tv Judisch sein in Europa Deutsche Welle February 22, 2021 6:00am-6:45am CET
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you know. you're watching news the wire from. the u.n. nuclear watchdog says it's reached a temporary solution with iran over its nuclear sites the deal allows limited about continued access to monitor iran's nuclear program for the next 3 months while you know precious time for further negotiation is also coming up on the show amid a fraught of peace talks there's no letup in the spike in violence in afghanistan sooner separate bomb attacks leave several dad and many more injured. and in the
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bundesliga a contender for the goal of the season helps like see close the gap on leaders fire next in just 2 points firing up the bundesliga title race. hello i'm claire richardson welcome to the show the head of the world's atomic energy watchdog has struck a deal with iran to allow international monitors access to its nuclear program for 3 more months international atomic energy agency chief raphael grossi hammered out the agreement at crisis talks in attack iran now i could give negotiators some breathing room as they struggle to revive the 2015 nuclear deal between iran and world powers. that are so rough for the clock was ticking the moment he touched down and turned out he faced an image. deadline to convince iranian leadership to
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drop a new law that would suspend u.n. inspections of its nuclear facilities but iran 1st wanted relief from oil and banking sanctions are now grassy has secured an extension of sorts we reached. by. i understand. well. the agency. and money towing activities for a period of up to 3 months but across he conceded that the un's watchdog will have less access than before iran's foreign minister mohammad zarif has already said tehran will restrict access to security cameras at nuclear sites it is clear that they won't get a foot. as long as the united states has not come back to full implementation
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of its agreement so leaf is also demanding compensation for sanctions he claims caused one trillion dollars worth of damage to iran's economy. under the terms of the agreement with world powers reached in 2015 the i.a.e.a. can inspect nuclear facilities in the country at short notice but after the usa unilaterally withdrew from the deal and re imposed sanctions 2 years ago iran suspended compliance with most of its key commitments under the pact thank you so much the current us administration under joe biden has signaled it is open to rejoining the deal and lifting sanctions but the 2 countries both want the other to make the 1st move at least last summer grossi had struck a deal to allow inspectors to visit 2 suspected nuclear sites following months of negotiation now he has passed the baton on to others my hope the hope of the 8 has been to. be able to just. which was very unstable.
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and i think these techniques understanding it. so that other patients on other levels can take place. and one small diplomats are on the clock with 3 months to find common ground. that was the head of the united nations nuclear monitoring agency there and for more on this story i'm joined by reporter joel a doll right give us some background on why was the head of the i.a.e.a. in iran rafael gross he was there to try and save what's left of the iran nuclear accord and to keep access open for u.n. inspectors to iran had set a deadline of sunday for the lifting of sanctions on its oil and banking sectors which are really punishing its economy and it said if those sanctions were not lifted then starting on tuesday it would block access for u.n.
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inspections to its nuclear sites now iran says that none of this is its fault in 2015 its side of the joint comprehensive plan of action also known as the nuclear deal under which it allowed inspectors in and limited its use of certain nuclear materials then in 2018 the united states walked away from its end of the deal under former president donald trump who said this was a weak deal and needed to be renegotiated he imposed sanctions and iran has had enough of this point it has started enriching its. and it is starting to use some of that banned equipment well european countries. have really tried to keep it at the negotiating table and to keep access open for inspectors and that is what this visit was all about and what exactly is it the agreement that rosie did get from iran after these 2 days of negotiations when he returned from toronto saying that he had reached a technical understanding not quite an agreement and under this. conditions access
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will be allowed for the coming 3 months the number of inspectors on the ground will stay the same and they still will be allowed to carry out some snap inspections however he was very clear that monitoring will decrease under the coming in the coming days and and that's because iran is going to cut access to surveillance cameras that were previously used to want to certain sites and they could send the inspectors away at any moment so this is a really fragile 3 months reprieve and grossi has been very clear that it is now up to the european partners and the united states to come up with a diplomatic solution and course the catalyst for all this is that the united states does have a new president how is joe biden and his going and his team going to approach iran in contrast to the previous administration well joe biden campaigned on a promise to return to the nuclear deal in some form and lift the sanctions and his administration has agreed to start talking with european partners to achieve that but it's not entirely clear what terms they will impose on that now iran says this
