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Christmas markets a deeply rooted tradition in Germany

December 20, 2016 By administrator

Christmas in Europe? Germany’s holiday markets quickly come to mind. After the attack on a market in Berlin, we look at the centuries-old history and meaning of Christmas markets for Germany.

When locals and tourists come to sip mulled wine and purchase hand-made Christmas presents at Germany’s holiday markets, they are participating in a tradition that has been around for centuries – and has even become more beloved lately. Some 85 million people visited German Christmas markets in 2012, up from 50 million in 2000, according to the most recent statistics.

Even before Christmas markets began, winter markets were held in Europe during the Late Middle Ages. At that time they usually took place over just several days, rather than weeks; the markets were an opportunity for residents to come together, trade food and handicrafts, and stock up for the coming winter months.

While the markets didn’t initially have a strong Christmas focus, people started using them to purchase baskets, toys, wood carvings and baked goods for Christmas.

During the Middle Ages, German-speaking Europe was made up of numerous principalities – the nation of Germany wasn’t created until 1871. The markets differed slightly from region to region, and some of that local flair has been preserved among the over 1,400 markets in Germany today.

Germany’s oldest Christmas market

The city of Dresden boasts what is most likely Germany’s oldest official Christmas market. According to the official website of the “Striezelmarkt,” as Dresden’s market is known, the first event was approved by Frederick II, Elector of Saxony, to take place in 1434. It lasted just one day.

Grilled meats play an important role in today’s Christmas markets, as apparently they did in 1434, too. The first Striezelmarkt was a meat market, where residents could purchase their Christmas dinner, which would end their Advent fast.

Now in its 582nd year, the Striezelmarkt is known for its Dresden Stollen festival, during which the world’s largest Stollen cake is baked every year. A 14-meter Christmas pyramid – a large version of a traditional holiday decoration from the nearby Erzgebirge region – graces the middle of the market and serves as an unmistakable landmark.

In response to Monday’s attack on a Christmas market in Berlin, however, authorities have erected a temporary cement wall around the market – to the chagrin of many locals. Closing Germany’s borders would eliminate the need for a wall, commented some users on Twitter. This user wrote: “‘We’re making cement mobile.’ Saxony responds to the attack in #Berlin by building a wall. Striezelmarkt in Dresden is secured with concrete.”

Germany’s most famous Christmas market

Among Germany’s oldest Christmas markets is the Christkindlesmarkt in Nuremberg – arguably also the country’s most famous abroad. Michael Fraas from the Nuremberg finance bureau told DW that the first written reference dates back to 1628.

While the Christkindlesmarkt is named for the Christ Child, the figure is traditionally represented as a female angel rather than Baby Jesus. Every two years, the city chooses an adolescent to play the angel and open the market by reading a Christ Child poem in the Church of Our Lady.

Since Nuremberg was a center of the spice trade, “Lebkuchen” (gingerbread cookies) became particularly popular there. The Christkindlesmarkt has also become known for its “Zwetschgenmännla,” souvenirs that are edible figures intricately decorated with dried fruit.

While the market lost its significance in the 19th century, it was rejuvenated by the Nazis during the 1930s when Nuremberg was the site of the Nazis’ large propaganda rallies. While the Christkindlesmarkt was canceled during World War II, it reopened in 1948 and now hosts at least two million visitors a year. Faas told DW that Nuremberg saw a record number of visitors last year – 2.2 million – shortly after the terror attacks on November 13, 2015 in Paris.

“I will be going with my children to the Christmas market over the next few days and won’t worry,” he said.

Did Martin Luther boost the Christmas markets?

The Christ Child is not restricted to the Christkindlesmarkt in Nuremberg. In many parts of Germany the Christ Child is said to bring the presents on Christmas Eve – a tradition that is attributed to Martin Luther. Some have even speculated that the church reformer contributed to the success of the Christmas markets by encouraging people to give gifts on Christmas Eve, rather than on St. Nicholas Day (December 6).

Source: dw.com

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: christmas, Germany, market

Breaking News: Germany 9 dead after truck crashes into Berlin Christmas market

December 19, 2016 By administrator

Local media reporting up to 50 people injured,

A truck plowed into a crowd near a Christmas market in Berlin on Monday evening, killing at least nine people and injuring many others, police said.

The market is  near the fashionable Kurfuerstendamm avenue in the west of Germany’s capital city.

It was not clear why the truck veered off the road into the market, but local media are reporting police have said initial investigations point to an attack.

A German newspaper has also reported that up to 50 people are injured.

