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Attacking Minded
12 Apr 2006, 10:12 PM
Teachers urge closure of school terrorised by migrant pupils
By Tony Paterson in Berlin
(Filed: 09/04/2006)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/04/09/wschool09.xml
Suddenly, teachers at Berlin's Ruetli school decided enough was enough. They would no longer tolerate being spat at, insulted and attacked by pupils, some of whom spoke hardly any German and many of whom carried knives.

Things had deteriorated to such an extent at the state school - in a district where 80 per cent of pupils are from Muslim immigrant families - that it had become virtually impossible to teach, and some staff feared for their lives. At the end of their tether, staff wrote to the authorities pleading for the school to be closed.

Led by Petre Eggebrecht, the acting head teacher, their letter said: "We are desperate. Our teaching is met with flat rejection. The mood in the classrooms is one of aggression, complete lack of respect and ignorance. Instructions are ignored. Few students bring relevant material, and many of us will only enter a lesson with a cell phone in order to call for help in an emergency."

Students carried knives, supposedly "to defend themselves", and many came from families with no breadwinner and no hope for the future.

When the letter - sent in February - was leaked to the press last month, the extent of the crisis in the country's once-prized education system finally burst into the public arena.

Remarkably, the furore has coincided with the release of the German film Brutally Tough, a fictional portrayal of the criminal youth subculture in Neukoelln, the Berlin neighbourhood where Ruetli school is situated. It tells how the son of a German prostitute is terrorised by Turkish drug dealers. In one scene, a waste bin is placed over his head and beaten with a baseball bat.

Detlev Buck, the director, said his film was meant as a wake-up call to the German authorities about the parlous state of the nation's immigrant communities.

For the staff of the school, the film has proved eerily realistic. "In many families, the pupils are the only ones who have to get up in the morning," one teacher told the newspaper Der Tagesspiegel. "I feel as though we are raising criminals and terrorists here," he added. The teacher wrote anonymously after education authorities banned staff from talking publicly, ostensibly to avoid inflaming the situation.

The school's language problems were highlighted last week when a pupil, interviewed on television, was barely able to answer questions put to him. Teachers said that the few German students at the school had resorted to "pidgin German" to fit in with the majority. Last year, not a single pupil passed enough examinations to graduate into employment.

When police and teams of social workers and psychologists were dispatched to the school last week, in an attempt to answer the teachers' calls for help, television crews following them were pelted with cobblestones by "gangs of marauding, hooded pupils".

Since the teachers spoke out 10 days ago, headmasters, staff and pupils at secondary and comprehensive schools across Germany have complained of similar deficiencies in the state system, caused by decades of failed immigration policies and diminishing prospects on job market.

Christian Pfeiffer, the head of Germany's Criminological Research Institute, echoed the teachers' sentiments. "German secondary schools have degenerated into schools for losers," he said.

Germans, true? Not true? What story have you been told?

diablodelsol
15 Apr 2006, 09:59 AM
In one scene, a waste bin is placed over his head and beaten with a baseball bat.



What the f are Turkish drug dealers doing with baseball bats?

Demosthenes
15 Apr 2006, 11:19 AM
Ha. Welcome to my world, Petre Eggebrecht.

Alex_K
15 Apr 2006, 12:41 PM
What story have you been told?

That those "gangs of marauding, hooded pupils" were actually payed by... the TV crews. Which wouldn't surprise me at all.

The article isn't really up-to-date anymore though. The school was closed down for a day, got a new principal and is up and running again, while the yellow press is already looking for the next thing to hype (immigrant kids are sooooooooo last week already).

Alex_K
15 Apr 2006, 01:17 PM
Btw, I just read the letter again:

"We are desperate. Our teaching is met with flat rejection. The mood in the classrooms is one of aggression, complete lack of respect and ignorance. Instructions are ignored. Few students bring relevant material, and many of us will only enter a lesson with a cell phone in order to call for help in an emergency."

isn't a quote from the letter.

I couldn't find anything I'd translate with "We are desperate" in there, the rest is made up of hand picked "highlights". I also couldn't find anything about someone fearing for his life. The letter itself actually highlights "an increase of violence against property". While the letter describes a situation that's surely not very pleasant, the article makes it sound much more dramatic.

Attacking Minded
18 Apr 2006, 06:49 AM
Thanks for the response. I was clicking on another thread and saw this one down here. I don't like to bother with the subforums. Normally, if the mods want to make it more difficult to keep up, I don't care to indulge them.

In any event, I found the article to be a bit too sensational and the teachers' letter to be a little odd. There are lots of stories coming out of Europe about the difficulties dealing with immigrants and it's hard to tell which ones are worthwhile.

Alex_K
20 Apr 2006, 10:32 AM
Here is the original letter, btw (in German - I'd translate it, but well, it's long... ;)):

http://www.rbb-online.de/_/nachrichten/politik/beitrag_jsp/key=news4034413.html

JBigjake
21 Apr 2006, 08:47 PM
What the f are Turkish drug dealers doing with baseball bats?
Baseball bats have become an interesting weapon of choice in some places! I once read a story about how many were being sold in Belfast, not exactly an outpost of America's favorite pastime. Apparently, they are more effective than cricket bats in levelling direct hits on knees.

Nanbawan
22 Apr 2006, 07:48 PM
The article isn't really up-to-date anymore though. The school was closed down for a day, got a new principal and is up and running again, while the yellow press is already looking for the next thing to hype (immigrant kids are sooooooooo last week already).

Well, this media little game can potentially trigger very unpleasant things indeed, and since they're not usually as willing to undo the crap they publish as they were to promote it ; it does leave some reluctant stains in the minds of some. Needless to state that this carelessness is an opinion time bomb.

We've had similar affairs in France, all you need is a mythomaniac, a police leak to the press et voila ! You have your one week sensational story that covers the slow news periods. It turns out to be completely untrue ? What the hell, there's already something else on the front pages ! A significant part of the media find the so-called notion of freedom of the press very handy to cover their basic lack of responsability towards the mission to inform the public.