tv Projekt Zukunft Deutsche Welle July 5, 2021 6:30am-7:00am CEST
6:30 am
she's an am on the national my computer. at some point i just wanted to discover my culture. my musical interests led me to my religion because there are very interesting aspects of jewish culture pettis. if my mother is ashton ozzy and my father is 40 boots. those kids, i don't and they went to israel, but not because they felt jewish. not at all reset it, but it was because at the time they were of a certain political persuasion and wanted to practice in a kid boots. my brother is israeli. i'm the only french one in my family and i ended up in my thing which isn't really friends, is sort of separate to the country. i feel like a true marcia, because i really like the city even with almost as long as you must have seen them . but can i book who that is really why see so anyway,
6:31 am
6:32 am
ah, i think it's great that we're traveling straight from my say to one of the oldest jewish centers in europe, transport and not just to paris as you might expect you see a whole other jewish life here. there are a neighborhoods with a strong jewish presence that is seen that you will find almost nowhere else. because we want to lose passport has always had a label, not in a derogatory way. on the contrary, in a very positive way, it has the label of being lonely community of any intellectual sense. there were granted intellectual figures who were born or hawkins across the board. if you ask a random jewish person here, they tell you they feel no sense of anti semitism here. it's not a heart of everyday lot of water. they tell you they feel alive here. transport is often referred to as little jerusalem is sort of
6:33 am
a little to river comes on. so yes, that's what people call strasbourg because jewish people can live here peacefully, totally independent from all the tension that arises elsewhere. totally to also keep of exist. there is also a very special quality of life and stress because of the jewish community poly, peaceful lifestyle that we enjoy here every day as jews who plays out right in the heart of the city. but this will be not the, somewhere on the outskirts, but write them a part of strasburg life. of those was popular kid on korea. jewish community is part of strasbourg culture. it's also a school comedy of life is extraordinary. and if you feel that the distances are short, you don't need a car to get around. you can walk your children to school, all the nef. did you stop? okay, cool. because everything's going to get into one place on them and is on fall record
6:34 am
is off auto media. almost no big problems with anti semitism in strasburg for a few small incidents here. and there was a view to be on the camino table. good immune us. as of course the community is guarded by the police because there could be threats here too. but it's not something you're constantly aware of. i think that's one of the reasons jewish people choose to settle here, especially families with young children and will continue to nurture and develop our jewish way of life. because of a huge restaurant and down there's a school where the grill, it's right here and there you have the culture pastry shop. there's another synagogue nearby and another culture chart notes on this little street. there are 7 or 8 of them. oh,
6:35 am
6:36 am
o g e o o, o, o, o, that showed us about about some stuff that kind of shipment is shavone, saturday's a day of rest for all jews, no matter where you are and on my role is canter doesn't change much whether i'm strasburg, or new york, or a small town like fryeburg because the task is the same, was still for i have to lead the prayer on the read from the tora, seeing well and so on. the about godlike shabba in a big city like stress books and the goals and stuff really is a wonderful experience than it because you see lots of jewish people out on the streets. months of this because if you then dressed in the traditional way for
6:37 am
shabbat shabbots and they're happy, it's all they go to synagogues, go for a walk and things like that. and they invite you along with them. and then that's what i've realized, having spent time in france, germany has a very different approach to judaism. the whole way of life is much less apparent, but the mindset is different to go out of a holocaust change like a sword of damocles over the jewish people. is that you can't just forget it. it's not possible that's come up. and in france, i get the impression that they live much more in the present. people there aren't shaped by the past and such an extreme way. probably has something to do with the fart at judaism. so the one that came from morocco or spain, or an area around there. it's very different to your or eastern european
6:38 am
judaism that went through the show. actually, are you 2nd generation i tried to came from holocaust 2nd generation of children of holocaust survivors. even though the question is, what is a holocaust survivor around with my parents for young? my father was born during the wave off. he was a baby when the jews were being reported and it's actually thanks to him that they managed to escape to switzerland. and so it's a long story. i'm probably not the 2nd generation, the psychologically i didn't listen to wal store day. i'll be that they were hidden from me or anything back sufficient with the older you get, the more you wonder why your family came out of it relatively on the phone. guy called me think about that and more and more off the fleeing from france and germany. my grandfather ran the jewish refugee camp in bonds on the 1st. he was
6:39 am
also confronted with constantly of alba, but i know how to put it. i'm a free person and a liberated person because i didn't grow up with a story. and so as it was over the top, just a few. i think what i've seen is that genes in france live a much freer, more present oriented and also future oriented lifestyle. than we do in germany as the
6:40 am
the hello alice corona. how do you know me? i especially know your sister right back. my cousin christina going to yes, photographer, from the mac to be game. right. she helped us a lot. hello. and on, how are you? nice to see you. nice to see this is going to tell me we have a copy for clubs in germany and it's also all over the world or their non jewish kids in the clubs to help us as this is exactly as far as possible. we have jews and non jews playing together. we're very open. i think we want to build those bridges and it depends on the place. there's mcafee munich that's open to everyone, but they're much stricter about the jewish traditions and religious practices. they don't play or train on saturday for example, and we do play on saturday just like they do in israel's, and it's just a normal match day. so i need to speak with them on stock. we have 1603 active