Speaking to CBC News from Berlin, freelance journalist Nick Spicer said the truck drove into the crowd around 8 p.m. local time, when the market was crowded with people drinking mulled wine and eating sausages.

“If you wanted to hurt a large number of people with a truck, this is the kind of place you would go to,” Spicer said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Berlin, christmas, crash, Germany, truck

German school in Istanbul cancels Christmas celebrations.

December 19, 2016 By administrator

Twitter Ulf Poschardt @ulfposh

A German-funded school in Istanbul has told teachers they cannot even talk about Christmas in class. Berlin has expressed outrage as the school is financed with public funds.

Berlin expressed its dismay on Sunday that a German high school in Istanbul had canceled its Christmas celebrations.

“We do not understand the surprising decision of the leadership at Istanbul Lisesi,” said the foreign ministry. “It is a great pity that the good tradition of the intercultural exchange in the pre-Christmas period was suspended at a school with a long history of German-Turkish” friendship, the government said.

The elite high school was founded more than a century ago, employs around 35 German teachers and is co-financed by German public funds. Each December, the school has a small celebration for Christmas and teaches pupils about the holiday.

One week after the school’s choir was prevented from singing at the German consulate in Istanbul, they reportedly canceled the festivities.

https://twitter.com/ulfposh/status/810533166234615808

According to an email seen by German news agency DPA, the teachers cannot even mention Christmas inside their classroom.

“The topic of Christmas traditions and celebrations will not be discussed, taught or sung about, effective immediately, according to the notice by the Turkish management,” the head of school’s German department reportedly wrote.

No advent calendars

Responding to the protests from Berlin, the school management denied that they banned celebrating Christmas.

However, they said that German teacher have recently been “talking about Christmas and Christianity in a way that was not foreseen by the curriculum.”

Several German teachers confirmed to the “Spiegel” magazine that they were instructed to forgo Christmas songs and traditions. The school also wanted them to remove advent calendars from school premises, they said.

According to the magazine, the teachers requested anonymity as the staff is forbidden from talking to the media.

German newspaper “Die Welt” put its own spin on the situation, depicting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as the fiendish green Grinch famous in Dr. Seuss’ children’s tale for stealing Christmas.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: christmas, Germany, school, Turkey

First in Europe: Armenian benches installed at Germany city hall courtyard

November 30, 2016 By administrator

benchesTwo benches that symbolize Armenian-German friendship have been installed at the city hall courtyard in Leer, Germany.

German Armenian Albert Tovmasyan, at whose initiative these benches are placed, told the aforesaid to Armenian News-NEWS.am.

This is the first time that Armenia-made benches are installed at the courtyard of a government building of a European country.

Mayor of Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan, Taron Margaryan, had donated these benches to Leer.

To note, the anniversary of Yerevan was celebrated in this German town, on October 8. And, on this occasion, four benches that symbolize Yerevan-Leer friendship were installed in the Leer central park, where an Armenian cross-stone devoted to the Armenian Genocide Centennial was placed in 2015, again at Albert Tovmasyan’s initiative.

The next of his projects toward creating a small Armenia in Leer is to have a street in this German town be named Yerevan.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, benches, Germany

German gunmaker Heckler & Koch to no longer supply Turkey

November 29, 2016 By administrator

gun-turkeyGerman arms manufacturer Heckler & Koch will no longer sign contracts to supply Turkey,news agency DPA reported on Monday, November 28.

Also, countries outside of NATO‘s influence will no longer have such contructs either because it has become too difficult to obtain government approval for such deals, Reuters says.

The company, one of the world’s best-known gunmakers, will in future only sell to countries that are democratic and free from corruption and that are members of NATO or NATO members’ partners, DPA said, citing company sources.

It said this change in strategy would rule out deals with countries such as Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Brazil, India or even NATO member Turkey.

Heckler & Koch did not respond to requests for comment.

Its HK416 assault rifle is said to have been used to kill Osama bin Laden and its G36 rifle is standard issue for armies across the globe.

Related links:

Reuters. Heckler & Koch to stop doing deals with non-NATO countries: DPA

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, gun, supply, Turkey

German court cites Turkey’s support for terrorism in Kurdish militant case

November 26, 2016 By administrator

court-germany-turkey-kurdA German court has taken into account Turkey’s persecution of Kurds and support for the so-called ‘Islamic State’ (IS) and al-Qaeda in a case against a PKK member. The court opinion is sure to rile Turkey.

A German court on Friday issued a suspended sentence to a member of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), citing in the decision to grant a mild punishment Turkey’s persecution of Kurds and support for terror groups in Syria and Iraq, “Die Welt” newspaper reported.

