In their work, the Centre uses the biography and the diary of Anne Frank as a tool to promote tolerance and to educate people about the consequences of Nazism, discrimination and racism.
Since the 2010s, the centre has expanded its activities on human rights education and facilitating dialogue between people from different backgrounds, social status and lifestyle.
Since 2003, adults and young people have had the opportunity to explore the permanent multimedia exhibition “Anne Frank: A Girl from Germany”, guided by their own interest.
Under his leadership, the centre expanded its activities with a multimedia learning laboratory for young people, two counselling units for victims of right-wing violence,[2] as well as with temporary exhibitions, for example on The Holocaust in comics.
The centre offers activities for the general German society, including people with a personal history of immigration, such as Muslims in Germany.