The Guardian (USA)

Rausings targeted in protest against Berlin bookshop eviction

- Philip Oltermann in Berlin

A UK-based Swedish multibilli­onaire family known for their philanthro­pic donations to literature, libraries and other arts, have become the target of angry protests in Berlin over the eviction of a community bookshop from a counter-culture neighbourh­ood.

The bookseller Kisch & Co, which has operated for the last 24 years from a historic building on one of the main thoroughfa­res in the Kreuzberg district of Germany’s capital, was told on Thursday by a criminal court to vacate its premises.

The building’s owners were represente­d via video link in court by a Frankfurt-based law firm, which in turn was acting on behalf of the Luxembourg-registered Victoria Immo Properties V SARL, which bought the property for more than €35m in 2019.

Tax justice researcher­s believe Victoria Immo is a shell company that hides the investment’s real beneficiar­ies, members of the Swedish Rausing

family, heirs to the Tetra Pak fortune.

Victoria Immo’s affairs are handled in a trust capacity by three Liechtenst­ein-based family lawyers who act in the same role for the Danish agricultur­e company Ingleby Farms & Forests, which is owned by Lisbet Rausing and Benjamin Henry Anders Rausing

Koerner.

“We cannot prove for sure that the Rausing family is behind the company seeking the eviction of Kisch & Co,” said Christoph Trautvette­r, a tax specialist researchin­g Berlin’s ownership structures on behalf of the leftwing Rosa Luxemburg Foundation. “But I am 99.9% certain that they are.”

Over the last year the heirs of the food-packaging empire have been the target of weekly protests outside the bookshop. Local members of the bands Einstürzen­de Neubauten and Stereo Total have supported the protest, and a petition mentioning the Swedish family as the probable owners has been signed by more than 20,000 people, including the Nobel Prize winning writer Elfriede Jelinek and the Turner-Prize winning artist Wolfgang Tillmans.

Outside the criminal court in the Moabit district of Berlin, about 300 people gathered to protest against Kisch & Co’s eviction, waving placards with the words: “Which members of the Rausing clan is really behind this? Is it you Lisbet?” Other placards carried the names of other members of the Swedish family.

One group of protesters performed a morality play based on the trial against the bookshop, in which the property’s owners were represente­d by two women and a man carrying a placard with the word “Victoria”. One of the lines in the play ran: “The family has to be measured by the mission statements of their own charities.”

Tetra Pak was founded by Ruben Rausing. His sons, Hans and Gad, were based in the UK from 1982. In 1993 they were listed as Britain’s richest men, their wealth at the time eclipsing that of the Queen. They have both since died.

The two daughters of Hans have each made a mark on the British art and literature circuit. Sigrid Rausing, 59, is the owner of the literary magazine Granta, and Granta Books. Her charit

able trust has donated to human rights organisati­ons around the world.

Her older sister, Lisbet, 61, is a cofounder of the Arcadia Fund, which says it seeks to “preserve endangered cultural heritage, protect endangered ecosystems, and promote access to knowledge”.

When asked by the Guardian whether the Rausing family directly or indirectly held shares in or received economic benefits from Victoria Immo, Sigrid Rausing denied any personal involvemen­t, while Lisbet did not respond.

“I have no financial interest or ownership position in the building, and have made that clear previously to the owners of Kisch and various other people, including politician­s, who have been in touch about the issue,” Sigrid Rausing said in an email.

Kisch & Co’s owner, Thorsten Willenbroc­k, said he could not condemn his shop’s supporters for targeting the Rausing family in their protests. “We have always tried to reach out to the real owners and discuss a lease extension face-to-face,” he said. “But we were only bounced from lawyer to lawyer and then slapped down with an eviction notice.”

Willenbroc­k said he was considerin­g appealing against the verdict but expected that he would have to clear out his shop within the next seven weeks.

“What makes me so angry is that the anonymous people who bought the building knew that it is a well-known, much loved building filled with cultural workers and organisati­ons,” said photograph­er Tillmans, whose studio is also in the neighbourh­ood.

“Why buy the place and then fire the people that make the neighbourh­ood attractive in the first place? It is not a sustainabl­e investment.”

 ??  ?? Protesters in Berlin rally against the eviction of the bookstore Kisch & Co. On Thursday a criminal court in the city ordered the vacation of the premises. Photograph: Jörg Carstensen/ Avalon
Protesters in Berlin rally against the eviction of the bookstore Kisch & Co. On Thursday a criminal court in the city ordered the vacation of the premises. Photograph: Jörg Carstensen/ Avalon
 ??  ?? Thorsten Willenbroc­k, owner of the bookshop Kisch & Co, said he had wanted to discuss a lease extension for the store. Photograph: Jörg Carstensen/Avalon
Thorsten Willenbroc­k, owner of the bookshop Kisch & Co, said he had wanted to discuss a lease extension for the store. Photograph: Jörg Carstensen/Avalon

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