Hi Patrick,
maybe you don't know, but after the war there were 12 million refugees from Eastern-Prussia and Upper Silesia to be intergrated (my dad being one of them), although the whole country lay in ruins. This is how Frankfurt am Main looked like back then:
Today this time of rebuilding is known as the Wirtschaftswunder (economical wonder). I remember how it was necessary to rebuild the totally bankrupt German Democratic Repuplic after the re-union 25 years ago. It had almost 17 million inhabitants and its economy was totally wrecked. I've been there and I saw the misery (and smelled it, you have no idea how Bitterfeld smelled back then, you could hardly breathe). Today the infrastructure in eastern Germany has been modernised and is often even better now then in many parts of western Germany.
It won't be easy and there will be lots of problems that have to be solved, but this country had to master much bigger challenges in its past. You can't deny that it succeeded pretty well so far.
maybe you don't know, but after the war there were 12 million refugees from Eastern-Prussia and Upper Silesia to be intergrated (my dad being one of them), although the whole country lay in ruins. This is how Frankfurt am Main looked like back then:

Today this time of rebuilding is known as the Wirtschaftswunder (economical wonder). I remember how it was necessary to rebuild the totally bankrupt German Democratic Repuplic after the re-union 25 years ago. It had almost 17 million inhabitants and its economy was totally wrecked. I've been there and I saw the misery (and smelled it, you have no idea how Bitterfeld smelled back then, you could hardly breathe). Today the infrastructure in eastern Germany has been modernised and is often even better now then in many parts of western Germany.
It won't be easy and there will be lots of problems that have to be solved, but this country had to master much bigger challenges in its past. You can't deny that it succeeded pretty well so far.
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