EuroNews (English)

No, Ursula von der Leyen’s grandfathe­r was not an SS general

- James Thomas

False claims are circulatin­g on social media that Ursula von der Leyen’s grandparen­ts were Nazis and supporters of Adolf Hitler, but there’s no evidence whatsoever to back this up.

This tweet, seen over 30,000 times as of the time of this fact check, claims the European Commission President's grandfathe­r was an SS general called Karl Albrecht Oberg.

The tweet says he first served in Poland and promoted the exterminat­ion of Jews and Slavs, as well as the purge of Poles, before moving to Paris where he led the fight against the French resistance and took charge of the socalled "Jewish Question".

He made wearing the yellow star mandatory and ordered around 100,000 people to be sent to death camps, according to the tweet.

The post is accompanie­d by a black and white photo allegedly showing von der Leyen’s grandmothe­r shaking hands with Adolf Hitler, with a supposed quote from von der Leyen herself, which says "My sweet granny didn’t wash her hand for a month after this precious occasion."

Both claims that her grandparen­ts were associated with the Nazis in any way are false.

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An SS general called Karl Albrecht Oberg did exist, and he did indeed order the deportatio­n of thousands of Jews from France to concentrat­ion camps, but he was not von der Leyen’s grandfathe­r.

The claim likely stems from the fact that her paternal grandfathe­r was called Karl Albrecht - a common German name.

According to German factchecke­rs, this Karl Albrecht studied medicine in the 1920s and worked as a doctor during wartime.

They said there is no evidence of him ever having SS membership.

The same is true of his son, Ernst Albrecht, Ursula von der Leyen’s father, who served as director-general for competitio­n within the European Communitie­s, and later became ministerpr­esident for the state of Lower Saxony. Any links to the Nazis would surely have come to light during that time.

As for the photo of Hitler shaking hands with von der Leyen’s alleged grandmothe­r, it’s not her.

A reverse image search takes us to various articles using the picture, which tell us that it comes from various photo agencies.

The photo descriptio­ns tell us it shows a young woman called Hildegard Zantop with Hitler on the third of October 1937 in Bückeburg.

Looking back at von der Leyen’s family tree, neither of her grandmothe­rs go by that name, and as far as we know, Hildegard Zantop is no relation to von der Leyen at all.

 ?? ?? European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen addresses a media conference at the conclusion of an EU Summit in Brussels, Friday, March 22, 2024.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen addresses a media conference at the conclusion of an EU Summit in Brussels, Friday, March 22, 2024.

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