6:41 am
members. and about 70 percent of them are non jewish. i not even get on the phone round about that we struggle to exist without non jews. wouldn't that? that's what we want to show that we cannot assess the time we live here as jews in germany. and so that interplay is part of life. we want to make that clear to our jewish, but also our non jewish germans ones when you didn't miss tube or some direction you clamor with them. bill mccarthy is perceived as a jewish association and my son used to go to all the games and they trained for a year. and every time they played against vetting or no, i can berlin and it was incredibly difficult. if there was ever hostility, you wouldn't just hear the normal insult. it was things like yesterday to jewish pig, things like that. one's of either. what's it like here? as everyone is considered liable for israel? if the situation escalates in the middle east, things get protect really bad year,
6:42 am
needed them. and then anyone in america be shared with a star of david on their chest is automatically a jewel. one time there was a stabbing, and on the way to the hospital, it transpired that both of them, the attacker and the victim from our side, were both muslims from iran. and one said, if you told me that i wouldn't have attacked you, you idiot, and our mac, a be player said that just shows how stupid you are. not how stupid i am because you attacked me for nothing. just because i was wearing a shirt with a star of david on it, and those are the values we want to convey. and of course the actions that we want to prevent from making one and provide them to us. it's true that anyone with a star of david is attacked in the same way. it's like the it's devastating that this sort of thing still happened today. unbelievable. it's hard to understand why we still have
6:43 am
anti semitism, racism, and discrimination at all in a liberal society. it's good to see though that life in these communities is continuing to develop and evolve countries that also goes for quincy and even ones that would develop in late. and we love the diversity of different cultures. so that's something we're always pushing in our establishment of this month. for example, in our newest play, when you go in, you see to me on the signs that say friendship, i'm a t broo and arabic light, the bones of it and the creature. and that goes for the staff to on in the kitchen . we have people from bangladesh, india, morocco, egypt, god, when, via, and call us. we're about to bring in a shift from israel, who's actually palestinian. by the time we feel it's the best way to represent what we're doing present when you read news and we don't talk about ourselves as
6:44 am
germans who live here. but his views who live here, the one does this entire and that's just part of who we are. the measurements menu, just reply to stick that we don't want to be pigeonholed and we just wanted to no longer be an issue and progress. i wonder, is that actually the case here, or what have you been confronted with such growing anti semitic hostility in recent years? that you wrap yourself in a cartoon. so it can't get to you to the dishes in i think because we have a very confident presence and engage in dialogue with every one anti semitism does happen. walk in pursuit and imitate most, and that's become a fun, it's subtle and behind out back. but we know so much, it's huge. for example, last year for the jewish culture week, we opened a pop up restaurant with the jewish community, including chef. you'll see a lot on java. it was a chance for the jewish community to present contemporary jewish culture. you go to
6:45 am
the site that the site has on here in about 5, look, we had a policy in the bar club with american de jason d. j from israel and jane young's of america often use what's the boys from america also had jewish, rubies and a non jewish friend of ours was about to come in and people outside was saying, you can't go in that place. there are loads of jews in their, in their lives and in the unit in virginia, i used to be further ahead in terms of living side by side no matter where you come from. but in recent years has gone back to where are you from which religion are you? it's become a much bigger topic and why and how that's happened is not just the problem in germany, but worldwide for them going on. right? is in diets isn't people born off of actually we german, we will born and raised here, but we have an immigrant background. what's routes lie in jewish and israel, li,
6:46 am
culture. and that's what ultimately defines us in the august the i love is really food hum. as to he for lawful jefferson ational. i like it a lot to, but i often wonder, what's the secret behind israeli cuisine? israeli cuisine requires 2 things. but i know i'm the 1st you need and israeli shit. advisor, and 2nd, you need glisper. and if the chef has chutzpah in his, from israel, they can make his railey quizzes. me,
6:47 am
i'm really looking forward to meeting one of germany's very few female rabbis. it's really an exciting development that a woman is allowed to officiate at one of the main synagogues all be its own in the side room at the community center. i still can't understand that. i ask you, in the 21st century why female rabbis are still not allowed to hold a service in the main room. when do use, the synagogue reflects the turbulence of frankfurt jewish history in its architecture. different shots are really interesting to play in both cases and then i'm going to stop. is there a reason why a liberal synagogue became an orthodox one after the show of him? definitely. the survivors who came to frankfort weren't necessarily original frank, for jews. some of them, yes, but the majority or survivors from displaced persons camps. deep support who had
6:48 am
been led on death marches from the east and happened to survive on german soil. moss and others who later fled from eastern europe because of hostilities and pogroms taking place by daughter homo. and i'm trying to find one of these nicks of survivors and wasn't necessarily interested in liberal judaism yet vice was yet at home. they were more interested in their old home in the last traditional judaism. something that gave them security at us to happen, as it does here, is. so that's been a bone of contention. the original main synagogue near to the old jewish ghetto, wasn't liberal enough for some of frankfurt stews in google, or people call it liberal, liberal and orthodox, and one look at this. and that's why this temple was built to books and i am on