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isn't good enough it says it wants the sanctions lifted immediately and it says nothing is substantially changed under biden also its politicians have their own election to worry about they've got that coming up in a couple of months and that could potentially put more hard line conservatives in power so the clock is really ticking on keeping iran at the negotiating table and we will be following those developments for our viewers told all right thank you so much. and in afghanistan 2 roadside bomb attacks continue a wave of violence sweeping the country in the capital kabul a police car was targeted killing the driver and a nearby child the other explosion in helmand province killed a civilian 20 people were wounded in the attacks. the marketplace in the south of helmand province was crowded with sunday shoppers when the bomb went off. there was no warning no escape for those in its range but i would work with the
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confirm there was an explosion it not me out people were on the ground crying i don't know what happened then. in the capital kabul to bomb attack on sunday authorities say it targeted a police car killing the driver under child close by and. remarked at the nose suddenly there was an explosion on the other side of the street. a police vehicle was hit it's lucky it was on a side street if it had been on the main street we would probably have witnessed many casualties much more damage. because your. there have been no claims of responsibility for the attacks. the people of afghanistan have experienced a sharp rise in violence in recent weeks as peace talks between the government and taliban insurgents lie stormed a life in peace and safety that still seems like an impossible dream for the people
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of afghanistan a country caught in an ongoing crisis of side interference and internal struggles for palla. let's turn our attention now to some of the other stories making headlines at this hour in myanmar a call for a monday general strike has been met by threats of lethal force from the ruling junta thousands of people have taken to the streets and just by the military telling protesters they could die. tensions in the country are rising after the deaths of 4 demonstrators. united airlines has grounded its fleet of boeing triple 7 airplanes with the same type of engine involved in saturday's emergency landing in denver the engine blew apart shortly after takeoff raining debris on suburban areas luckily no one was injured airlines in japan have also suspended aircraft carrying the same engines. new zealand is marking 10 years since
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a devastating earthquake struck the city of christchurch prime minister just into our dan let a tribute to quake victims and the. morial ceremony in the city. 185 people lost their lives in the earthquake making it one of the deadliest disasters in new zealand's history. on germany has started a year of anniversary events to mark 1700 years of jewish life and culture a nation wide celebrations a liberally aims to look beyond the persecution of jews during the holocaust instead the focus is on the diversity of jewish life in germany's past and its present. colonial was to friends sitting in germany would choose were allowed to surf in the town said they in the year 321 after a decrease from the roman emperor constantine so we fitting that these here is coming more ations of 1700 years of jewish life in germany are centered here a ceremony launched a year long program of events separating jewish contribution to german culture and
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society german president. is the patron of the series of events. in these in 1st year are there is a lot to discover and rediscover during this year of come immigrations in philosophy literature paintings science medicine economy jewish people have contributed to our history shaped it an enlightened our culture judaism made a decisive contribution to germany's emergence into the modern age the more down the bag. along with his acknowledgement culture is part of german culture there was also a warning that anti-semitism is on the rise in germany. it is still true today even those who have never met a jewish person and who have never shown any interest in jew days in those people
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still harbor anti semitism prejudices prejudices are handed down. generation to generation and the less someone knows about jews demoed a prejudice is entered we have to address it is especially in schools where we must not only convey more knowledge about judaism but also share more information about anti semitism. densher of anti-semitism was also highlighted by presidents time. then they wouldn't it was if i could wish something chairman president for desir of come immigration it would not only be a clear make a nation that jewish people are part of a civil society but i would also wish that we could take decisive steps against those who seek to questioned is a god that does not. in foggiest did the you know wrong to come immigrations on hundreds of years of eventful common history teaches us that the german federal
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republic can only be holding if jewish people you feel fairly at home here since i was of. sports news now and in the bundesliga are be like have closed the gap on leaders of bahrain your neck to just 2 points a security comfortable 3 nil victory against head to berlin no match that included another contender for goal of the season. the weekend has already started well for you know goldman is like sick before they'd even kicked a ball by and defeats in frankfurt it's a welcome boost for this bunch and they made sure to capitalize in berlin. i myself scoring a goal you could fall in love with. it was the sweetest of strikes from the light sea captain this goal was all that separates you decide it's going into half time.
