Skip to main content

tv   Afro. Germany  Deutsche Welle  May 4, 2020 7:15am-8:01am CEST

7:15 am
it will boost taiwanese football long term is unclear but their experiences could help forge the blueprint for over leagues trying to return to action. you're watching day w. news that we'll be back with more headlines for you at the top of the hour in the meantime you can head over to our web site today w dot com and don't forget to follow us on twitter and instagram at state of the unit is for me and the team here in berlin and thanks for watching. stan for. loader and all. the language courses. video for your. anytime anywhere. wu.
7:16 am
the perception that germans out wide fair haired and blue eyed has never been true and will never be to it's and. people always ask me where i'm from it's not possible to be german and black. from the moment i get up and leave the house in the morning i'm confronted with
7:17 am
racist views images in stereo types of people. as a child alice wanted to have white skin because i felt bed being black and not being able to blend in and i was kind of sticking out of the group and being you know different than the rest i didn't want to be different. i am traveling around germany to talk with other black people about our experiences with racism my 1st stop this ham that's where i was born and. i had absolutely wonderful parents and that helped me a lot in difficult situations.
7:18 am
i mean i always had a lot of friends about what i do remember and kim agora that we played these funny games like who's afraid of the black man and tender little negroes that's called in german so and i remember that sometimes the ran after me and said yeah nothing can hurt in something like janice an african man as an african and the problem is that african men something bad. at 1st met sammy did looks when i was a teenager and have today's one after germany most successful refers to have a bias. on. the record. a lot of us were living as overusing.
7:19 am
i've come to see semi and it's doing as you. say the way it was this had a number of top 10 hits and us a little the a 1000000 records. just like today he also produces other musicians. just. as he forgets a kid i wanted to be white and he you know what. yeah as a kid white and as a teenager i really wanted to be black. that's nice only still needs to not have this ambiguity so it seemed so clear cut like on the white side and white people just knew who they were black people did to me i felt like i was in the middle i grew up in a white family in a white neighborhood it was definitely a challenge. and the challenge of really does it's mission for me the feeling of being caught in between is something imposed on you from the outside i mean people
7:20 am
always say don't you see taunting conscious black and why do you feel more. effect is yes how i don't find it unusual why should i have to choose sides i'm fucked up when we have guns for you one thing that cause me a fair amount of confusion right from the start was that i have straight hair. just to spite me than it was of a machine in the one shoot as in which he could sneak out going on top of the stand in grade school if some kid called me the n. word and i reacted defensively or aggressively they'd say yes and hey i was if you're not really a nigger because your hair is straight. so for me that was like ok i'm dark enough to get called the n. word but my hair isn't frizzy or curly enough for me to have the right to get upset about it to me that was the 1st contradiction that was imposed on me from the outside world and that's he wrote a song for some about humorous didn't you it's the song of the stream so i told him i wrote the song in 2008 at the time i was reading
7:21 am
a harry potter book to my son in the evening at bedtime and and one night he said he wished he were white and exactly. as then he could be like his friends in the moment and all you have to do is paint that thing on his forehead and wear around glasses and he'd look like harry potter was still need to be loved that's logan's e.l.c. harry potter of england i wish him good that made me realize that there's an acute shortage of dark skinned superheroes but so i wrote the song and made a really nice video to go along with it. his issue was with us we. have. no. i was never going to. come down but. i'm looking down the road when they leave that. for that. period of. time i was longing and i don't quite know playing the last song but. by the last guy. someone's listening to domino
7:22 am
me and i'm definitely played a long long time itself plus a little. less money right now so i mean i think i get a fresh start it's a high i can remember when i was 13 i was into novena and that's when i started going to pot to do stuff and the other kids would say van are you why you're listening to that and should be listening to black music i did and i liked it more and then it was the best music scene whatever that means hip hop and r. and b. i haven't done a school book on them and is a see in the and then all of a sudden yes a big person a part of the majority of i'm up on my own vomit enemy and then with these positive associations it's who's it's even us it's who and you have something as a show with us all from a single i think that's one of the main reasons i became who i am and that's where this record thing that's asked of a rap was the 1st thing that gave me
7:23 am
a home court advantage so to speak and i'm for tired houses i just had to let my pants hang a little bit lower paying less in the sky. my cap to the side and move like this. and everyone was into it it looked authentic and it fit well with my exotic status this was i did graffiti deejaying collected records started producing rasping and and beatboxing all the hip hop disciplines except breakdancing that was too much work so you're telling me you're not just body type take it out. only with words. as a journalist i don't have a home court advantage. when i decided to become a journalist and when i became an anchor i was actually i think the 1st female black and gemini i didn't have any role models.
