
The primary image is a screenshot from the video Memory of the Camps made by the British military as it liberated Belsen, see it here - https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/docu ... the-camps/
The top right inset is a photo of Anne Frank, and the lower right inset is from the primary image. I uploaded the two inset photos to Grok and asked - are the two girls in the uploaded image the same person?
Grok's response -
The primary image is of a group of Jewish children that have become known as the diamond children because their parents were Amsterdam diamond merchants. The older woman is Luba Tryszynska, who served as nurse to the children. She wrote a book 'Luba: the Angel of Belsen'. The group traveled to Amsterdam after the war and met the Queen. They held reunions as late as 1995.Yes, the two images depict the same person: a young girl widely recognized as Anne Frank. The top photo is a clear, high-resolution black-and-white portrait showing her with short dark hair, a slight smile, and looking directly at the camera. The bottom photo appears to be a heavily pixelated or noise-distorted version of the exact same portrait, with the same facial features, expression, pose, and clothing details visible despite the degradation. This kind of pairing is often used in demonstrations of image processing, compression artifacts, or restoration techniques.
I wrote to the Anne Frank center in Amsterdam and asked them what they knew about the girl in the photo. They replied that they were not familiar with the photo.