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German Village of 102 Braces for 750 Asylum Seekers - The New York Times

10/31/15, 4:28 PM

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EUROPE

German Village of 102 Braces for 750 Asylum


Seekers
By ANDREW HIGGINS

OCT. 31, 2015

SUMTE, Germany This bucolic, one-street settlement of handsome redbrick


farmhouses may for the moment have many more cows than people, but next week it
will become one of the fastest growing places in Europe. Not that anyone in Sumte is
very excited about it.
In early October, the district government informed Sumtes mayor, Christian
Fabel, by email that his village of 102 people just over the border in what was once
Communist East Germany would take in 1,000 asylum seekers.
His wife, the mayor said, assured him it must be a hoax. It certainly cant be
true that such a small, isolated place would be asked to accommodate nearly 10
times as many migrants as it had residents, she told him. She thought it was a joke,
he said.
But it was not. Sumte has become a showcase of the extreme pressures bearing
down on Germany as it scrambles to find shelter for what, by the end of the year,
could be well over a million people seeking refuge from poverty or wars in Africa,
Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
In a small concession to the villagers, Alexander Gtz, a regional official from

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German Village of 102 Braces for 750 Asylum Seekers - The New York Times

10/31/15, 4:28 PM

Lower Saxony, told them this week that the initial number of refugees, who start
arriving on Monday and will be housed in empty office buildings, would be kept to
500, and limited to 750 in all.
Nevertheless, the influx is testing the limits of tolerance and hospitality in
Sumte, and across Germany. It is also straining German politics broadly, creating
deep divisions in the conservative camp of Chancellor Angela Merkel and energizing
a constellation of extremist groups that feel their time has come.
One of the few people, in fact, who seem enthusiastic about the plan for Sumte is
Holger Niemann, 32, an admirer of Hitler and the lone neo-Nazi on the elected
district council. He rejoices at the opportunities the migrant crisis has offered.
It is bad for the people, but politically it is good for me, Mr. Niemann said of
the plan, which would leave the German villagers outnumbered by migrants by more
than seven to one.
Germans face the destruction of our genetic heritage and risk becoming a gray
mishmash, Mr. Niemann added, predicting that public anxiety over Ms. Merkels
open-armed welcome to refugees would help demolish a postwar political consensus
in Germany built on moderation and compromise.
Unlike those in other European countries, far-right parties in Germany have had
little success in national elections, and remain firmly rejected by the overwhelming
majority of Germans.
Reinhold Schlemmer, a former Communist who served as the mayor here before
and immediately after the collapse of East Germany, said people like Mr. Niemann
would have been put in prison right away during the Communist era.
Now they can stand up and preach, he said. People say this is democracy, but
I dont think it is democracy to let Nazis say what they want.
Mr. Schlemmer is among those concerned that extremists are exploiting
widespread concerns, even in the political mainstream, over absorbing vast numbers
of refugees, as the influx tests Germanys capacity to cope.

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German Village of 102 Braces for 750 Asylum Seekers - The New York Times

10/31/15, 4:28 PM

Sumte has no shops, no police station, no school. The initial number of arrivals
was, in fact, reduced to avoid straining the local sewage system and give time for new
pumps to be installed.
We have zero infrastructure here for so many people, Mr. Fabel, the mayor,
said.
As the federal government desperately scrambles to find shelter for the refugees
before winter sets in, it is assigning quotas to each of Germanys 16 Lnder, or states,
based on factors like economic strength and population.
Initially, the migrants were housed in renovated homes, then in gymnasiums,
military bases and old schools, but as obvious shelters run out, the authorities are
hunting for any free space they can find, like the 23 empty office buildings in Sumte.
Dirk Hammer, a Sumte resident, said that he felt sympathy for the refugees, but
that he feared the sheer number of people dumped with little warning in places like
this could offer an ideal platform for the far right.
I get stomachaches from fear of what is going to happen not just here but in
the whole of Germany, he said.
At least for the moment, the tolerant values of people like Mr. Hammer have
proved resilient, even as Mr. Niemann and like-minded neo-Nazis deride such views
as alien imports imposed by the United States and other World War II victors.
When Mr. Niemann took the floor at a meeting in October between villagers and
regional officials responsible for migrants, Mr. Hammer snatched away the
microphone.
We have to take a clear stand against these people, Mr. Hammer said later,
noting that his family had lived in Sumte for 400 years. He dismissed Mr. Niemann,
who lives in a village a couple of miles down the road, as a disruptive outsider.
Mr. Hammer himself initially reacted with horror when he heard of plans to
move refugees into the empty office complex, built by a now-defunct debt collection
company, he wrote an angry open letter on Facebook expressing his fury as a