The court ruling is likely to further strain ties between Germany and Turkey at a time when Ankara has accused Berlin of not clamping down on the PKK and of being a center of terrorism in Europe.The court’s ruling also comes amid a broader crackdown in Turkey that has drawn sharp criticism in the EU.

The Hamburg court gave the 60-year-old man a one year and nine month suspended sentence for being a member of a foreign terrorist organization and heading PKK activities in the northern city of Bremen. His arrest warrant was also lifted.

The verdict led to some 70 PKK supporters in the room erupting in applause as it became clear the man would be set free.

Between August 2014 and March 2015, the man collected money for the PKK, organized propaganda and took part in membership meetings, the judge said. His name was not provided in line with German privacy laws.

Court cites Turkish support for ‘Islamic State’

The PKK, a recognized EU terrorist group, carries out murder and attacks in Turkey, the judge said.

But in issuing the mild verdict, the judge took into account the man’s admission to being a PKK member and his Yezidi origin, which the judge said meant that he was subject to persecution.

The judge recognized the role of the PKK in fighting against the so-called “Islamic State” in both Syria and Iraq as the Sunni extremist group tried to commit genocide against the Yezidi ethno-religious minority. In 2014, for example, PKK fighters came to the rescue of Yezidis in Sinjar in Iraq.

The PKK’s Syrian affiliate, the YPG, is backed by the United States in Syria in the fight against IS.

The court assumed that Turkey supported al-Qaeda and IS between 2011 to 2014 by providing health treatment to wounded fighters in Turkey and allowing jihadist fighters to cross into Syria. Kurds in Syria and Turkey have repeatedly accused Turkey of supporting terrorist groups in Syria in order to fight against Syrian Kurds, which Ankara considers a threat.

The renewal of fighting between the PKK and the Turkish state since the breakdown of peace talks last year has led to security forces destroying Kurdish towns and a deterioration in human rights, including extra-judicial killings. All this was taken into account in the court’s decision to issue the suspended sentence, the judge said.

Acquittal on other charge

The court acquitted the man on allegations of forced coercion. The charges stemmed from an argument between the accused man and the father of a 21-year-old girl who joined the PKK as a fighter against the wishes of her parents.

The father originally accused the man of threatening him with a gun if he went to the police about the matter. In court, the father denied the statement and therefore there was insufficient evidence to proceed with the charge against the PKK member.

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/german-court-cites-turkeys-support-for-terrorism-in-kurdish-militant-case/a-36532293

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Court, Germany, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Armenia second major business partner for Germany – ambassador

November 22, 2016 By administrator

armenia-germanyArmenia is Germany’s second major business partner after Russia and China, Ambassador Bernhard Matthias Kiesler said today, highlighting the increased trade turnover between the two countries.

At a news conference in Yerevan, the diplomat noted that his country’s financial allocations amounted to € 54.4 million in 2016 alone. Additionally, he said, Germany spent €22 million for regional projects.
After intergovernmental negotiations on Monday, a bilateral protocol was signed at the Ministry of Finance.

“2016 was really a unique year in the development of the Armenian-German relations,” he said, citing the mutual intensive visits (including Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s trip to Berlin and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier’s trip to Yerevan in late June) and Germany’s presidency of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

Asked why then major German companies’ presence to Armenia is not visible, the ambassador replied:

German businessmen are interested in counties with large markets and political stability to make investments. Regrettably, German medial headlines about Armenia and the region did not speak of regional stability. Their topic was the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Such problems are an obstacle to small and medium businessmen in terms of economic interest.

German businessmen point out ample opportunities not only for trade, but also for production in Armenia. Armenia’s membership in the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) is one more factor making Armenia attractive to German businessmen.

Anush Dashtents

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, business, Germany, partner

Germany issues first verdict of case on threats against #ArmenianGenocide resolution

November 4, 2016 By administrator

genocide-first-verdictGermany issues first verdict on the cases of insulting the German MPs of Turkish origin for adoption the Armenian Genocide resolution by the Bundestag.

The administrative court of Berlin fined a Turk 600 euros for cursing the expert on foreign policy from the leftist party Sevim Daghdelen on the Facebook, reports Berliner Zeitung. Another defendant will pay 700 euros for calling the chairman of the Green Party, Cem Ozdemir “son of a bitch.

