For further details of our complaints policy and to make a complaint please click here. "He did not speak French, but solely ranted in German, talking to an imaginary audience. The baby was conceived after a "tipsy" night. [16] Loret claims to be the grandson of Hitler. "Deep in his mind, Philippe Loret is sure without any DNA that he is Hitler's grandson," an NTV presenter said during a show. Donald M. McKale: Hitler's Children: A Study of Postwar Mythology, in: This page was last edited on 19 October 2020, at 21:51. By comparing DNA from the stamps with that of Hitler's relatives, Mulders claimed proof that Jean-Marie Loret was not the son of Adolf Hitler. News Corp is a network of leading companies in the worlds of diversified media, news, education, and information services. Jean-Marie Loret was born illegitimately in 1918 in Seboncourt as Jean-Marie Lobjoie. Loret said: "There are always some doubts, but if the DNA test is negative - well, there's nothing to do then. The documentary is filmed at Loret's home, which is decorated with Nazi relics. According to the entry in the birth register of his hometown, Loret’s father was an unidentified German soldier from World War I. Whether the rumors had been put out into the world by Loret himself or by others has never been determined. On 8 June 1978, during a public discussion, historian Werner Maser moved Loret to his own house in Speyer, Germany, to seclude him from the intense scrutiny by the press of Loret's home in Saint-Quentin. "If positive - my thought will be confirmed. State-run Russian channel NTV has brought his DNA sample to Moscow to see if it matches Hitler’s remains, retrieved by Stalin's forces who stormed the dictator’s Berlin bunker in 1945. "Even if I spoke German I would not be able to follow him, as the histories of Prussia, Austria and Bavaria were not familiar to me at all, far from it.
[7], The ultimate origin of the story of Hitler's son, at first spread only by word of mouth, was until then not determined, although written accounts maintaining that the illegitimate son of a French girl and a German soldier was Hitler's son had already been around for a fairly long time in Loret's hometown when Loret became known to German historian Werner Maser. Loret, 62, says his grandmother Charlotte Lobjoie had a fling with the Nazi leader, then a young German corporal, fighting in northern France in the summer of 1916. Mother of Jean-Marie Loret Marc Vermeeren, "De jeugd van Adolf Hitler 1889–1907 en zijn familie en voorouders".
The latter published the most influential story on Loret to date under the title "Love in Flanders". "Perfect genetic material for a DNA test which can finally prove that Philippe Loret's grandfather was the most horrible slaughterer in human history.