Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

German family uncovers Nazi past, vows to donate $11.3M

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BERLIN — One of Germany’s richest families, whose company owns a controllin­g interest in Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Panera Bread, Pret a Manger and other wellknown businesses, plans to donate $11.3 million to charity after learning about their ancestors’ enthusiast­ic support of Adolf Hitler and use of forced laborers under the Nazis, according to a report Sunday.

In a four-page report, the Bild newspaper reported that documents uncovered in Germany, France and the U.S. reveal that Albert Reimann Sr. and Albert Reimann Jr. used Russian civilians and French POWs as forced laborers.

Family spokesman Peter Harf, who is one of two managing partners of the Reimann’s JAB Holding Co., said recent internal research confirmed Bild’s findings.

“It is all correct,” he told the newspaper. “Reimann senior and Reimann junior were guilty; they belonged in jail.”

The father and son, who died in 1954 and 1984, did not talk about the Nazi era and the family had thought that all of the company’s connection­s to the Nazis had been revealed in a 1978 report, Harf said.

But after reading documents kept by the family, the younger generation began to ask questions and commission­ed a University of Munich historian in 2014 to examine the Reimann history more thoroughly, Harf said.

The expert presented his preliminar­y findings to the Reimann children and grandchild­ren, as well as Harf, several weeks ago, he said.

“We were all ashamed and turned as white as the wall,” he said. “There is nothing to gloss over.”

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