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- Newsgroups: rec.travel
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!bunyip.cc.uq.oz.au!griffin!kurango!ajl
- From: ajl@kurango.cit.gu.edu.au (Alexandre Lefebvre)
- Subject: Re: Germany?
- Message-ID: <C16pMu.2n0@kurango.cit.gu.edu.au>
- Organization: Griffith University.
- References: <C14nHn.A45@news.udel.edu>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 03:28:05 GMT
- Lines: 40
-
- thuyan@ravel.udel.edu (Thuy-An Hartman) writes:
-
- >My husband and I are looking to go to Germany in May. I have heard it
- >is not the place to be now. We have relatives there, so we really want
- >to go. Anyone have any info?
-
- If you don't go to the new Laender (east), and maybe some border towns
- in the east of the west part, the Germans are not more anti-foreigners
- now than they were before the reunification and its troubles came.
-
- The German attitude to foreigners is that they are foreigners and
- will always be. They are a bit patronizing/pedantic to this respect
- (a bit like the Japanese).
- Being a foreigner in Germany means that you'll be considered as a
- foreigner, in general.
- This is a general statement, reflecting the feelings that you might
- have, and not the behaviour of all Germans of course.
-
- So I'd say there is NO problem to visit Germany as a non German at the
- moment.
-
- In general, staff in shops are very unfriendly in Germany (this is
- for everyone, and a bit more unfriendly to tourists), and when you
- go shopping you have the weird impression that you are annoying them,
- and that they don't have any sense of service. Get used to it!
-
- Beware as well that the Germans are the world champions in cheating
- in queues (lanes). Watch your turn!
-
- Apart from that, the Germans in general speak pretty good English, and
- are willing to use it, so it's not a problem not speaking the language
- there, as soon as you're not too aggressive (try introducing and excusing
- yourself in German first).
- They can be really nice people, and have a good sense of enjoying parties.
- They ARE organised, and it does make life simpler in many cases.
-
- alex
-
- PS: I left Germany 1 year ago, and I had lived there for 5 years.
- Im French.
-