Thousands of people of immigrant origin in Germany share stories of daily discrimination under the #MeTwo hashtag, inspired by the resignation of football star Mesut Ozil from the German National Anti-Racism Team.
author and rights activist Ali Can, who nicknamed it #MeTwo – a piece about the #MeToo movement that highlights women's badual harbadment experiences, and a comment from Ozil on having "two hearts"
Ozil dropped a bomb Sunday when he announced in a quaint letter that he would do it No longer plays for Germany after facing racist abuse for posing for a photo alongside Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
"I have two hearts, a German and a Turkish ", writes Ozil, who accuses the German Football Federation. for failing to defend him after critics had questioned his patriotism and blamed him after the flop of the World Cup in Germany
The controversy sparked heated debate in the German media about racism and integration. "We need a #MeToo debate for people from immigration," said Can, who lives in Germany since childhood, in a video posted online Tuesday.
"I am more than an identity. I feel at home in Germany … at the same time I feel connected to another country, "he said." The two sides mix, one does not exclude the other. " 39; other. "
The hashtag #MeTwo quickly became viral as thousands of poster workers recounted their prejudices and racism in Germany. "You are well integrated for a Turk" and "Do not you wear a scarf?" Were cited as "clbadic examples" of remarks suffered by the user of Twitter Hatdische Indsche.
Many also complained about the owners' discrimination in looking for an apartment or house, because of their skin color or foreign-sounding sound. "When you can not get an answer, but your German girlfriend gets instant answers to the same offer.After we got married and changed her name, she also stopped getting answers," writes Oguz Yilmaz, Twitter user
Malcolm Oscar Uzoma Odeh-Ohanwe, who tweeted MalcolmMusic, recounts being nicknamed "a monkey"
Foreign Minister Heiko Maas hailed the campaign, saying that he was "impressive and painful" to see how many stories were flowing in. "If you think that racism in Germany is no longer a problem, I recommend reading every #MeTwo tweets," he tweeted. Let's raise our voices with them: against racism, no matter when, no matter where. "