In 1992, Rostock was tarnished by the worst racist rioting in Germany since the days of Hitler. But current Rostockers, including African immigrants, are trying to change that.
EnlargeFrom her fifth-floor apartment one late-summer night, Kathleen Fichtner is trying to exorcise this city?s demons.
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"My third day visiting Ghana, I walked through a crowded square, and everyone was black," she tells a group of guests about her recent trip. "And I thought, 'They?re all going to rob me!'"
Beside her, sipping drinks, five Ghanaian political refugees howl with laughter.
But back home in her native northeast Germany, she encountered even wilder notions: "Do Africans use forks and knives?" a grandparent asked. "Do they have roads?"
Her guests roll around in their chairs, slapping knees, and each other?s backs.
"We don't have houses!" someone jokes.
"We sleep in trees," cracks Kofi Owusu.
Ever since 1992, when Rostock became site of Germany?s most racist riots since the days of Hitler, this Baltic Sea port has faced a long road to redemption. That August, an angry mob, fed up with scores of Eastern European refugees pouring in, ran riot for three days ? hurling Molotov cocktails at a heavily immigrant apartment complex and then storming it, and at one point forcing the police into retreat. In the process, the city became a byword for the sort of neo-Nazism that?s plagued Germany for decades.
Over the past 20 years, though, Rostockers have labored to reinvent their city. They have restored their picturesque Old Town, which was bombed in World War II and mothballed under four decades of communism. They?ve expanded their deep-water port, which will dock a record of nearly 200 cruise ships this year. And they?ve modernized their 15,000-student university, founded in 1419 and now attracting talent from as far away as Korea.
?If it weren?t for the riots, we?d be known for the sea, tourism, maybe the university, soccer, and history,? says Thomas Niebuhr, an editor at the local newspaper Ostsee Zeitung.
Yet for many foreigners, Rostock ? like much of eastern Germany ? is considered a xenophobic place. Only about 3 percent of the city?s 200,000 residents are foreign-born, three times fewer than in most German cities. Since the riots, many say they still endure racial slurs in public places, mistrust local law enforcement, and interact daily with neighbors who voted their chief tormentors into public office.
Foreigners out
The refugee center Oekohaus Rostock offers a window into this world. Located in a dense cluster of trees near the final stop of a tram line, the fenced-in campus, which houses some 200 Africans, Arabs, and Eastern Europeans, appears half public-housing project and half campground. Refugees assigned to the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania? by German immigration often linger here for years before getting cleared to look for work or private housing.
Maxime Sanvi Sodji, a 37-year-old Togo native and former refugee himself, is a social worker here. For 13 years, he?s braved the worst of Rostock with a grim determination. He's been called racial slurs hundreds of times, he says. He?s accustomed to watching people avoid sitting in empty seats near him on public transportation. And since his friend got badly beaten a decade ago ? and the paramedics? first question was if he had his papers ? he?s joined an underground network of ersatz first responders.
"I can call the police, but I do not think they will be there in three minutes," he says. "But I am 100 percent sure that my fellow people will be."
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