Saturday, October 16, 2010

Merkel: multicultural society is utter failure, new residents must speak German and adopt Christian values (maybe)

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Update #2, 10/18: The BBC report has been significantly changed from its 10/16 original.

The quote: ""Anyone who does not immediately speak German", she said, "is not welcome"."
  • has been removed (though it remains in this post below).
""Mrs Merkel said: "We should not be a country either which gives the impression to the outside world that those
Update 1: The BBC report left out a significant detail in Chancellor Merkel's remarks, which is she recommended newcomers to Germany adopt Christian values. Per AFP report:

"Attempts to build a multicultural society in Germany have "utterly failed", Chancellor Angela Merkel says.
  • In a speech in Potsdam, she said the so-called "multikulti" concept - where people would "live side-by-side" happily - did not work.

Mrs Merkel's comments come amid recent outpourings of strong anti-immigrant feeling from mainstream politicians.

  • A recent survey showed that more than 30% of Germans believed Germany was "overrun by foreigners".

The study - by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation think-tank - also showed that roughly the same number thought that some 16 million of Germany's immigrants or people with foreign origins

Mrs Merkel told a gathering of younger members of her conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party on Saturday that at "the beginning of the 60s our country called the foreign workers to come to Germany and now they live in our country...

  • We kidded ourselves a while, we said: 'They won't stay, sometime they will be gone', but this isn't reality.

"And of course, the approach [to build] a multicultural [society] and to live side-by-side and to enjoy each other...

In her speech, the chancellor specifically referred to recent comments by German President Christian Wulff who said that Islam was "part of Germany" like Christianity and Judaism.

While acknowledging that this was the case, Mrs Merkel stressed that immigrants living in Germany needed to do more to integrate,

  • including learning to speak German.

"Anyone who does not immediately speak German", she said, "is not welcome".

Her comments come a week after she held talks with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in which the two leaders pledged to do more to improve the often poor integration record of Germany's estimated 2.5 million-strong Turkish community.

Earlier this week, Horst Seehofer, the leader of the CDU's Bavarian sister party, CSU, said about integration that it was "obvious that immigrants from different cultures like Turkey and Arab countries, all in all, find it harder".

  • "'Multikulti' is dead," Mr Seehofer said.

In August, Thilo Sarrazin, a senior official at Germany's central, said that

  • "no immigrant group other than Muslims is so strongly connected with claims on the welfare state and crime". Mr Sarrazin has since resigned.

Such recent strong anti-immigrant feelings from mainstream politicians come amid an anger in Germany about high unemployment, even if the economy is growing faster than those of its rivals, the BBC's Stephen Evans in Berlin says.

Our correspondent adds that there also seems to be a new strident tone in the country, perhaps

from American Thinker, 10/17: "Germany is not America and has little experience assimilating foreigners while America has been doing it for 300 years. But what Merkel is making clear is that
  • the German/leftist model of celebrating and encouraging the development of the immigrant's culture separate from the host country rather than employing a "melting pot" strategy...
has utterly failed in assimilating the foreign workers who poured into Germany from the 1960's until today.
  • She is not saying anything different than critics of multi-culturalism here in America who are routinely tarred with the epithet of "racist"

for espousing melting pot assimilation, including

  • the necessity of foreigners learning the English language."...
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