Anonymous
07/26/2022 (Tue) 23:50:02
No.7349
del
>>561I think I found out what made you uncomfortable, they were into young girls (and who knows what else):
The dark history of the G7’s luxurious spa resortSchloss Elmau,With the property no longer in his control, after the war Dr Philip Auerbach took possession of Schloss Elmau, and until 1951 it served as a sanctuary for displaced holocaust survivors until the hotel came under the the control of Bernhard Müller-Elmau, and his sister, Sieglinde Mesirca in 1951. Schloss Elmau reopened with a chamber music festival, and from this point the hotel emerged as an institution celebrating unity and high culture, becoming a sleepover spot for the rich and wealthy of Europe.
And indeed, other types of sleepover, too. Into the 1960s the hotel became renowned as a place forresidents to fraternise with young, aristocratic daughterswho “helped” at the hotel for a pittance and were free to socialise with the powerful guests who came to stay, the majority of whom booked single rooms. A 1963 article in Der Spiegel said:“Women of all agestravelling alone feel significantly more free here than in a normal holiday hotel, and much less exposed to the slanderous suspicion of looking for adventure.”One of these former helpers reportedly responded to the article, pointing out that Müller “preferred conspicuously blonde, blue-eyed girls” and encouraged his staffers to attend nightly dances and “be like fairytale children”. In a letter to Der Spiegel one visitor, Ilse Sauer von Langsdorff, said: “I would not send my daughters there.” During the 1980s Elmau fell out of vogue, but since 1997, under the new management of Müller’s grandson and tech entrepreneur Dietmar Mueller-Elmau, it has become a place where “high art could flourish”, and for 25 years has been the meeting point of scholars and professors, with particular focus on Jewish history, political theology and liberty. When our culture and consumer expert, Nick Trend, visited in 2019 and interviewed the man in charge, he wrote: “Although he has invested heavily in the traditional spa facilities here, you can tell from the way he talks that Müller-Elmau is more interested in the mind than the body.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/the-dark-history-of-the-g7-e2-80-99s-luxurious-spa-resort/ar-AAYXsUm