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Пишет DK ([info]k_d_s)
@ 2020-07-16 19:21:00


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Настроение: sleepy
Entry tags:deutschland

A Look at the Refugee Crisis Five Years Later
"We at the regulatory authority have a slightly different view of certain problems," she says. "When a Sikh man shows up in your office, sits down on the floor and says he's not going anywhere until he is allowed to cook in the hostel" – which isn't allowed due to fire regulations – "then friendliness doesn't get you very far. You have to pull out your English and affably throw him out. But you can never forget that you are dealing with a human being."

...

Behret can provide a precise description of the asylum seekers in Hassloch using just a few sentences. She says they have "the entire spectrum" in the town, from a mathematics professor from Syria to others who can't even write their own names. "The typical cases come by once a month to pick up their checks. For some of them, it's enough. Others start working at McDonald's at some point, or deliver packages for Amazon."

...

She tells the story of the man who died, yet couldn't be buried because he had no birth certificate. "And if you haven't been born, you can't die." In this room, focused on the administration of people, where everything is perfectly arranged, it is clear that she derives a certain amount of pleasure from such moments of turmoil.