**Eritrean becomes first Black woman to serve in parliament in Germany** "The can do people"
Eritrean becomes first Black woman to serve in pain-germany?fbclid=IwAR0BEA-kmAdr1I1T29csyFesGffxJgeoxag8BvZlVK0qlC5wzYcGeTdJuMg# rliament in Germany https://face2faceafrica.com/article/eri ... arliament-
Re: **Eritrean becomes first Black woman to serve in parliament in Germany** "The can do people"
Very funny sing a poor citzens fled in millions to Sudan, Ethiopia, Libya , U.S and Europe to find refugee and freedom from the poor near collapse nation. The irony is there is no election, parliament nor real government for over 30 years. Now you clapping for a German citizen winning her seat? Man, get a life what an idiot
Re: **Eritrean becomes first Black woman to serve in parliament in Germany** "The can do people"
Can we have a parliament and elections in North Korea of Africa like the British era? "Can do" my asz. Moron.

MatiT wrote: ↑05 Oct 2021, 14:38Eritrean becomes first Black woman to serve in pain-germany?fbclid=IwAR0BEA-kmAdr1I1T29csyFesGffxJgeoxag8BvZlVK0qlC5wzYcGeTdJuMg# rliament in Germany https://face2faceafrica.com/article/eri ... arliament-

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Eripoblikan
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DefendTheTruth
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Re: **Eritrean becomes first Black woman to serve in parliament in Germany** "The can do people"
የአገሬ ሰዉ አባበል ትዝ አለኝ፣ ነገሩ እንድህ ነዉ። እዚህ ቦታ ሽንት መሽናት ክልክል ነዉ፣ ስባል፣ ምን ለማለት ነዉ? ስለምሸና አይደለም እንዴ ክልክል ነዉ የተባለዉ ብሎ ሽንቱን ቦታዉ ላይ ለቀቀዉ አሉ።
የዚህች አፍርካዊት አባበልም ተመሳሳይ ይመስለኛል።
My sister go back to root, that is when you will be able to root out the problems you raised and willing to fight against.
Those people I mentioned above were never able to stop people from using the places for peeing at, because the place was there to pee at.
የዚህች አፍርካዊት አባበልም ተመሳሳይ ይመስለኛል።
Which means that she is admitting (if not reporting) that there is lack of diversity and equal opportunity while there are also discrimination and racism in her adopted country. It seems that she is in an odd place to ever be effective for some reason, willingly or unwillingly.In the Bundestag, she wants to campaign for diversity and equal opportunities while fighting racism and discrimination.
My sister go back to root, that is when you will be able to root out the problems you raised and willing to fight against.
Those people I mentioned above were never able to stop people from using the places for peeing at, because the place was there to pee at.
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DefendTheTruth
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Re: **Eritrean becomes first Black woman to serve in parliament in Germany** "The can do people"
Okay,DefendTheTruth wrote: ↑05 Oct 2021, 15:41It seems that she is in an odd place to ever be effective for some reason, willingly or unwillingly.
My sister go back to root, that is when you will be able to root out the problems you raised and willing to fight against.
Those people I mentioned above were never able to stop people from using the places for peeing at, because the place was there to pee at.
if you or she didn't believe me that she is in an odd place, then let's add what others (witnesses) are saying about it:
The writer said here "that is basically the end of it", our Eritrean sister is telling us there is a place for her to change many things in a place where she is not from there.My family isn’t from where I grew up, the name doesn’t fit, and I don’t speak like the people in that region. So I grew up a stranger there, and once you get that status, that’s basically the end of it.
I think to have stated/heard somewhere here or else where that "Germans live in a closed society".
I don't have any sense of belonging in Germany and I don't fit in. Why is it that way? I was even born in Germany.
Welcome to the club. I feel exactly the same way. Born and raised there, but it’s not my country. I may have the paperwork, but not the sense of identity.
The problem as I see it is that it isn’t possible to be “German” - the regionalism is too strong. You have to be a Franconian, or Bavarian, or Swabian, or what have you. And as long as you have a family history and a surname and a dialect that goes with that, you’re fine. And then, it’s not far to also accepting being “German” - it’s basically the club that runs the regions.
Alas, I never managed to connect regionally, so there is no home for me nationally, either, because no one ever cares about you having a German passport - it’s your Lokalkolorit that determines how the locals process you.
My family isn’t from where I grew up, the name doesn’t fit, and I don’t speak like the people in that region. So I grew up a stranger there, and once you get that status, that’s basically the end of it.
Every time I tried to land in another region, where they spoke more like me, and where my name fits (North Rhine Westphalia) I got “oh, you’re the Bavarian fella!” Bitter irony, to be stashed with that group after being excluded there all my life, by those I was accused of belonging to all my life and taking sh*t for it nonstop.
So when I was 20, I’d had enough of it and decided if I’m going to be a stranger all my life anyway, no matter where I go, might as well try it with some place amusing. And I proceeded to live in Canada, New Zealand, Britain, France, Sweden… turns out in some places, you can be a stranger AND belong. 30 years have passed, and I think leaving was the best thing I ever did.
Greetings from Sweden.