elderly protesters in the UK demonstrating against Israel’s genocide if Gaza and your thoughts on activism when a US soldier has just been identified as a threat to the US for posting against Israel. Can you share more practical tips for dealing with the helplessness and repeat trauma of seeing people blown to bits day after day; how to use social media to not only voice support – but to influence those who have been taken in by our governments’ total lies and propaganda and comments of ‘its complicated’ when actually they’re purely motivated by greed, making money for the rich and seem to have zero humanity left. We’re being gaslit daily and it’s mentally exhausting! We’re 6 weeks short of three years of devastating evil and brutality. Please share guidance for how we come out of this stronger and more empowered than ever. Thank you.

  10. Vishen, thank you for sharing this. Frankly, thank you for having the guts to do so. I found it very moving. Paragraphs like this: “Anne Frank didn’t write her diary so we could cry in museums. She wrote it so we could recognize her suffering in others — and have the courage to stop it.” I could feel heart in every sentence and I thank you for being one of the relative few with a large platform willing to shine a light, in such a way, on what has become one of the world’s most devastating collective abandonments of humanitarianism. And that has not been for want of trying on the part of many for whom, for more years than the last two, have nevertheless been left feeling helpless and impotent with this particular issue. But posts such as this do help us return back to love – and hope.

    I know many will disagree. But this is about getting it right, not being right – to echo Brené Brown’s sentiments. I think if more people could understand that and the subtle but powerful difference in there —the former is about Oneness and the latter is about “youness”. And that’s the irony of what happens when we are forcibly pitted one against the other – we see infighting overshadowing the real issue and the people in need.

    Cruelty doesn’t need to be critically assessed or politically defined. We don’t need people in power to confirm it. It is what it is: cruelty. And we need not fear calling it out. Those who are trapped in terrors of their own making may try to silence us from saying so, but all said and done, for that, we must ultimately have compassion because they clearly are also suffering.

  11. I’m feeling quite compelled to share my thoughts
    I am an Israeli
    The days after October 7, I found myself reading the quotes of Anne Frank and even posted one on Instagram
    In those difficult days I found myself encouraged by her words, just as you did
    As a person who believes in good just as she did, just as you are, it’s very complicated to explain the depth of this conflict.
    Unfortunately, I am not a journalist. I’m not sure I can find the words to explain, how could it be that we live in a world, in a reality, that there are people who live right next to you, that you most definitely don’t want to come face to face with
    I wish for no one, to ever feel the fear of death from people
    So I will say, that I agree with you on many things you wrote, just like in the Charlie Chaplin’s speech in the great dictator..
    And yet, compering Israeli politicians to HITLER is a vile act, especially when it’s derived from the words of a Jewish girl
    Am Israel Hay

  12. Republicans may not be the solutions to all of American Problems, but the Democrats are the cause. Look at history again. It’s always the division and power struggle of the politicians but we as Americans can unify if we build communities that are safe, compassionate and visionary.

  13. Kære Vishen
    Tak for dine velvalgte ord. Vi har i den grad brug for, at stå sammen om en fredelig verden. Historien gentage sig i disse år og der er så mange lighedspunkter fra tiden op mod 2. Verdenskrig . Vi må ikke lade dette ske igen.Tak fordi du bruger din store platform. Åse

  14. Although I agree with the idea that suffering must stop, history is on a loop. I would advise you to not put a point of view on a deceased Jewish person. The attacks on the Jews during the holocaust were not provoked. There are hostages still being held in Gaza. These are people, too, who are suffering greatly; their families are suffering greatly. I would absolutely agree that Gaza is a humanitarian disaster, and the response from Israel is not proportionate. And yes, there are evil people in power on both sides of the conflict. Still, I think your logic overlooks many factors. Anne is silenced, as she is not able to express her opinion on the matter. She may have had a more nuanced view. We will never know because she was murdered.

  15. Well said Vishen. We must fight fascism whenever and wherever it raises its ugly head. “Evil prevails when good men do nothing” (For men, read humans!).

  16. Thank you for this important mail! Thank you for describing and talking about what is going on. Thank you 🙏
    Let love be our leader
    We are all one

  17. Vishen, Business leaders are often forced to choose silence in the face of issues like this but I am inspired by your courage and clarity. That’s what real leadership requires. Thank you for modeling this.

  18. OK, I just did a quick search to find out why the book was pulled for review. It wasn’t banned, it is under review. You could do the search yourself on Google. This is why: Apparently, there was a graphic novel produced telling Anne Frank’s story that had some nudity in it. Too young girls, exploring their body, looking at each other’s breasts. Not sure what that has to do with Anne Frank‘s story, but as we’ve seen in movies and on television, there are people today who want to add sexuality to everything. I’m not sure how trying to portray Ann Frank as a lesbian has anything to do with furthering her story.

    Your article shows an extreme bias where you’re comparing what’s happening in the US to the Nazis. I’m not so sure that that’s fair. The people being deported are people who entered the country illegally to begin with without proper documentation or screening. I went to Europe this summer. I’m only allowed to be in Europe for 90 days as a tourist. I must leave before the 90 days are up, or I’m in trouble. If I want to stay there, I have to go through an application process, perhaps buy a house and get a resident visa. Obviously, they do a background check. Are you calling Europeans Nazis as well? Look around the world, it’s the same in every country, even in Asian countires. There are rules and there needs to be rules to screen out people who might be foreign criminals, or simply illegitimate refugees. And a country can only absorb so many immigrants per year. And it’s been like that forever. 100+ years ago, immigration to the United States people went through Ellis Island where they were held in quarantine for a period of time and vetted some were sent back most were let in.

    So what’s not inflame what’s going on for political reasons. The truth is, the United States appears to be going back to enforcing its immigration rules after a period of time when there were no rules and millions entered without any vetting.

    Dial it back and try and understand what is going on before jumping to conclusions or inserting a bias.

  19. Thank you Vishen for your thoughtful and unifying vision.
    We are living in a time when our choices could not be clearer. Polarization, separation, division and destruction is blatantly obvious. Contrast that against a growing awareness in the “goodness of humanity” and our interconnectedness with one another and with this beautiful planet.
    We can choose unity and it begins with the healing of our own traumas and the resulting expansion of love and peace within our hearts.
    I was struck by a passage written by consciousness expert David R Hawkins. The answers to our questions are either yes or Not Yes, meaning that there is only truth. A not yes (no) refers to the absence of truth, to illusion, to the unreal.

    May each of us turn to the truth that is written in the deepest aspects of our hearts. To remember and know our relationship with the infinite Creator of existence, known by many names.
    As we reject thr false light, the false matrix, we pivot and turn to the light of truth, our true nature and are guided by goodness.

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