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Tuesday April 23, 2024

Arnold Schwarzenegger reveals how he and his brother suffered abuse due to tyrant father

Arnold Schwarzenegger shares his abuse story in new Netflix documentary, Arnold

By Web Desk
June 07, 2023
Arnold Schwarzenegger reveals how he and his brother suffered abuse due to tyrant father
Arnold Schwarzenegger reveals how he and his brother suffered abuse due to tyrant father

Arnold Schwarzenegger has recently revealed how he and his brother suffered abuse because of their tyrant father in his new Netflix documentary, Arnold.

According to Independent, Arnold’s father, Gustav Schwarzenegger, had served in the Nazi party during World War II and was wounded in the Battle of Stalingrad.

While discussing about his Austrian dad, the Terminator star said, “He was buried underneath buildings, rubble, for three days, and on top of that, they lost the war. They went home so depressed. Austria was a country of broken men. I think there were times where my father really struggled.”

Arnold remembered how his father would make him and his older brother “earn breakfast”.

“There was a kind of schizophrenic behaviour that my brother and I witnessed at home,” stated the former California governor.

Arnold mentioned, “There was the kind father, and other times when my father would come home drunk at three in the morning and he would be screaming.”

Speaking about “strange violence” at home, the actor remarked, “We would wake up and, all of a sudden our hearts were pounding because we knew that meant that he could, at any given time, strike my mother or go crazy.”

Arnold revealed that the “brutality that was at home, the beatings that we got from our parents sometimes – all of this” took my brother’s life, adding, “he was soft by nature”.

The actor pointed out that he left Austria and went to America in 1968. Three years later, Arnold received the news of his brother’s death.

Arnold explained, “The kind of upbringing that we had was beneficial for someone like me, who was inside very strong and very determined, but my brother was more fragile.”

“Nietzsche was right: that what does not kill you will make you stronger,” he concluded.