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but leipsic were determined to pile on the heartbreak in the 2nd half. made to cheer on 17 minutes past his material can do z. punished for getting too cozy with the ball inside his own area. the likes the glove story was completed 6 minutes from time for the ball by me with a header 3 male might seek me within 2 points of leaders by in the title race is horsing up. and before we go here's a twist on the concept of moving house re locators in san francisco carried out a careful operation to move a victorian home crowd straight out to watch the 139 year old building in very slowly and carefully towed it to its new address just 6 blocks away it was moved to make way for new apartments the developer reportedly paid $400000.00 for the
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relocation alone san francisco tries to preserve old homes like these which are considered icons of the city. as your news update at this hour and don't forget you can always get the latest around the clock on our website d.w. dot com and richardson in berlin i mean the whole team thanks us for joining us. in the many pushed. all floods are thrown out in the more climate change a different awful story this is my place in wave form just one week. we're going to really get. we still have time to work i'm doing. this. i said.
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something i hear a lot is. coming even which. i am a. jewish person you do so many of us it's not something i really keep secret. as i just say i'm a jewish girl many people say i'm jewish geminids others say i'm a german jesus. i thought it was wrong to say i'm a jew. or women's or someone says hey you're a jew sounds kind of extreme i can't say it like that i don't like the way the term sounds i that guy so mostly i say i wish me to. you can say jew quite normally i'm a jew definitely. not a bad words i'm definitely a jew i'm a jew here. do you
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do you jew. you jew must or don't act like a jew. and he's amazing. do you mean you jews. these days but they could how many people in germany are actually personally acquainted with any young jews real people in the real life not just figures from history that. must have been playing basketball for 7 years with mccarthy francophones as of now i'm the coach that. my copy is a jewish club life but it's also very open to normal jews. to. feel free when i'm playing sports i can just let go of everything that happens during the day so i
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can i could imagine playing someplace really big in the n.b.a. course in the n.b.a. sphere. like with my favorite teams of oklahoma city. i'm in the 11th grade and high school. ever since i was really little i've tried to spend as much time as i can with children i know i babysit a lot fewer. than was it meant i took when i'm babysitting my daily routine it's like this i go over to the child's house and when the parents leave i try to make sure the child feels secure and safe even though their parents are going out fit the walk in is kinda out of if the child was to draw something that i draw with the child but at the same time i try to teach them something i might say hey you credit
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this really nicely but so did i as in that way the child learns that she's not always the best and that we both made a good showing up it's just that on my. you know barack to text from berlin right between the rainbow shops and fetish stores. living here in this environment i have to say coming out as a queer person pretty easy. because right now i'm still in school i like meeting up with my friends and i write a lot i really like writing i'm very political and i read a lot i'm part of the feminist reading group that meets every 2 weeks. because i took music losses when i was at michigan's high school music taste but
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i'm more into rap music. with rap you can really let it all hang out he's almost you know. that's something i'm good at. my job just music because some people have a hard time feeling the heat. but with me i want to climb that mountain and see her right to the top she puts it being my just that's how it is. i was the only jew in my class actually the only one in the whole grade they'd say hitler this hitler that and what's it like being a jew this is you would say we're going to guess you just. kind they center around and now what south korea does where they made fun of. me
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they praised. the company that i know and then you hear this one sentence this one little joke and you want to jump out of your skin because for me you joke isn't little. just cause a few i cook a lot and i like trying new things for she new include all kinds of dishes from all different cuisines. cooking is totally relaxing for me it's called i basically started because my father always cooked the same thing one of the 1st day she learned to cook with it on tomato sauce with chicken tomatoes also them and then at some point i was like ok this has to change i'm taking over. as a mission he doesn't know every jew eats the same way although there are fixed dietary laws he could home cash root that's what it's called kosher food to do we're not
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allowed to mix meat with milk or examines not at all not even on the same time tenet has. been it's nice to know it's 100 percent religious his point was if i make myself a chicken breast i might slap some cheese on top pieces let it melt just as true. and what's important to me because it's the law i can understand the best is that in judaism it's forbidden to eat insects all the fruits and vegetables you eat you have to check them 1st is everything clean that's all they really know insects and like i can totally understand that i don't want to eat bugs. here and also never look that means i can't just go out some coffee but i'll drink coffee in a cafe for example sprite things like that some people would say this restricts mine and you know you don't have to be religious to be jewish i'm jewish because my mother is jewish and because my father is jewish that's all on the spot.