7:24 am
do not a baby all things tend to become for me it's really important that children you know when this watch on the t.v. that might see me and think oh right i can be on t.v. and read the news and i don't have to have a job which was filled the racist stereotypes for me that would be great if i could help bring down perry as in that sense. that people have been living in germany for 400 years but today they numbered about 1000000 you from me in cologne of come to see. do you support that. he was born in 1025000000000. why did your father come from cameroon to germany back then come on by you know
7:25 am
those cameroon was a german colony. we've done for you. just just people used to dream of going to america. at the time many young africans wanted to come to germany. says there was no such thing as what we now call racism. at least not as we know it today. you see it only started to take shape when the young africans started asserting themselves for instance by marrying german women oh. and the reaction was there taking away our women. in quincy in the name once he had the fall invade. i mean are you appeared in ethnographic exhibits also known as humans zeus what was it like standing for the imagine human beings. being exhibited like objects literally exhibited earth present for what they supposedly represented of namely
7:26 am
africa with vast skirts and drums dancing saunders. didn't and the idea was that people under splay were foreign exotic. and more showing spectators what their homeland was like the city. basically it was just a big show. me i might as good i'm going to the numbers show evidence how crazy istead us a german was supposed to imitate just received cuts off africa i was just such a huge continent. and he's a consummate. window had trod so i was sort of not black. so of course i should be able to do that that's how it is in my blood and let's talk about the nazi era it's so hard to imagine because black people would obviously attract attention in
7:27 am
every genre that was so racist that's right as a mom both to kind and. we didn't need to wear yellow star. everyone could see we were aliens. you know a lot of other black people in germany ok yeah sure everyone knew everyone and there were so many corneal films made back then but that's the many of us would meet up as part of the cast. yet that's me. this is mine and that's my closest and still don't like the fact that the shot a close up of me. and everyone who was in black was in that film. and. i was 16 at the time. and it struck me that my god we're all here together.
7:28 am
because they could take us away without anyone noticing or not does this oath they did that and then thought it weighed very heavily on me this. is good thank god i never came to practice but in the via we were too few in number to matter to the nazis that you could. die for you know all contact with white women with the fat women horrible home field. i would have been sterilized still inside. and i might also have been charged with racial defilement being the ass and shunned. oh how do you say that you took great care not to get too close to white women all girls like tom wasn't like how you being all trying to become invisible
7:29 am
how can you imagine that i wanted to. see men the sleestak that's the right word invisible i could become the only of course with a face like this i could never completely disappear. but i tried to. i think have sense who i really did that's who didn't skip this i and the main thing was to keep your head down can your mouth shut. i made sure i did that as well. to the point that i started to start or. yeah i started turning black i have been understood listening to the difficult of the horrible things you experienced. how did you find the strength to go on but that's one of the w.c. well i have to say with god's help. i became a religious person league as i mentioned above. that's what you.
7:30 am
do don't you michel always says there's nothing in the german constitution that states what a german is supposed to look like but some people haven't gotten the message for them we asked the saudi. when i was a child complete strangers would touch my hand say it feels like a bird's nest. right. way to my god it's good to see you still see my watch breakfast t.v. every morning i turn on the set and think like an afro german woman on german public t.v. be as we're so proud of you. oh you're such a wonderful job just 1002 muslims torn back to tear me a look at your hair we have to talk about that yes we do.
