Shades | 02-18-2012 04:25 AM | Quote:
Originally Posted by Death2Theft
(Post 7799751)
Well if your black that makes you the perfect target for teenagers to rebel with. | Being Chinese, I can't say I didn't recieve zero racism when I lived in Europe. I mean I heard some kids walk by and yell out "ching chang ling long" at me while I was having lunch on the patio of a Chinese restaurant with my German girlfriend at the time.
There will always be punks like that. In fact, every May Neo Nazis march through Eastern Berlin. Then there is the opposite extreme, the Anarchists who protest and try to block them. Every year it turns into a fight and the police step in and it becomes a free for all. It's quite the sight! Think Stanley Cup riot but it's even on both sides and the police are ready with their riot gear.
Just because of a few bad apples you can't generalize Germans as a whole for being racist. I was treated with some of the best hospitality and generosity one can imagine. During Christmas my international school friends, from all over Europe, returned home because it was convenient to do so. I stayed in Berlin. A German friend, who I met on the internet a few months before I left from Vancouver, invited me to spend it with her and her family.
There are racist people everywhere, especially in small towns, but I would say they are in a minority in Germany. Quote:
Originally Posted by falcon
(Post 7799938)
How does being Canadian make you an expert on German culture? You list Linz as your location, but you also mention that you're starting work in April. Have you actually worked/lived in Austria or Germany?
I live here, and I can tell you it's not a racist culture. A bit protectionist, but racist? No.
I work with an Italian, a Tunisian, a Slovak, an Australian, a few French and everyone gets along great. I've traveled through all the big German cities as well as Austria and it is very multicultural. There is more "Racism" within the Germans themselves from Tyrol/Southern Bavarian areas of Germany/Austria Vs. the North (Berlin/Hamburg etc.) than there is between actual races from what I've experienced. People here where I live don't even call themselves German, they call themselves Bavarian. Go to Austrian Tyrol, and ask them if they are Austrian. %75 of them will say they are Tyrolian.
German girls are the farthest thing from North American girls. You have no idea what you're talking about. | Yeah I had 2 friends from South Tyrol. They speak Italian and German. Nicest guys I know who each had me over for dinner. The best pasta I had in my life was with them! One made spaghetti carbonara and the other tagliatelle e funghi. It was mind blowing how good they were. I tell one of them how I make pasta at home, with carrots, chicken, brocolli, bell peppers, tomatoes etc. like how Chinese people make it and he spazzed out at me! lol Apprently, pasta sauces are suppose to be simple.
I don't think those ethnic cliques Tyrolian and Bavarian are necessarily racist. They are just overly proud of where they're from. Just like how most Vancouverites think they're better than Torontoians?
I also had Spanish friends who say they're not Spanish but Catalunian and Catalunya is a region in Spain. |