She refers to them as a gang to demonstrate to her
students, almost all of whom are gang members or most likely future gang members, that
gangs abuse power and that they do not improve a community. She knows that by
introducing them in such a way, her students will be interested, and then as she starts
to tell them of the atrocities that the Nazi "gang" committed against Anne Frank and her
family, she hopes that her students will start to consider what their involvement in a
gang might do to the innocent.
Similarly, after she builds
up the Nazis as one of the most powerful gangs in history, she can demonstrate through
Miep Gies (the woman who helped hide Anne and her family) that even someone who appears
to be weak and insignificant can stand up against a huge gang.
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