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More than 70% were born in Germany, according to Mediendienst Integration, which tracks migration issues in the country. Germany’s history of racial discrimination begins long before the Nazis began ...
12hOpinion
LGBTQ Nation on MSNGermany bans Nazi symbols. The U.S. should do the same with Confederate monuments.How have Germany following defeat in WWII and the U.S. south after losing the Civil War taught succeeding generations and ...
Explore the rise of racism and the AfD party in Germany, and the impact on Black Germans and African migrants in Thuringia.
Weyni Tesfai on MSN12d
Should Black People Leave Europe? Germany's Far-Right Secret Meeting ExposedPlan Back to Africa Africa strives to educate and showcase the incredible potential of the up and coming continent. Join us ...
Germany’s history of racial discrimination begins long before the Nazis began excluding, deporting and ultimately murdering Black people in the 1930s and 1940s.
A man born to an active-duty member of the United States military on an Army base in Germany in 1986 before coming to the states as a child was deported last week to Jamaica, a country he’s never ...
It is described as a time to “remember those who fought for Black people’s freedom.” In Germany, Black History Month was established in 1990 by the Initiative Schwarzer Deutscher (ISD).
In Germany, more than 60% of Black people and Muslims have experienced discrimination, according to a new study by the National Discrimination and Racism Monitor. The consequences can be severe.
A German police officer has been suspended from duty pending a homicide investigation after shooting dead a 21-year-old Black man, state prosecutors said on Thursday, in a case that has raised ...
After more than 150 years in Germany, the remains of 19 Black people, taken for racist scientific research, have been returned to New Orleans.
Germany’s history of racial discrimination begins long before the Nazis began excluding, deporting and ultimately murdering Black people in the 1930s and 1940s.
Being Black in Germany has always meant exposure to racism, from everyday humiliations to deadly attacks. In eastern Germany, the risk can be even greater.
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