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German Village of 102 Braces for 750 Asylum Seekers - The New York Times

10/31/15, 4:28 PM

longtime supporter of Ms. Merkels Christian Democratic Union party who felt
betrayed.
If we are being used as dumping ground, this shows the situation is out of
hand, Mr. Hammer said in an interview at his familys home, a modernized
farmhouse.
But he has curbed his anger and rallied to efforts by the mayor, Mr. Fabel, to
make sure that extremists do not capitalize on the widespread unease among
residents. He said he knew people who are not far right, but who are afraid and their
fear is being exploited.
Unable to speak at the village meeting last month, Mr. Niemann and a handful
of followers heckled speakers who voiced sympathy for refugees, and waved banners
demanding an end to asylum terror.
At a follow-up meeting between officials and villagers on Wednesday, Mr.
Niemann stayed silent, taking notes.
An assertion by a senior regional police official that Sumte did not need a
permanent police presence prompted one villager to jump to his feet and shout, Of
course we need protection. But the discussion was civil and devoid of inflammatory
outbursts.
People are just tired and think that so long as we have enough food in the fridge
we are all fine, Mr. Niemann said in an interview, frustrated that his efforts to stir
resistance to the refugee relocation had gained little traction in Sumte.
Other extremists in the area have resorted to blunter methods to get their
message across. Shortly after the news first broke of the plans to move 1,000
refugees to Sumte, unidentified arsonists attacked a smaller refugee center in the
nearby town of Boizenburg, setting fires and smashing windows.
Mr. Niemann said he rejected violence, but a far-right coalition he represents on
the district council includes two of Germanys most belligerent groups, the National
Democratic Party, better known by its German acronym N.P.D., and Die Rechte,
which was last week linked by authorities in Bavaria to a cache of weapons
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German Village of 102 Braces for 750 Asylum Seekers - The New York Times

10/31/15, 4:28 PM

assembled in an alleged plot to attack refugees.


There are individuals who cannot be controlled at all times, said Mr. Niemann,
a car washer.
Asked whether he considered himself a neo-Nazi, he said, No, I am National
Socialist in other words, a real Nazi. We are not extremists, but people have
become so soft that we seem extreme, he added.
Mr. Fabel, the mayor, insisted that Sumte, despite its unease, was open-minded
and hospitable, and was now focused on making the refugee holding camp work.
Many families here suffered during the war, so they will think twice about
joining extremists, he said.
He said he realized that there was no point in trying to block the plan when, at
the initial meeting, he asked Mr. Gtz, the regional official in charge of finding places
for migrants, whether Sumte had any choice. You have two options, he said he was
told. Yes, or yes. Mr. Gtz declined to be interviewed.
The asylum seekers will stay in Sumte only as long as it takes to process their
applications for refugee status. But those who move on will eventually be replaced by
new arrivals, as the vast stream of refugees and migrants shows no signs of slowing.
Life here is going to change, the mayor said.
Katarina Johannsen contributed reporting.
A version of this article appears in print on November 1, 2015, on page A1 of the New York edition with the
headline: Germanys Test in a Nutshell: 102 Villagers, 750 Migrants .

2015 The New York Times Company

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