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because my religion teacher is probably crying somewhere right now because i don't remember everything i learned in all those years to find out about holidays and so on i tons of fog stupendous converse no yardstick no way i can somehow be more jewish. this woman mentioned you know he was born i live in munich and i was also born here i'm very active in the jewish community i work with young people and i also work part time in an israeli restaurant one carriage of my enjoy a waitress they were because like i just meet so many different kinds of people people come and most of them are trying israeli cuisine for the 1st time asked mollie's 3 israeli cuisine is super diverse and then they want to know what is kosher wine of what is kosher framed this is the restaurant.
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as a student in judaism plays a big role in my life it's my roots it's always with me it's something i carry within myself and i wear a star of david from the history of my family it's always there with me really your religion isn't such a big part of it because i just didn't grow up religious books from ash for me the special thing about judaism is that it's both a cultural and a religious affiliation people deal with this in very different ways some people feel they belong only in one group some of the other only religious or whatever for me it's both bibles. with the. old usually room comes from again about religious genius it's know a lot more about the whole thing than we do to about the for example i've never read the torah and all the other things you do if you're a religious jew let me tell you mark. my real hobby
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i would say is ballet as well i do ballet i started pretty recently but i like it very much and i love swimming and that's great here with the lake. piano and finding his own community we have a friend of the family who's also jewish as when he visits us we celebrate shabat and things like that and like candles but we try to do it more often but it doesn't always happen and by and because part of our family is christian we also celebrate easter and christmas by not really big celebrations but well kind of. thing to show him to see.
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this deal also not as a number but this is the orthodox synagogue with they say they're the central orthodox synagogue and for of when there's these it's really big and very old it's beautiful very high ceilings lots of decorative elements just magnificent up 1st it . was that's where i grew up. this is there often the m h. m i know this is the place where i can really leave my worries at the door into soho for judaism the prayer is in hebrew and that really is like entering another world and you may need to it's all in something like meditation perhaps and because for example as theoretically celebrated by all jews throughout the world i feel this strong connection. and i got some bad ones there's this powerful feeling of togetherness because everyone is on well in theory says the same prayer in the same
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language in hebrew beatrice on and on the sabbath that feelings and is beyond words on as this is only 5. 2. god especially the few of us the song to me the best feeling of the whole week is on saturday on ship bats i know my phone is off all my devices are off and i can't watch netflix or any other series so i can really focus on the important things in life. so when i spend time with my family i spend time with my friends and my neighbors and i don't have to think about schools from so i don't have to think about any problems i'm really a sense of freedom by hard religion might restrict me but by doing so it also gives me the freedom to clear my mind. and also with prayer i feel how it touches my soul which really touches my heart when we sing. 'd went finished
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a new read all still i wouldn't trade this moment for anything in the world. i mean 12th grade at the rocks given the i'm free i'll complete my high school diploma next year forms the truth my focus is science chemistry biology and math but i'm also interested in ancient languages like greek and latin my oral exam subject is history yeah those are my favorite subjects. and you wouldn't mind once they threw money at me they said because you like money so much marks again you get on i understood they thought i like money because i'm jewish and i said please never ever do that again. feeley you can to hear the and his image become how many young people have
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experienced anti semitism don't want to go on camera because they don't want to be targeted because book anti semitism in schools in germany that friend is just. left in some examples. to classmate saying the holocaust never happened she intervened and asked him what he was saying the boy replied you should have been gassed along with them the gazans only. i knew i'd teach said to mark if all jews are like you then i can see where hitler was coming from. ever he was in the april 9th grade when his classmates told him to go to the gas chambers he's like his relatives in. camos farm i'm 20 years old i'm from frankfurt i'm about to start school in berlin
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as a film student. writes in yeah i wrote the noise when i was 13 years old and i started going to a new school. i didn't know at the time that there might be anything wrong with saying that i was jewish or that it could be a problem in any way or that but i quickly noticed that my classmates thought it was funny to draw swastikas harken quite single and home to molyneux die and as soon as the word gas came up the whole class turned and looked at me was the cia. i'm fine mascot in the beginning it wasn't hurtful at all because i didn't understand it was god i didn't know that this was anti semitism and that it was actively directed against me as a jewish did this. is going on that's a huge event a struggle always that i see got around school that i was jewish yeah i think i was actually the only jew at the school governesses yes i can say i was bullied for