6:49 am
this being forwarded liberal jews in the 19th and early 20th centuries referred to temples rather than synagogues. 25. when they, when they were saying, we don't need to recreate the temple in jerusalem in temperate and use an envy to of the home. we are quite happy with this temple. this house of worship in this form here in frankfort tells us of poet. i mean, oh the the my is this is as men in terms of jewish life, my self image is that person and a jew was and still is not one of integration, much less assimilation. i'm fighting for emancipation conservation. i feel like you've been fighting a losing battle for years because things are getting worse rather than better than others. lester. when monday the she said that you wouldn't open it if you look at
6:50 am
the history of jews in europe over the centuries, i think we're still in a phase now where jews are protected, not by others, but by a system the other. and then how do the same system that protects every one else, that this gets the neck, that's the negative spin puppies, come on other things. but on a positive note, you could also say that we're free and as citizens of our countries, we have a voice will go on and then i understand. ok. and what about the group of all right, s p g. is that for you? from essence effect? michelle, a few fancy mentioned she'll come well, it's hard for me to make a psycho gram from 24 people in anti semites must get annoyed by the fact jews a portrayed is being smarter than everyone else. yes, although we'll also see that choose not always politically smart. now they've made themselves into token to him and that will get these kind of b a s d can use the pseudo argument that they can't be anti semitic because they
6:51 am
have 24 jews on board. even then i'd call that nevis on, on that you mention, the situation has become significantly worse. so despite or perhaps because of the last 20 years, my human dignity should be respected independently of my jewishness. but we need to engage. i hope that others feel similarly affected and threatened by these anti democratic movements in societies the way i feel threatened. the question is, are people sick of freedom and responsibility? do they believe that they can give up and not get eaten by the authoritarian systems that they're enabling? and to that question, all i can say is, as a jew, i will be among the 1st to be eaten, but i won't be the law if we are honest, we don't have a religious judaism, but we do live judaism every day. but we're not that over not
6:52 am
6:53 am
the, the the bonus transience and sydney came to put in 5 and a half years ago. but i've been for a long time coming to germany, and i was, i was brought up was jewish music as a child in synagogue at home. my grandfather played violin and i heard songs my whole life. my mother was born in casablanca, my father, in budapest. so we grew up with was distinctly this jewish european music, so and also playing violin from a young edge because i was inspired by my grandfather and been traditional. i've been going to synagogue from the high holidays keeping sure, but case and this sort of thing. you know, dev, it's normal music just just it just comes very naturally transmission. what i'm
6:54 am
interested in, it's in the background of could you grow up jewish and how you grew up in a house of musicians. it's my you jewish wants your bank right now. i love this finish nice according to the car. i'm not jewish because it comes from my father's side. he didn't speak yiddish either. in the fifty's, he started the jewish evenings among his other projects and he wanted to know what makes a jewish evening. he wanted to present to close, but he was also a german writer, digest, as people would recite things that it had been translated from dish or sometimes he himself would resign to the organism. when he also played jewish records with the i listen to them to that then give me a so i think jewish or not, i absorbed it old and grew up with that background of the the
6:55 am
of the, the, the the the news, the berlin has become a real hot spot for young israelis, a started seat has emerged here, is really open galleries and there are lots of restaurants to the as jews. they were in the majority in israel and in berlin there in the minority. so that confronted with being jewish, the living is doing
6:56 am
a living in germany. yeah, i think i think i never thought about it right there. so i think i never saw one myself. i never, i never thought about it to me. it's normal ability of a friday dinner drama holidays that my family have revision within the country like it wasn't really not separate here. we are all together close together because i am an artist so we have to practice much more . yeah, i don't know. i don't know how to think about. i think i'm living in about is it, it's something that i try to like being religious with finding myself to like, you know, there's all this talk about. i'm just, i feel like i'm not better than anyone on sunday. first of all, is there any of your but then all just like me here in the context it is for
6:57 am
instance and it's off with now and it was like was it was, it's like this. and i like of course my grandfather. i'm going to hide it. i don't even think about it. they used to give my grandma, my grandma because i'm afraid of varying and i know all the like even though it was like, i was never aware and i know it's a bit from the he but i think, you know, i won't be able to get out of it because i'm because that's why that's why i was because i couldn't. then i realize it's everywhere and i'm going to protect and if i have a feeling and that i'm let it expire, i the
6:58 am
6:59 am
7:00 am
and young people clearly have the solutions that do job 77 percent. now every weekend on the w i i, this is deed of you news, and these are our top stories. the remaining part of a collapse condominium near miami, has been brought down in a controlled demolition. the tower had been declared unstable and afraid to search and rescue efforts in the rebel below. more than a week after the disaster 24 people confirm dead and 121 others are.
14 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on