7:31 am
and then i will work in some coconut oil. like. cancel on t.v. that i have so i think it is enough now my love your curls ok then i would always wake up the movies are good these are funny curls. now i'm really happy to be talking to s. that don't call the phone up cause a knuckleball cully hamner agassi that's how sometimes i think that black people's hair is really politicized it's like a political statement whether you have to have. it naturally the stereotype is that the hair is messy and wild that doesn't go over well in the professional but also how the afro hair just isn't acceptable. our society still doesn't comply with our
7:32 am
ideals of beauty. look at beyond saying she's a black woman she's a performer of the she's the embodiment of empowerment but she still wears a straight blonde we've made it's kind of anti you know i've met women who work in law offices in places like that we get into trouble if they wear their hair naturally that kind. of not to mention hot off the plate can you tell us about the natural hand movement does is sort of fell into it. it's about allowing people with afro textured hair to wear it naturally without causing a fuss or having to feel self-conscious. that's what life is about that with accepting yourself a good set of names absence of times. change. to feel comfortable in your own skin that's the goal but it's not so easy. i think the problem is that if you see all these stereotypes about africa about tribes about
7:33 am
being primitive of that barrier a native underdeveloped. it hits you. part of the problem of the images from the days of colonialism and the lin dance to streets named after german nice and colonialists. and berlin in 1804 that european nations had to climb when they carved up half a can to colonies. and yet a street festival aimed at forcing the city to change the name from was. i am here was just a crazy akins political scientist an activist why it's important for you to remain districts the term is one of the oldest german words. person box look
7:34 am
at the roots of the term it has an action in the greek root morris and morris i guess that means dr block but it also means stupid even primitive and so you see already in their origin of the work that there is this ideal block if there are it's a bend if we look into the history of the street maybe if we see that the street was named quiet its name in the context of the brandenburg involvement in the transatlantic enslavement and to prize how would you say that's germany to deal with this colonial history. i think is a huge problem. a lot of aspects of german korean history are not widely known we can't even begin to understand national socialism without looking at the colonial and to see this because we find that they are ideological political but also personal continuity. linking german colonialism and national socialism.
7:35 am
please and i set off to uncover some of the traces. soft colonialism in the german capital. ok i think i moved to berlin 10 years ago but this defers time i'm seeing this fresco can be explained by a scene so we had the house and this here shows us the trail of tobacco so you see and slaved african men harvesting tobacco then enslaved african women packaging the tobacco then it is sorted and weighed you know as a white overseer and then it's package further it's made ready for shipment and you see one of the white oversea is already lounging and having a smoke but then you see the ship departing and then not only you see it's berlin because you see the silhouette of the german the french don't so this clearly explains the source of the wealth that was used to build this place right but of
7:36 am
course it also implicates the people that frequented here and the suffering but it's also depicted here. people often defined by this skin color so when known south african artist robin wrote place with the stereotypes he experienced apartheid in south africa now he's been living in berlin for 4 changes. i. could tell you this you i can see you working on a new p.c.'s. i have a work in process and it's a world guy some aldermen this is about myself african i did 30. and of course the african is a strong some bull it's interesting that you chose here of course i can identify with that but what does i mean look at what role of detail
7:37 am
a for have play for you he became a way to to classify a place been sold to a place through he to. who did you pick to kind of the stand and the for the racial category. so saying that if they go through my head they say it's f. i have i am exactly black on the public at a west coast that is colored always mixed race. so if the cold winds we invaded find you here because you guys as white how were you classified as on a farm because if i discard it as if it is a person of mixed race and so i might be and so my grandparents and. in many ways my cultural background is quite complex because i you know we don't associate ourselves with black and neither white.
