My interests are for strange reasons centered around a line from the French Alps to Helsinki. Since December 2000 I live and work in Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark. Or, more precisely, I live in what's evolving into Copenhagen's easternmost suburb, the town Malmö in Sweden.
Having moved quite a few times in my life, both as a child and as an adult, I have a certain interest for Xenophobia and nationalist prejudices. The fate of linguistic, religious and ethnic minorities in Germany, in the European Union and in Europe as a whole, can usually get me heavily involved in boring discussions on transculturation. It will be hard, but I am doing my best to avoid that while here.
I consider myself (among other things):
My formal education is limited, to express it mildly. I wasn't tuned in on school and homework when I was in that age. Much of my life ever since has been sort of a compensation for that. My Wikipedia editing also - for sure!
On my handle, it can be noted that it has nothing with reality to do. I've never had any RL connection with the Ruhrgebiet. My not-so-clever classmates did however not believe me, when I as a 12 year's old arrived in the class, telling that I came from a country-town in westernmost Germany, West of Osnabrück. In "Westernmost Germany?" They knew nothing but Ruhr there, and I made the mistake to try to correct the misconception with exaggerated enthusiasm, ...why the name stuck on me. ;->
In retrospect great impacts and influences from friends and relatives are obvious, like when my closest friend celebrated his 18th birthday by proudly declaring he was to undergo Bris milah, learn Yiddish and start practicing Judaism, or when my great-aunt revealed how her much beloved big-sister (that was my grand-mother) had been an enthusiastic local activist of Bund Deutscher Mädel, giving a picture of their perception of Nazi ideology which hadn't much in common with how it has become known after World War II.
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