Sex Ed: Anne Frank in Africa

Without telling us the punchlines, Dutch researchers announced this week the discovery of four dirty jokes papered over in Anne Frankโ€™s diary.

I taught the diary as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Malawi two decades ago, curious from the start why it was on the curriculum. My students faced a lifetime of grinding poverty, endemic corruption, and a grab bag of diseases. HIV/AIDS ravaged the country with a prevalence close to 40%.

Before cracking the cover, I wondered: How did these challenges compare to Anneโ€™s years in hiding to avoid Nazi capture? How could her experience possibly connect with that of my students?

The answer: Literature prevails because the particularities of time, place, and circumstance are subordinate to the general nature of humanity.

Providence Secondary School, where I taught for two years, is an all-girls school established by the Catholic Church in the wet, fertile land around the Mulanje massif. I had relatively small classesโ€”55 to a group, each girl a desk of her ownโ€”and an elite category of student.

They were smart and funny and lively and connected quickly with their peer from half a century earlier. Anneโ€™s movie star collection, check. Anneโ€™s difficulties with her sister, check. Anneโ€™s lack of privacy, snarky observations, even her keen self-awareness and introspection: check, check, and check.

But it was Anneโ€™s relationship with Peter, most of all, that kept my students on the edge of their seats. Anne is 13-15 years old during her concealment, charged years of development and burgeoning curiosity. Sheโ€™s confined with a boy 16-18. Intimacy is inevitable.

I donโ€™t recall now the exact passages that stirred my studentsโ€™ imagination. I just remember the close, hot classroom steaming over. I remember the quick, loud reactions in Chichewa at some passages and the heightened silence at others as they focused on what they read, wrestling with what they thought they understoodโ€”does she meanโ€ฆ that? The voice of a young girl becoming a woman, just as they were.

Anne brought a fun, witty, intelligent voice into our lives. Iโ€™d like to know what her concealed jokes might have been. My students would have appreciated reading those jokes, too.

Wonโ€™t the Dutch researchers please unveil the jokes, and let that voice from so long agoโ€”a voice at once innocent yet daringโ€”ring out just a little louder again?

 

 

 


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Comments

7 responses to “Sex Ed: Anne Frank in Africa”

  1. Beautifully written

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks John!

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  2. I love this

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Deepa Ramesh Avatar
    Deepa Ramesh

    Wow. *THIS* is why I found you so inspiring during Model School — the life you bring to stories.

    My favorite line: Literature prevails because the particularities of time, place, and circumstance are subordinate to the general nature of humanity.

    ________________________________

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Model school–we were all *hot*

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  4. Wow! The version I read must have been heavily expurgated! Was Anne Frank’s father really telling her dirty jokes – and was she really writing them in her diary? Well, that would certainly have appealed to my high school literature classes ๐Ÿ˜‰

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