7:38 am
sorry. i know you viewed as black d.c.'s leg while i gem content what i think is in the german gone thinks i'm viewed as out of oh really so that's actually pretty interesting. i use off as a way to subvert but also to to play with. on the valvoline what these kind of cultural labels off. this particular piece reading speed of middle painting everything needs to be defined is going to be categorized and i'm trying to knob explore the notion of something that is completely in this something that is going to be tea and you find. i was born in 1981 and in the early ninety's we had
7:39 am
a serious of of racist attacks in germany and also placed in hot and high us to get it and so willing it must be backed by stand the skunk. during the attacks. it was really heartbreaking to see and it frightened me so much as a child. and i think that's something that is also very scary if you look at the recent vice and racist attacks on refugees in germany and so few of the people who take them were caught and put on trial and i think that's a very dangerous message to everyone who experience racism because it means ok you can be attacked but you know you can attack people but you can get away with it in that it gives us the message ok people can do to you whatever they want they
7:40 am
won't be put on trial. and that scares me a lot. about us an apprentice rufo working in the east and german state off 6 and i'm hot he hasn't been living here for very long in 2013 he fled book enough icing for germany his job gives the 28 year old some stability was but otherwise his life is often difficult recently he will speak not by a right wing thought i mean he send the town of war where he lives as a hero 8 months ago you were beaten up right here tell us about that. i went into the stall and saw a man and if with a woman in charge here. and he said why didn't you look at that he sure does using the n word for us to look at this black piece of trash written in ago i didn't say anything about ownership i went to the counter to pay this call and he went like this. and i
7:41 am
said this is what do you want from me and he says i'll show you i went over there and he hit me 3 or 4 times like this. you know muscle history of how bad the way you hurt when a boa less due to the i felt a lot of pain in my stomach losses and i come down the block for about 2 months. and we're not holding. on to how does it feel when no one steps in to help you when you're being beaten up and you often treat it with hostility and in solitude and i'm at how do you cope. to not because you're soft i'm always afraid when i go out now going to start to see who can i go to work on the freight of what might happen along the way roads people make just just like i'm going to cut your throat so it is seeing and they shout go back to where you came from shocking people do that to me every day shipment. this is the courthouse in the
7:42 am
town of stand up it's where the man who beat up he says on trial. how do you feel knowing you about to see the person would take kids as he has. done not afraid. i can't wait to see him again for and look into his eyes of these young folks and the mystery of. the attack on who has a long criminal record was found guilty of assault and sentenced to 10 months in jail but he appealed was just a reason for his hearing. if. the. cameras aren't allowed inside the concert that. after 4 hours the consciousness.
7:43 am
isa how was it for you today. i never expected it to go so well an abuser person very pleased to hear mr. c. ter. the conviction is upheld but the attacker intends to appeal again. once you wake up in the morning and you switch on the radio or you switch on the t v you're confronted with all these stereotypes about africa and. it's really difficult to talk about racism in germany because once i experience it when i talk about racism people say oh you're too emotional you're over reacting the company true i'm sure the person didn't mean it that way so they don't really take it serious and that is really hard because i feel like i am not taking seriously my
7:44 am
experience it's. false we're here to cigarettes. i thought it was racism without regret because he shed all his. and listening and the author of this play is the artist and writer. the story she's originally from particle but has lived for many years a 1000000000. for me it took a lot of effort to research lecture me history had to go out because there was nothing that was presented to me in school for example what told us the silent seeing play in your eyes i think in the last words that i've been doing i'm very concerned with this question of silencing and speaking and with the with the fact that it's not that we have not been producing no words will have not been speaking but we believe in
7:45 am
a system that constantly silence will make these knowledges. invisible racism is really with the for equally for me a ghost that our society never took care of and never cared because we live in these very white narcissistic society that don't want to deal with it and then says well that's me you're not black i don't think that you are black. and she said that in a way as a. suzumiya for you when did you. start feeling that no i don't believe this dominant narratives you just talked about when did you fade out and said no not this can't be it there must be something you know. i don't know if i can tell you. but i believe it has always been there. now as
7:46 am
a mother i when i am with my children and i hear them bringing the topic of racism even though they are 2 and 4 or 5 it's just time 5. it is still i i see that aware that is not right and it's extremely complicated to explain such a brutal history and this is the trial of black people and people from many other than for us who went through similar experiences collective experiences that you cannot explain and apply any logic to something that is so absolutely love illogical and not aggressive eg because this is aggressive yet i called it i do not want to be better. let's not turn to a question that has but more times than i can count how come your parents are white the ends are my biological father came from zimbabwe but actually the mother from germany directly after i was born in hamburg i was adopted by
