Breivik a 'normal boy': Stepmother
The stepmother of Anders Breivik said he was an apparently normal youth who showed no signs of what he was planning even in the months right before the massacre.
Tove Oevermo said she kept in touch with Breivik even after she and his father divorced when he was a teenager.
âHe was just an ordinary Norwegian, a well-behaved boy. You canât put all of this together really. I saw no sign of him being a person like he must have been,â she said. âItâs really such a shock.â
Ms Oevermo married Breivikâs father, Jens, when he was four. Breivik would often visit her and his father in France.
âHe felt like a happy, normal child,â the retired career diplomat said. âWe had a very good connection, and we liked being together, even when he was a small child,â she said.
Ms Oevermo and Breivikâs father divorced 10 years later, around the time Breivik claims, in his 1,500-page manifesto, that he became estranged from his father. Ms Oevermo, 66, recalled the split, but declined to comment on what precipitated it.
She did say, however, that she got the feeling Breivik wanted to have a relationship with his father, though he never spoke of their relationship.
After her divorce, Breivik kept in touch with Ms Oevermo via an occasional email, but she did not see him very often, she said.
She said she saw him last in March or April of this year when he visited her at her home south of Oslo. He was living with his mother in Oslo at the time and stopped by to pay her a friendly house call.
She said Breivik didnât seem agitated during the visit and behaved normally.
He left saying ââsee you again soonâ or something like that, something very normal,â she said.
In recent years, Breivik would often speak of a book he was writing, Ms Oevermo said. He was proud of the book, but was evasive about its contents.
âHe just told me he was trying to publish a book. He didnât say what about. He said, âYouâll see when itâs finished,ââ she said. âHe didnât really want to get into it, but he was proud of it.â
In recent years, he was working on the book full-time and not working. Before that she said he worked âodd jobsâ and tried to establish various companies.
Breivik released a 1,500-page manifesto shortly before carrying out the deadly attacks Friday in Oslo and an island outside the Norwegian capital. In the sprawling document, he details his hatred for the âcultural Marxistsâ who have allowed Muslims to immigrate to Europe.
He claims his attack is part of a coordinated effort by a group calling itself the Knights Templar to rid Europe of Muslims and left-wing politics. Police officials say theyâre not sure whether such a group exists.
Breivik spoke about politics âlike every normal person does, not more than that. He never touched Islam and this hatred for it he must have had,â Ms Oevermo said.
As for the attack itself, she said she was horrified to learn the âquite informed and well spokenâ man she had known was responsible.
âPeople say, âIâm shocked.â They donât know what shock is all about, physically and psychologically. It was so unreal. I couldnât believe it. I refused to believe it,â she said. âIf Iâd had some kind of suspicion â some kind of idea that something was not right with him, it would have been easier, I think.â




