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Berlin, Germany
Berlin is a relatively young city by European standards, dating to the thirteenth century, and it has always had a reputation as a place filled with people from elsewhere. Someone who has lived in Berlin for ten years will see themselves as a true Berliner, looking down on the person who has only been there for five. It may seem tough to find someone born and raised here! This is part of Berlin’s charm: it never gets stuck in a rut. A certain uneasy detente still exists between some former residents of East and West Berlin (and Germany). Wessi evolved as a derogatory nickname for a West German; its corollary is Ossi. The implication here is that after reunification, the West Germans automatically assumed the way they do things is the right way, and the way the Easterners should start doing it, too. Westerners got a reputation for being arrogant. They saw the Easterners as stubborn Communist holdouts only interested in a handout from the rich West. Consider a shirt for sale in a shop inside the Alexanderplatz Deutsche Bahn station: Gott, sch?tze mich vor Sturm und Wind/und Wessies die im Osten sind (God, protect me from the storm and wind, and Wessies who are in the East). Another such stereotype is reflected by the short poem: Der Ossi ist schlau und stellt sich dumm, beim Wessi ist es andersrum (The Ossi is sly and pretends to be simple-minded, and with the Wessi, it relates the other way around). However, most of the younger generation do not share such biases.
Video Length: 188
Date Found: December 06, 2009
Date Produced: December 07, 2009
View Count: 0
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