7:47 am
a german swedish couple. and for me they are not texts. this is india parish she too was adopted i grew up in best germany she grew up in the us we're inside an old guard tower from the days of communist east germany the war divided berlin 110980 9 in the us biological father is from guinea he was studying at the university of light see when he met her biological mother but she was married and her husband was in jail nevertheless he said he could imagine raising the child. ever stop money does it but he didn't know that i was going to look the way i look at it as an issue that i would be a black child this auntie's a man who died because i'm leaders and this man was a hard core rightwinger. and it's not my not what he got out of jail soon after i
7:48 am
was born. it was obvious that i wasn't a white child. and had hired and he tried he attempted to kill me. or and my electrician with my biological mother saw him dangling me out the window so in all likelihood she said before the child is killed i will send her away. if he had to and at some point and she decided to put me up for adoption. out of 2 thirds of. us to hire. a lion the last move wardens for i think that subconsciously in any case you never forget that you were abandoned by a biological parents you were born and were unwanted you take that with you to your grave the sheer kin to me it still seems unfair to just give away a child like that. darron kinde and forth over to him.
7:49 am
oh oh joyce oh oh great stuff. in the other works as a duck trainer and has adopted several neglected dogs. we've asked them how was it for you in a place school. yard problematic via dusters thought one problem was the teachers who thought we shouldn't eat with the other kids to finish with an argument as. ringback we were supposed to wash our hands really thoroughly as if something could rub off on the other kids. we have all the moments and 1000 word of i was going to be kind to us and we weren't allowed to nap near the other children . 'd and a minute and wouldn't should my parents did everything to protect us. they gave up
7:50 am
everything they had to be there for us kids they fought for us they did what they could and i think it was the right thing that they may have to explain it. in the hospital is another thing you hear so often oh adoptive parents can never be the real parents but that is complete nonsense you really see the love they have for the children just like any other parents. absolutely they protect you and do everything for you and your family whether someone gave birth to you are not absolutely for me blood relationship is meaningless. behold new groups for one traffic are good for me too and for me it's immaterial them and it and as my parents told me about how they drove to the children's home and life where i was. and i crawled straight into my papa's arms for me it was clear that's my papa and
7:51 am
that's really great this is my part of you and yet as well to do is to tire sharon and that's how it was until the end we were really close. best views on a father no. it wasn't until the age of 17 that india hametz her biological mother. jones and you had no one going off. we went for a walk and she said that you and i didn't want you to turn out so black yes that was the very 1st sentence i heard from my biological mother. and i'm happy because i and i said. oh ok well as of what to expect. 'd talking with the other effort germans about our experiences gives me strength
7:52 am
that's one reason why i'm a member of the initiative called black people in germany every year they hold an annual meeting this is the 1st time i'm attending. the mollified by the crowd through the chef in the kisha zinah alf garden by ness the pasta and so whole in the house and temperate too it's a control issue it's put off sharing to do it sure is holding us wanting his rating up to the final round 270 people have come to the initiative and the only thing i was harkened the group was fond of a 36. pack a day less and the steering committee. and the diet you tell me how was the initiative found it it was thanks to 2 happy coincidences the 1st audrey lord was in berlin because my and who was our great aunt. she was an american writer from the black feminist movement in the us shortly but she was teaching in berlin when
7:53 am
we were in because over the course of her time there she met a lot of black women who came to her readings. discovered that they didn't know each other. so she hit on the idea of connecting them so that they could exchange experiences come on down come she also brought out what i believe is the 1st book of stories born by black people about black people in germany. trying to deceive. to mention in the article i am a black man everyone is welcome to read aloud at initiatives me to you when i look at a white man i mean. really why i came to their god knowing in the growing of the night when i think about it. this is the theme of this meeting is somehow meant in self care what does it mean. yeah because i can paul meant to mention empowerment mean showing black people especially young people there was a lot they can do with themselves up from because it's from before they can take
7:54 am
charge of a lot of things develop themselves and establish new perspectives of self care within a society influenced by racism and entails ensuring that he was a black person stay healthy protect yourself and grow stronger in the mission it's a mixture movement but it involves politics but also drinking smoothies or doing yoga or sports or. the buddhist because sucking up cheika give it a somewhat similar. to go. into 2011 he played in the german national team.