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being jewish but in the 7th grade inflation because my german was a little worse than it is now because not everyone has a birthmark like mine now and in the 7th grade that definitely makes a difference in 5 s. also as if you 3 factors came together used to birth mark and russian. helped actually is a so there's a cumulative language that builds up with all those little things all those jokes and invited some point you've had it out of class and it goes bam bam month. you feel. you don't know what to do with yourself and that's a big problem on the same course for liam because it makes things develop that you don't even want to imagine for. far more not next few months ago there was a situation that school where girls together with 2 boys called me a jew as an insult you didn't bloody tap as you took the term and used it in
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a negative way she said a lot of a bad word is a valid one and one cannot all and and i was totally overwhelmed and upset when it happened manfred she complained for them feel completely alienated as much you don't want to be who you are as you wish you'd never been born or saul this is the that's the terrible thing about racism anti-semitism whatever that it makes you dislike yourself zigzagged. as it is because there has been one i grew up without a religious upbringing but we've always had. connection to the senate on a cool with. that. he kept i just started to really engage with the deficit estimate and it was a process and i gradually integrated more and more things into my everyday life so my school had to get used to the fact that i wasn't going to go to school on jewish holidays my friends had to get used to the fact that i can't go out partying with
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them on saturday didn't find out it wasn't an obvious choice for everyone from this don't stand. up after i came out as jewish it made the rounds in the school relatively quickly and i got some surely one pretty soon everyone knew i was jewish his father children beside me i was presented a bit like a museum piece construed but people accepted it. delighted when i transferred to another school and on the list when my own class knew that i was jewish it's a huge discipline. but the other classes didn't know. them pause on one off in the school courtyard and i'd often hear expressions like don't act like a juvenile thing you will don't be cheered when the fun sometimes i'd go over or friends of mine or god and say that's not cool don't do that roman is jewish almost as much then there was this look of shock won't we have jews here in school. over
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felt uncomfortable yes the word was used every day don't fear to call don't act like a jew. you know but to call the better because i saw how the people who constantly said things like that i started to pay attention to what they were saying and the sum of all when it slipped out they apologized for just because when it's in someone's vocabulary it's hard to stop or look once it's the swears the right answers then. i used to see it as a disadvantage to grow up in a small jewish community and then of there being i'm one of the few actual jews in essen huge figure mind is the jewish community here is very very small a fountain people to my i would say that less than 10 percent of all people who live in essen have ever actually met a jew. and you can get and. 2 i
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studied acting and i work a lot with jewish communities all over germany but i was with youth groups and zones in general i would describe myself as an actor. yes one of the answers now at the moment as i see having grown up in essen is a real advantage in cologne or berlin maybe i wouldn't stand out as much as i do here in essex and 2 or. 3 gives a. word. from. the little. in fact i'd be happy if people who live in s. and watch this program because s n was actually one of the centers of jewish life in germany before world war 2. had the 3rd largest synagogue in germany until 1938. as this one was shaped by its jewish community for the whole of the 2nd world war that's not the case now and it's
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a shame but it doesn't mean it won't change in the future and that's. going to do soon you get how i'm jewish and the keeper is part of me i wear it at home all the time i wear to synagogue why can't i wear to school i remember that day when i came to school wearing a kippah. orleans and the vice principal came up to me and said sam well i think it's great what you're doing but you know the school rules say no head coverings are allowed and i was like yeah but what about the headscarf you have this and she said yes well a headscarf is different you don't have to wear keep so i said it's actually very important to me that jewish life is also represented at the school here just leave as we have jewish students and the keeper is important to me and it's the jewish
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equivalent to the muslim headscarf and i'm going to wear it now and so too and then the next day she came up to me and apologised and said how embarrassed she was and i just thought it was a funny moment you decide and i've had nothing but good experiences to go home and i was elected student representative with a cute pastor give me to keep up. thank you. for the for. the good to. see. you know was says i avoid a lot of conflict situations because i'm jewish i don't look at it i don't wear a kippa except at weddings and i don't wear a star of david to go toward a big. old guy or talk to my my when he came back on the phone once i was riding the train and i had my star of david on and an older man sat down
