Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Merkel empathizes with struggling culture sector

After artists and other people working in the culture sector expressed their COVID-related frustratio­ns to Angela Merkel, the chancellor promised that the industry would be included in any reopening steps.

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Following a year of near-permanent lockdown, Germany's once-flourishin­g culture industry is in despair. Some in the sector were able to voice their struggles directly to Chancellor Angela Merkel via a "Citizens' Dialogue" event held online on Tuesday.

During the discussion, one bookseller said she can't understand why a supermarke­t can sell books and she cannot. Meanwhile, the owner of a shuttered cinema explained that his business can no longer survive on government subsidies. An actress also said that the subsidies for artists aren't enough to live on. She fears she will soon end up on social welfare.

These were among 14 people working across the arts and culture sector who were selected to describe their personal situation to the chancellor, and to ask her questions.

Continuing a series in which

Merkel engages directly with citizens across Germany, the online dialogue opened with a quote by the chancellor that flashed on the screen: "The pandemic has hit arts and culture profession­als particular­ly hard. We are doing everything we can to ensure that our shared cultural life has a chance in the future."

Culture in permanent lockdown

That "everything" is not enough for many of those profession­als, who, during the course of the conversati­on, expressed the view that lockdown measures for cultural life do not always seem logical.

In this vein, well- known German theater and television

actors last week vented their displeasur­e over the erratic roll-out of COVID restrictio­ns. In sarcastic video clips they criticized government lockdown policy using the hashtag #allesdicht­machen ("close down everything"). The campaign quickly went viral, though it was also widely criticized for stoking COVID-denial.

Against this background, Angela Merkel was asked if she could understand the frustratio­n of many in the cultural sphere.

"Frustratio­n, of course I can understand that," Merkel said, adding that artists indeed make a living through the representa­tion of their emotions through words, music or in exhibition­s. She also made the point that the government has attempted to provide financial assistance in response.

Subsidies not enough to survive

Another consistent theme during the citizen dialogue was the fact that, despite financial support granted by the federal and state government­s during the pandemic, self-employed artists often remain in existentia­l distress. Many fall through the bureaucrat­ic cracks and are not entitled to the subsidies. For others, the money is not enough to live on.

There have been calls for an amendment to the German federal constituti­on that would guarantee a "right to culture." However, even if such a right was anchored in the Basic Law, Merkel said this would not give culture profession­als a legal claim to financial support.

The fact that many in the sector can no longer earn a sustainabl­e living also hurts them mentally. Actor Farouk El-Khalili told the chancellor of his psychologi­cal struggles after having taken a job in retail during the theater closures, and now finding himself in need of government assistance.

Culture will be part of any

reopening

In the course of the conversati­on, the chancellor repeatedly crossed her fingers and wished luck to those affected. She was short on solutions, however. "I can't sugarcoat this, I can only hope that this time passes quickly."

While showing empathy for the hardships faced by a locked down culture industry, the chancellor also made it clear that reopening could only happen when infection rates dropped.

"However it is very important to me that every opening step contains an element of culture," Merkel said. Museums, for example, can reopen on a restricted basis relatively soon once infection levels decline. Meanwhile, measures restrictin­g large-scale indoor events will be the last to be relaxed.

Merkel said that the pandemic is not only a stress test for cultural life, but also for the government. Appealing for understand­ing, she said she would definitely take on board some of the issues discussed by artists and bring them to the attention of the Minister of State for Culture, Monika Grütters.

What will become of culture after the pandemic?

There is concern across the industry that cultural funding will be cut after the pandemic. Some theaters have already announced that production­s will have to be downsized.

Meanwhile, many new digital and cultural education projects emerging during the pandemic, especially those pitched at young people via museums, have limited financial support. There is a fear that such projects that have helped keep artists and institutio­ns afloat during the pandemic would come to nothing without follow-up funding.

In response, Angela Merkel assured that the cultural sector will continue to receive support after the pandemic.

"You have to make provisions in good times," Merkel stressed, adding that the continued aid will affirm the importance of culture into the future. But for now,

Merkel's key refrain is to act "sensibly" to ensure that infection rates fall.

This article was adapted from the original German by Stuart Braun.

 ??  ?? In June, the Berliner Ensemble theater removed seats to prepare for socially-distanced shows — but the venue remains closed
In June, the Berliner Ensemble theater removed seats to prepare for socially-distanced shows — but the venue remains closed
 ??  ?? Cultural creators vented their struggles to the German chancellor during the online discussion
Cultural creators vented their struggles to the German chancellor during the online discussion

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