JRN449, Fall 2023

Author: Lia Opperman

Ashley Olenkiewicz Day 1

Our first day began in the lobby of hotel Adina. We filled our plates with mini sausages, scrambled eggs, baby pancakes, flakey-soft croissants, and, most important, wafer cups filled with hazelnut spread freshly sourced from the spout of an automated Nutella machine. We departed the hotel and took a short bus ride to our next destination, a historical multi-use space for the people of Nuremberg. The grounds house Nuremberg State Philharmonic Orchestra’s acclaimed open air concerts and the annual carnival-games- and food-filled Nürnberger Volksfest; this was also once Hitler’s and the Nazi party’s very own arena and marching grounds.

Although the Nazi party had an expansive vision for the grounds, not much building was actually completed here under the Third Reich. The start of WWII forced the Nazis to divert their 14,000-person team of builders on the Colosseum-inspired arena and grounds to work in the factories producing ammunition and other war supplies. Yet, they still managed to get pretty far on one building, leaving a large structure of what would’ve housed 50,000 people (three times the capacity of the Colosseum). The incomplete building stands in Nuremberg today and its use is contentious. It was nearly turned into a soccer field in the years following the war, a plan only stopped for lack of funds. Then, it was even closer to becoming a shopping mall, thought to be a terrible idea by many in the community. Now, it received the green light to be used as an arts and culture center. Our group agreed that using former Nazi-party stomping grounds as anything but an educational tool is reprehensible. But our tour guide explained that many Germans feel that the grounds should be updated to include economic and cultural development to reduce the risk that the space becomes a monument to the Nazi party. The debate has been stalled due to the discovery of asbestos, which has stalled the construction of the opera house within.

After our first tour of the day concluded, we took a short lunch break at a Greek chain called Gregory’s Coffee. Our second tour commenced soon after at the Nuremberg trials courthouse museum.

At the museum, we discussed both freedom of speech and church-state separation in Germany. The first topic was inspired by Julius Streicher, one of the 21 Nazi leaders put on trial at the international war crimes tribunal in Nuremberg in 1945. Streicher was a journalist and publisher of the unimaginably horrific antisemitic newspaper, Der Stürmer, during the Third Reich. He was found guilty for his publications and abhorrent speech calling for the annihilation of Jewish people. We learned that after WWII, many words, phrases, and hand movements associated with Nazis and Hitler are outright banned in Germany, where breaking that rule results in an investigation and a fine.

Nuremberg courtroom 600 became a working domestic courtroom following the war. Some time in the 1950s, a large wooden and metal crucifix was affixed to the center-front part of the room, directly above where the judges sit. Although religious symbols are banned in public spaces in Germany, Bavaria passed a state law circumventing the federal one, which explains the presence of this religious symbol. To an American, this seemingly lax separation of church and state is further exemplified by a religious tax. Three-percent of income is collected from people who identify as official members of churches, synagogues, and even some mosques.

The tax does come with benefits, including a reserved spot at a church-run school, a particularly big plus for Lutherans with the best kindergartens and high schools in town. It also gives you access to a church’s healthcare system, elderly care facilities, and the ability to be “married or buried” by your church.

After our two tours and before dinner, a handful of tired students set out in search of a coffee shop with Wifi, hafermilch (oat milk), and eisgekühlter lattes (iced latte). This is evidently a hard ask in Germany! While we did find one that checked the boxes, it had no room for us to sit indoors. We then set off on a mission to find a sweet treat or salty snack to hold us over until dinner, stopping only briefly to get cute pics in front of our favorite bridge.

Berlin Memo – Lia Opperman

In Berlin, I hope to focus on the stories of Palestinian refugees. Neukollon is one of the city’s most diverse boroughs, located in the southeastern part of the city center towards Berlin Schonefield Airport. The area is characterized as having one of the highest percentages of immigrants in Berlin. On the edge of the district, Sonnenallee is the artery of a thriving Arab community with shops from across the Middle East. Being such a diverse borough, different dialects of Arabic can be heard and most signs feature both Arabic and German. Many Palestinians, Moroccans, and Syrians dine on traditional food in this area and have a sense of community. There are many Palestinian-run businesses in the area, including stores selling “I Heart Palestine” scarves and trinkets next to miniature statues of Che Guevara, the Arabic bookstore Khan Aljanub, AL Berlin, a cafe-bar-nightclub with a Palestinian owner, and popular restaurants, like Azzam, which serves shawarma and falafels.

Also located in the neighborhood, Al-Huheh was set up in 1995 as the city’s first Palestinian society and been a first point of call for many Palestinians (and other Arab migrants) in Berlin. This organization shows Palestinian refugees how things work in Berlin and helps them meet people. It also hosts events with food and dancing and offers legal advice and relationship counseling. 