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across from me and surratt he got up immediately and sat somewhere else and kept looking at me very angrily from the bazaar. his actual you say this more with me. and asked me what do you have to do 1st. in my stand up right hand and they are right. this one you want and so. i try to never hired my jewishness and i wear my star of david necklace opening which is a jew it's all about that they all situations where my mother asks me not to say i know that there have been problems where you're going could you please try not to
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attract attention name right it's not the 1st thing i say it isn't us hello i'm jewish i kind of sit back and see what the situation is and yes some fortunately there have been times where i've put my star of david on the my t. shirt you know. i find it kind of sad you should actually be able to expect that it's a chill you can live just like any other german does here in germany. we always have to have the police in front of the school and i think it's not terrible but more a shame that i did on the spot our sports hall isn't in the school building and when we walk to the gym we always have to wait until the security and police are there so i don't really miss the police have to walk us to the gym. i'm in fribourg i wore my keeper openly for a year that is without covering it up with
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a cap even when i was doing sports. actually i'm tired i didn't even notice how the attacker followed me into the locker room i think and while i was busy doing something at my locker he grabbed me from behind and ripped off my keeper then he shouted this doesn't belong here you're dirty too you are so on. and he tried to tear up the keeper it didn't work so he spat on it and threw it in the trash free but then he said free palestine and spat on the ground and then he came up to me very close and threatened to beat me up there were other people in the locker room the whole time i turned to the other people in the row and we made eye contact and nobody said anything kind of us they didn't move an inch and that's what hurt the most on my tongue some of my mother and as a true. i myself was once in a situation where i was put down and insulted in class jew you jewish which because i also have red hair or something and my essence what hit me the most was not the
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insult but that the other 23 people just sat there and didn't say a word on kind involved because act. should eventually i would like people to stand up and show some courage not just when it comes to people of the jewish faith but for people of all saints. mind you shouldn't hide behind someone else or hide behind the crowd and say let the others do something so you should try to act as. the final part of a reporter asked me if the attacker was ethnically german yes i said i didn't want to talk about the nationality of the perpetrator why was i being asked to say yes it was imported anti semitism no it wasn't there's no such thing as imported anti-semitism anti semitism has never disappeared from history shows jews have been hated since the beginning of time most jewish holidays follow this pattern someone
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tried to kill us it didn't work but seat up the things with. you just smile vanished and every time i'm asked about muslim at the cemetery soft i say sorry but that's just an excuse to deflect responsibility to vent. laugh i see that laura tells the story of her brother in which the perpetrators none of him had an immigrant background all got away scot free he and his 3 jewish friends were severely bullied so badly that they had to be picked up from school and all of them changed schools i think except for one or 2 and the fact that the kids who were doing the bullying didn't get kicked out of school they just weren't any serious consequence not the kind of stuff the consequence. of you for the ass that i definitely think that the 1st reaction of all teachers
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and professional should be 20 kate you should stop it 100 percent explain to the stooges why it's wrong because that's the biggest problem i think they don't know why it's wrong if this is just a joke to them by the diseases and that's. it. i think it would be a big mistake if the teachers just cut the person off or sent them out to. punish. the money and i think punishment it's not very productive and the end punishment just makes the hatred grow it creates even more negative associations you know it. doesn't help people deal with the problem it just makes people feel strengthened in their conviction because especially at our age everyone wants to we want to test. his promises not seen v. i can't understand how the teachers can think there's no anti semitism at our
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school it's not a problem we don't need to talk about it. well we visited a concentration camp on the school hike so we've shown what the consequences of anti semitism are so they know about it. and then. they put from an intimate jewish students face and said to remind you. of the. teaching really angry tradition that she said you know what i don't want people like you in my closet either you behave yourself and cut it out with these anti semitic slows and leave the room the whole. sleep just leave the room just leave it on and then this student was like i was just kidding. but then everybody else was like you don't joke around with something like that that's gross.
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most of all and what my teacher did was completely right and i wish i still had classes with her because i really felt comfortable with her which is through the. george. will feel of mine over the years i've run into a lot of my classmates again by chance i have more self-confidence and i talked to almost everyone about it and we discussed the issues after these direct conversations we shook hands they also apologized for what they said or did that's why i think education and direct discourse is definitely the right way to approach this should.
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