7:55 am
you could stick. them off and a day in the life of someone. and give a given custody of us the very 1st black german national player and you were also one of the 1st i know that yesterday is i started playing for germany in 2001 i was set and he was for this time last summer every possible way i was not for the crossed it was more half an hour what does that mean because my you want to help your shots i think this is a i was the 1st really blackwater's was the 1st black africa and that's why. i felt it wasn't easy for me back then to side with us or i could have played for john and i was told off for going back to have. in a play for god's. golf that's the figure i was in uganda but then they didn't claim sex on the i'm going back to germany and germany was very insistent and at some
7:56 am
point i said ok i'll play for germany was very rewarding very interesting it wasn't easy but it was nice sure but wasn't easy. and there's some people some idiots who don't want to accept us and that was my big problem and i want also to see you do something for your country but you're still the black i thought i was if there's an example his team itself after the world cup in 2006 we came in 3rd and people accepted us and then suddenly a month later you get the food and call the neighbor during a match and that was a moment where seriously consider no longer playing for germany it hurt. ok that was the courtroom after hanging out this so-called booth get someone became a household name and today he's the minutes off cyclists on the 28th weeks he was going up in guyana. 5 hours away from michael vick was in class it was a small village where people didn't have much notice when after school we play
7:57 am
soccer with balls made of soccer. hides when i look at myself he has everything he doesn't know what to do with them i had to struggle to get to square meals a day. that was how i grew up and it affected me. made me said goals and say i have to give my all to achieve something buswell action on a certain time and then come where i honestly don't know if. i can no longer understand why as a child i wanted to leave right even if it takes a lot of strength and energy to deal with racism and to hold your head up high i would want a different skin color not put anything in the. not
7:58 am
me black means something serious he means me that i'm seen differently but what's going on inside that something else. is just me it's nothing more than a skin color no. my blackness blooms and becomes my beauty yahia where all the same 1st and foremost i'm a person would be yes at my age i wouldn't want to change anything of the law who i am is more truthful about but i'll tell you one thing just as we blacks are pretty cool mission cool don't you think you. meet the artist today we speak to you she came to camp blues a refugee when she was just a child joining she's a lawyer author and show host successful and full of bright to ideas she talks about how canada became her own someone picked me up and help me in the towns everybody was late. getting to know him during our 21.
7:59 am
and 30 minutes on d w. it's a deadly sin. and a whim of nature. motivates us. and threatens to murder us. greed. the sexual desire for me. that drives our. bench puts it in danger. while. we go in search of answers in a documentary film. starts may 21st t.w.
8:00 am
. this is g w news live from berlin at 7500000000 euros to fight the coronavirus it will fund millions of doses of vaccine at an affordable price for use around the world that's the aim of the european commission's virtual pledging conference taking place today . also coming up austria eases its 7 week lockdown will take you to mozart's birthplace the city of salsa group to find out how people are using their new
8:01 am
freedoms. but in singapore the lockdown rules are being enforced more strictly than ever after so.