Timeline-191/WMG

Anne Frank grows up to become Europe's equivalent of Martin Luther King Jr.
By the 1960s, she's become a popular, respected writer, and she's one of the world's most prominent civil rights activist fighting for the rights of Europe's oppressed Jews, passively resisting antisemitic authorities with a series of peaceful sit-ins, protest marches, and bus boycotts. By the 1970s, she's won the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts. She eventually dies quietly, surrounded by her loving family, sometime around 2010.

Martin Luther King Jr becomes America's equivalent of Elie Wiesel
As a teenager, he survives a hellish stay in Camp Determination, and he writes a book about it as an adult. In subsequent decades, his book is used to educate the world about the horrors of the Population Reduction, and King becomes one of the world's foremost human rights activists, swearing to devote his life to speaking out against genocide and government oppression.