Though this place may be deemed a “cultural hub,” Germany does not recognize Palestinians as an official nationality, so most people remain underrepresented in government statistics. Despite Palestinian impact, Palestinians in Germany are often reduced in German media to a single political entity: hostile opponents of Israel, a state that Germans shouldering historical guilt for the Holocaust feel compelled to outspokenly support. In response, events such as the Saot Festival have been formed as an “interdisciplinary festival for solidarity with Palestine and intersectional struggles” for activists as tensions rise. Last week in Berlin, there was a rally for Palestine that was confronted by police repression. How do Palestinians confront a diverse city home to many refugees that they may not necessarily be welcome to?

I hope to explore what life is like for Palestinian refugees and how these tensions have affected their transition into German culture. Though I do not have a concrete specific source list just yet, I want to visit the borough of Neukollon, speak with the owners of these Palestinian-owned businesses to start, and then hopefully get connected to Palestinian refugees. I think an exact angle to my story will reveal itself once I am able to venture through the borough more and speak with people. Though they’re a smaller population in Berlin than Afghans, Syrians, and Ukrainians, their story, mixed with a complicated relationship with Germany that hasn’t been shared too much in the media, makes me want to cover them. In addition to covering potential tensions, I really want to focus the story on these cultural hubs that they consider home, and how they’ve found community in such a big city. I do worry about potential language and communication barriers in Berlin, but I hope that I will still be able to connect with many people.

China and Syria elevate relationship to ‘strategic partnership’ – Lia Opperman

Beijing, September 22 – Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Chinese leader Xi Jinping announced a strategic partnership to rebuild a war-torn Syria during the Arab leader’s rare visit to China. 

Assad visited China for the first time in almost two decades in an attempt to end over a decade of diplomatic isolation under Western sanctions. His visit takes place as China seeks to advance its influence in the Middle East, where it recently aligned with Iran and Saudi Arabia.

“China opposes interference by external forces in Syria’s internal affairs… and urges all relevant countries to lift illegal unilateral sanctions against Syria,” Xi said in a readout of talks published by Chinese state media. “China supports Syria’s opposition to foreign interference, unilateral bullying … and will support Syria’s reconstruction.”

The United States, the European League, and much of the Arab League called for Assad’s resignation from the presidency in 2011 after he ordered a violent crackdown on Arab Spring protesters during the events of the Syrian revolution, which led to the ongoing Syrian civil war. A series of economic sanctions were imposed in 2011 by the E.U., the U.S., Canada, and Australia as a result of the repression of civilians in the war. Syria regained full membership in the Arab League in May. 

As the second largest economy in the world, China has worked to partner with nations that have been historically shunned by the U.S. Assad’s motivation for visiting China was for financial and international legitimacy purposes, the same ones behind his Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) tour earlier this year to the United Arab Emirates, Oman, and Saudi Arabia.

Xi announced that a number of initiatives would be implemented aimed at building up infrastructure along the Silk Road and promoting China’s approach to global security. Syria joined China’s Belt and Road Initiative in 2022, which aims to strengthen China’s ties in Asia and Africa by improving regional integration, increasing trade, and stimulating economic growth.

Xi told Assad that China would help Syria to rebuild its ruined economy and counter domestic unrest, by upgrading ties to a “strategic partnership.”

According to the United Nations Refugee Agency, over 12 million Syrians remain forcibly displaced in the region, including almost 6.8 million within Syria and 5.4 million living as refugees in neighboring countries. 15.3 million people in Syria will require life-saving aid this year. The country remains the world’s largest refugee crisis.

In August 2023, protests over Syria’s high inflation rate and economic situation in Syria erupted in the city of Al-Suwayda. The protests began with hundreds of participants and grew to thousands of protesters by the next week and spread throughout the country. Protestors chanted slogans demanding the downfall of the Assad government.

In an interview with the New Jersey Times, Dora Guo, a research assistant for Princeton University’s Center on Contemporary China said “China is trying to help countries such as Syria in a very peaceful way. China is continuing to rebuild countries, no matter who’s in position.”

Guo added that Middle Eastern countries are in a “tough place,” where they have to “choose sides between global superpowers. “If it’s not the U.S., it has to be someone else, like China.”

Guo, an expert on China’s influence on the global scale, emphasized China’s want to gain control over the Middle East and its natural resources. 

“China has very limited oceanic resources,” Guo said in reference to the Belt and Road Initiative. “The initiative with the Middle East helps China, not only politically, but also economically, and culturally.”

Yan Bennett, the Assistant Director of the Contemporary Center on China, expressed a similar sentiment in an interview with the New Jersey Times.

“Based on trendlines from other Belt and Road Initiative projects, whatever infrastructure or energy investments in Syria will be more beneficial to China than to Syria,” she said. “China makes very one-sided deals with Belt and Road Initiative nations, which favors Chinese trade and investment gains.”

In the readout of the talks, Xi emphasized that this development marks an “important milestone in the history of bilateral relations”.

The meeting took place on Thursday, September 22 in Hangzhou, China. 

As Assad returned from China, the U.S. Central Command announced that the U.S. military captured an ISIS official in a helicopter raid in northern Syria over the weekend.

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