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Life as an 'alien' in Germany
is a humbling experience
By Jasmine
Michaelson
May 4, 2009 | We had to visit the Foreigner Office
last month for the millionth time since landing in Dresden,
Germany, this time for visa renewals for my husband,
Jake, and me and a first-time visa for our baby, Jethro.
I think the petite, poker-faced, bespectacled woman
we always get is warming up to us the longer we're here.
In the beginning it felt a little like she was trying
to make our lives miserable. I think the lowest point
was when she refused to accept our spartan Idaho marriage
license because it didn't look official. (We had to
write to the Idaho State government, and they had to
write to the Foreigner Office vouching for our marital
status.) But over the last almost two years, we've tried
to maintain our civility with her. I think that, combined
with watching my pregnant belly grow with each visit
over the last year, and now seeing us with a baby on
our laps as she stamps our forms, has softened her up
a little. In fact, last week, as she was standing over
the photocopier making copies of our expired visas,
she actually smiled in response to a happy squeal from
Jethro.
The alien experience is a humbling one. Being herded
from bureaucracy to bureaucracy and having your existence
reduced to documents and numbers can be a little dehumanizing,
but I've also come to respect the system. I finally
get why you can't just pitch a tent on any nation you
want and decide to make it your home. I finally get
that the way immigration is handled can make or break
a country. Since coming to Germany, I've been acutely
aware that I am a guest here. The German taxpayers are
allowing me to use their public transit system and their
health care programs and their clean and beautiful public
spaces, and I feel a strong responsibility to be a good
guest.
And part of that is learning their language. Even
though most Germans have at least a little English,
I've tried (as much as has been possible) to avoid making
them use it. This is their country, and I should adapt
to them. Not the other way around. I had a little bit
of German when we got here, but I still couldn't understand
a word of what people said to me or choke out a coherent
sentence when pressed. Learning German has been one
of the hardest things I've ever done in my life. It
has involved countless hours of studying and listening
and taking notes. And it has involved looking like an
idiot almost daily. I'm sure I've used the phrases,
"Langsamer, bitte!" ("Slower, please!") and "Noch einmal?"
("One more time?") thousands of times. I have regularly
wanted to slam my head through a wall, and for the first
few months I don't think a day went by that my anxiety
over the language didn't bring me to tears. It is a
painful experience to have your language — in my case,
the thing I've devoted my life to studying and perfecting
— be rendered meaningless.
But as the months passed, an incredible thing happened.
I started understanding people, and I started to be
able to express myself very simply. Today, my German
is still very, very rough. I suspect I sound like a
2-year-old to Germans most of the time. A 2-year-old
with a weird accent. And I still don't understand as
much as I'd like to. I have to concentrate hard when
I listen to people. I furrow my brow and squint and
stare at their lips. But I'd say that most of the time
I understand at least the gist of things, usually more
than that. I can hold coherent conversations, follow
instructions, ask questions. After about 6 months of
pregnancy my obstetrician changed and from then on all
my pre-natal checkups were in German, and I got by just
fine. Jethro's doctor speaks only German, and we've
had no problems so far. I'm an active visiting teacher
in the LDS ward here, and, though it may seem like a
small thing, a couple of months ago I bore my testimony
in church for the first time without notes or a completely
memorized routine — and I felt golden for the rest of
the day.
I appreciate now, more than ever, how difficult it
is to learn a language. But I've learned that, with
effort and humility, it does come. And I feel more strongly
than ever that a country's residents should speak —
or at least be learning to speak — its language. When
I think of the all the free services in the U.S. set
up to help immigrants learn English, I ache with envy.
After going through this here, I have no patience for
people who live in the U.S. for years, even decades,
and can't conduct a simple sales exchange in English.
That being said, however, I also have zero patience
for any American who mocks immigrants for their accents
or their halted speech or who ever utters the words,
"Learn English or go home!" without ever attempting
to learn another language themselves.
We aliens shouldn't be coddled or patronized. If we
are, the system won't work. But we do need the patience
and kindness of the native citizens if we are ever expected
to assimilate and grow. So thanks for the smile, glasses
lady at the foreigner office. It means more than you
realize.
Jasmine Michaelson is a graduate of USU's journalism
program.
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