Wednesday - The travelday
Even with all the waiting at the airports, my
flight from Helsinki to Nürnberg via Amsterdam was actually quite
pleasant. I dozed off a little bit and enjoyed the tea service with
pizza-roll and tiny tortilla. It was the first time for me to land on
Amsterdam Schiphol airport. I was HUGE. Compared to that, Nürnberg
looked small, grey and very humble. Nevertheless, there I was at the airport and was hoping to see the worker from CPH to pick me up. In stead I had the first intercultural experience here. The airport was full of people with bouqets of flowers. Later It turned out that they were waiting for pilgrims to get back from Mekka. More and more people came in and they were clapping and shouting. Unfortunately my contact person was on the other side of the room and we did not see each other before the growd went outside. Then the second obstacle: the metro, U-bahn, did not work between the airport and the city. My boss ended up driving us to the house and I got the first proper meal of the day - at 8'clock pm.
Thursday - The day of meetings
Quite practically there is a staff meeting held in house every thursday. It gave me the opportunity to see all staff members I'd be working with. I also would have heared a bit of recent activity had I understood the language. Even when I did not catch all the conversations, it was very useful to meet everyone and hear what their responsibilities are. Afternoon meeting went on with few guests. The first was representing a project called Kopfball. Here is a video I saw about the project (link).
Later at night there was a symposium about taxes, from the viewpoint of tax avoidance. I was really tired and it was troublesome trying to understand speech of such a difficult matter in German. Yet, it sounds like Finland is not the only country that loses millions due to tax avoidance, undeclared work and other holes in the tax system
Friday - Begegnungsstube Medina e.V.
On
friday morning I participated in a get-to-know meeting at
Begegnungsstube Medina. It is a place where different groups are
invited to get to know Islamic culture. There was a museum, mosque and
a lecture toom. The museum featured Turkish, Balkan and other oriental
clothing, handcraft, currency etc. The
mosque was used not only for educational purposes but also as a
an actual mosque and in different events. The lecture room was orientally
decorated just like the other rooms. Still, the most important part for me
was the clothescorner. When school classes come to visit, children
and young people are allowed put on clothing from different islamic areas.
The guide said visitors usually love this
part. They take a lot pictures and selfies. With this experience they are
sure to remenber their visit but also get a different perspective to
the culture. Women in headpieces are not anymore just something you see on
the street. With smaller children the education cannot be too difficult. The guide told us an example of childrens visit. Everybody gathers in the mosque. Then the children are told imaam would come to see them. The children are taught how to greet him in Islamic words shalaam aleikum. Then a staff member comes in dressed as imaam. This is yet another example of teaching through experiences rather than boring lectures. Adults and older adults visit Medina, too. With them, topics are
naturally more deep. It can be about politics or the religion.
Muslim hate (or fear) seems to be hot topic in Germany, too, which does not surprise me at all.
Learn more about Begegnungsstube Medina in their facebook page (link).The costumes corner |
Me as a "convertee" |
This here is an interesting piece. I did not quite get everything that was said, but the title for the piece it "You stole our dreams". And yes, the figures tell a lot. |
Pictures in the info flyer in order: the museum, the mosque, more museum, more mosque |
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