” Sevim Daghdelen appealed the court decision. “It’s good that the Internet is not in the legal field. I hope that the verdict will become a deterrent,” he said, adding that he reserves the right to take a legal action because of threats. Ozdemir, in his turn, assesses positively the fact that the insults and threats have become the subject of criminal investigations more often.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Germany, Greek police arrest 72-year-old German suspected of spying for Turks, Turks, verdict

Reuters report: Germany cancels Istanbul concert “aghet” marking Armenian massacres

October 26, 2016 By administrator

aghetTurkey’s Government do not want Turkish people to see the truth 

The German Foreign Ministry has canceled a long-planned concert by the Dresden Sinfoniker orchestra in Istanbul on Nov. 13 that was to commemorate the 1915 massacre of Armenians after protests by Ankara, orchestra director Markus Rindt said on Wednesday.

The ministry notified the orchestra that the German consulate in Istanbul, where the performance called “aghet”, or “catastrophe” in Armenian, was to have taken place, would not be available on Nov. 13, Rindt said. The piece premiered in Berlin in November.

“It’s definitely been canceled. They said they wanted to reschedule at a better time, but when would that be? This has been planned for years,” Rindt told Reuters.

Turkey, angered by the German parliament’s decision to brand the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman forces a genocide, had protested the use of European Union funding to support the performance, and earlier this month withdrew from the EU cultural arms program that was funding the project.

While Turkey accepts that many Armenians died in partisan fighting beginning in 1915, it denies that up to 1.5 million were killed and that this constituted an act of genocide, a term used by many Western historians and foreign parliaments.

The Dresden Sinfoniker performance includes musicians from Turkey, Armenia, Germany and members of the No Borders Orchestra, which is comprised of musicians from the former Yugoslavia. Additional performances are planned in Belgrade on Nov. 5 and in Yerevan, Armenia on Nov. 10.

Ties between Germany and Turkey remain strained over the Armenia resolution and Ankara’s frustration about what it sees as Germany’s half-hearted expressions of solidarity after the July 15 attempted military coup in Turkey.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; editing by Ralph Boulton)

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-turkey-concert-idUSKCN12Q1K9

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: AGHET, Armenian, Germany, İstanbul, Massacre, Turkey

Turkish President Erdogan invited to Armenian Genocide concert “aghet” in Turkey

October 24, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-invited-aghetTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been invited to attend a concert commemorating the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, Ermenihaber.am reports.

Dresdner Sinfoniker will perform “Aghet”, a production commemorating the Armenian Genocide, in at the German Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey on November 13.

Besides Erdogan, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and Minister of Culture Nabi Avci have also been invited to the event.

According to Turkey-based Armenian newspaper Agos, the invitation sent to Erdogan says the concert seeks to establish cooperation among artists of the three countries.

Also, the invitation said, the event is organized with the support of the German Foreign Ministry and the European Union.

The orchestra said on April 23 that Turkey attempted to pressure it and the EU to keep the term genocide out of the same concert it ended up playing on April 30 to mark the 100th anniversary of the Genocide.

The controversy then centered on texts that were sung or spoken during the show in the eastern German city of Dresden, as well as the event’s programme, which used the word.

Director of the Dresdner Sinfoniker orchestra Markus Rindt said the concert matters to Germany a lot as the country “bears its own share of responsibility for the massacres.”

letter-to-erdoganGerman Foreign Ministry’s support

It reads the invitation letter dated October 21 Agos contact:

“Mr. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,

You German-Turkish-Armenian Friendship Society is pleased to invite you to the opening and concert events and we hope to see you in our midst.

“Aghetti-Requiem” November 13th hour of the conclusion of our extensive concert tour with 19: 00 in Istanbul Consulate General in Kaisersaaal We want to celebrate with the support of the European Union and the German Foreign Ministry.

Dresden Symphony Orchestra will hold a concert for the participation of Turkish and Armenian guests. Ulvi Cemal Erkin’s String Quartet in the program next Quartet Cenk Erbiner the viola-duo, Vacha Sharafyans sürgit Gloria Viola, Duduk and String Quintet and Marc Sinan electric guitar in yello-Blue-Red String Quartet place armor. Www.aghet.e you can visit our website for more detailed information.

German-Turkish-Armenian friendship group of artists from three countries regularly bring together it aims to establish cooperation through art. These issues are not common to get in cooperation with both the Turkish and Armenian history and to share their influence today, and we would like to address the idea of freedom and artistic freedom peculiar to itself.

The common belief that dialogue contributed to good tomorrow, we would like to express that we will be very happy to see us.

 We are glad if you give us information about your attendance status until November 5, 2016. “
Related links:

Էրդողանը հրավիրվել է ցեղասպանությանը նվիրված համերգին. Ermenihaber.am

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Erdogan, Germany, invitation, Turkish

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