Article 6YN9Y Women born in East Germany have lived between two worlds. That’s why we’re shaking up art and politics | Carolin Würfel

Women born in East Germany have lived between two worlds. That’s why we’re shaking up art and politics | Carolin Würfel

by
Carolin Würfel
from US news | The Guardian on (#6YN9Y)

The stories of curator Kathleen Reinhardt and provenance expert Lynn Rother show how exclusion can be turned to powerful insight

In February 1990, the German news magazine Der Spiegel ran the headline Why are they still coming?", adding: In West Germany, hatred for immigrants from the GDR could soon reach boiling point." That year, resentment towards so-called newcomers from the east erupted without restraint. East Germans were insulted in the streets, shelters were attacked and children from the former GDR were bullied at school. There was a widespread fear that the weekly influx of thousands of people would overwhelm the welfare system and crash the housing and job markets. The public consensus? It needed to stop.

That same year, Kathleen Reinhardt and her parents moved from Thuringia in the former GDR to Bavaria. She was in primary school, and her new classmates greeted her with lines such as: You people come here and take our jobs. You don't even know how to work properly."

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