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'I don't know why I think this,' wrote my brother in an e mail the other day, 'but I have the impression that you are about to leave Berlin. Is that true?'

It's true that I get restless after two years in a city, and I moved to Berlin in March 2003, so the 'two year itch' is due any month now. And it's true that, since coming back from my summer in Japan I haven't really embraced Berlin with much fervour. But I'm not sick of Berlin by any means. I like the city a lot -- the politics, the culture, the air quality, the low prices, the international young people and the local old people, the seriousness, even the deadness of the place.

Well, the deadness maybe a bit less. There is a fusty grandeur, a monumental splendour about the Karl-Marx-Allee, the socialist boulevard on which I live. It has fountains, Soviet-style architecture, a certain otherworldliness which comes from its origins as a propaganda showpiece for the virtues of communist egalitarian prosperity in the 1950s. But mostly, these days, it's just six lanes of traffic. Under the admittedly glorious avenue of chestnut trees, a rather sedate and chintzy sort of life goes on. Elderly East Germans potter through tacky shops in incongruously palatial spaces. The local food shops are mostly run by North Vietnamese, as is the street market that migrates daily between the Kino Cosmos and another spot closer to the Kino International and sells frilly underwear, cheap clothes, watches, meat and cheese.



I'm not leaving Berlin, but I'm on the verge of moving to Kreuzberg. Whenever I go to Kreuzberg, as I did yesterday to shop in my favourite Turkish supermarket, Tek-Mer, I feel a big sense of relief. This is what a city should be! Instead of cars and monumental boulevards, there are narrow 19th century streets milling with people. Instead of shops which shut early there are shops which stay open late. Instead of old people, there are young people. Instead of beauty salons and Mexican restaurants, there are some of the most radical bookshops and art galleries anywhere (NGBK is currently showing an exhibition of art which breaks the law, Legal / Illegal). Instead of clubs and alcohol there are hammams and tea. Instead of Germans, there are Turks.



I love the Turks. I love their food: olive oil, flat aromatic bread, proper chick peas (not the soft German rubbish you can only get in soup), big tubs of plain yoghurt, big cans of garlicky olives, feta cheese, dried figs, tea and rice. I don't much care for the colours and shapes of the packages in German supermarkets, but I love the colours and shapes and smells in Turkish markets, especially the twice-weekly at Maybach-Ufer by the canal. White Europe hasn't had this kind of density, this kind of vitality since the Middle Ages, since Breughel.

I don't care for the western pop music piped into German supermarkets, but the Turkish pop music in Tek-Mer is a delight to listen to. Two songs on my forthcoming album are in Arabic scales, and it's for pretty much the same reason that two years in New York's Chinatown left me with a taste for Cantonese Opera rather than The Strokes. The faces and clothes of people I see in the Turkish quarter are much more appealing to me, aesthetically, than faces and clothes of Germans in a district like Mitte, no matter how trendy, affluent and creative the Germans may be. For much the same reasons I left London, after ten years there, with a Bangladeshi bride, not an English one. The real vitality in London, the really sympathetic people, were out in the ethnic suburbs, in places like Ilford and Woodford, where the Asians were. A European city without at least one immigrant quarter is a dying city, a sad place of senescent blandness, deadening safety, cautious affluence.

I'm moving to Kreuzberg at the earliest opportunity. I also support the idea of Turkey joining the European Union and I hope that when the decision on Turkey's membership is made on December 17th it's a yes vote and a green light. For Europe's sake as much as Turkey's.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-24 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
If you're referring to the increasing Latino population, rest assured that you will be around. On the Northeastern Seaboard, an old-stock WASP like myself seems to be a bit of a rarity as it is, so I wonder if a larger Latino population would make much of a difference in the variety one sees on any given day. Whatever keeps Walter (http://paginau.univision.com/content/photoalbum.jhtml?cid=157636&toShow=1) on the air is fine wih me.

In my travels abroad, most populations tend to be a bit more homogeneous than one is accustomed to, especially when one leaves the urban centers (Central America seems to be an exception). This is becoming less true with every year, though.

Even in this small, rural town there are Turks, Mexicans, Indian Sikhs, Chinese, Koreans and Vietnamese--and I think some Russians, Scots, and Bosnians as well. Remote, traditionally homogenous American cities like Lincoln and Tulsa now seem to have recent arrivals of Asian and African communities, which is encouraging to hear.

I look forward to the day when we have an Australian Aborigine neighborhood in Brooklyn and they open up a Witchety Grub bar (they can call it "Little Uluru"). It can be like fondue or something. Some say they taste like peanut butter, but I think they taste like scrambled eggs.

W

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-24 05:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-ebb439.livejournal.com
I'm from DC originally and I loved that I could find so many different cultures packed into such a small area. I would ride the bus some days and hear a melange of languages; different dialects of Spanish, an occassional click language from Africa, some island creole... I loved it. Some days I would be the only English speaking person on the bus, save for the driver. I'm bilingual, so it sometimes afforded me the opportunity to speak French with people from a variety of North African countries. Talk about the crossing of cultures!

I work at a small private college, so I hear about the population change all the time. Higher ed is trying to bend with the times and accomodate an ever changing demographic.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-24 06:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
I was in Africa a few months ago, and had a first-hand crack at those linguistic 'clicks' you mention. Phonetic pronunciation of the language is so elastic, and the roman alphabet does not do the spoken language justice.

Zulu:
Saw(u)bonnn-na ('hello')
N'(g)yabonn-ga ('thank you')

Xhosa is very 'clicky'. So is the language of the !Kung bushmen. ('!' usually denotes a click).

W

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-24 06:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-ebb439.livejournal.com
The director of our international studies office is an Africa expert and he speaks one of the click languages fluently. The funny part is that he's a Jewish boy from Brooklyn.

Did you ever read Nisa? It's about a !Kung woman. It's a very good read.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-24 06:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
Yes, I read it in college--a cultural anthropology classic.

I wonder if anyone might care to share with us the most unusual or incongruent immigrant neighborhood they've encountered (say, 'Little Finland' in Rio, or something along those lines)? It always amazes me where people wind up.

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