Her family spied for Germany in WWII. She tried to learn the truth

Her family spied for Germany in WWII. She tried to learn the truth
(Image: Getty)
The Washington Post
By Rebecca Brenner GrahamIn 1994, a suburban wife, mother and journalist named Christine Kuehn received a mysterious letter in the mail from a filmmaker. Its message? A suggestion that her grandparents were Nazi spies who facilitated the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour.As Kuehn would soon learn, when her father, Eberhard, was a child in 1935, he moved with his half-sister, Ruth, along with his brother and their parents from Germany to Hawaii. The Japanese Empire needed White spies on Oahu. The letter that Kuehn received suggested that fro...

More The Life

Best of BusinessDesk: My Net Worth part 3
Editor's Picks

Best of BusinessDesk: My Net Worth part 3

Pearls of wisdom from some of NZ's most perceptive business leaders.

Best of BusinessDesk: My Net Worth part 2
Editor's Picks

Best of BusinessDesk: My Net Worth part 2

Pearls of wisdom from some of NZ's most perceptive business leaders.

Good books – what our top CEOs recommend: part 2
The Life

Good books – what our top CEOs recommend: part 2

What Richard Taylor, Leighton Roberts and Mark Todd recommend. 

Staff reporters 04 Jan 2026
Best of BusinessDesk: My Net Worth part 1
The Life

Best of BusinessDesk: My Net Worth part 1

Pearls of wisdom from some of NZ's most perceptive business leaders.