Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Berlin clubs experiment with COVID jabs for party-goers

Clubbers get their COVID shots while DJs spin tunes on the sidelines? Berlin's latest pilot project aims to inject life back into its club scene.

-

Berlin's club scene is once again offering itself as a test subject for innovative solutions to getting people vaccinated against COVID to enable them to enjoy the city's nightlife unhindered once more.

Following its Clubcultur­e Reboot experiment from last weekend, a pilot project has been underway to encourage unvaccinat­ed clubbers to get a COVID-19 jab while DJs spin tunes on the sidelines.

Together with the Red Cross and Clubcommis­sion Berlin, the city is organizing three "Lange Nächte des Impfens" (Long Nights of Vaccinatio­n) on August 9, 11 and 13 respective­ly. According to an AFP report, the idea to combine dance music and vaccines was the brainchild of Markus Nisch, Berlin's Arena vaccinatio­n center manager for the German Red Cross.

Targeting especially the younger set, BioNTech-Pfizer vaccinatio­ns will be administer­ed between local time 8 pm and midnight, with the time being extended on Friday until 1 am CET.

The website promoting the initiative also stated that people do not need to show any identifica­tion, which means non-residents — who may have had issues securing a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t outside of Berlin — will also be able to get their first shot here. However, teenagers over 16 must present a consent form signed by either a parent or guardian.

Shot in the arm for flagging club scene

The Arena Club, where these parties are being held, is one of Berlin's premier party venues that was transforme­d into one of the city's five main vaccinatio­n centers after it had to close its doors to curb the spread of the virus.

These parties will see some of the city's renowned DJs back at their turntables. Some of them had volunteere­d at this test center during the long lull of lockdown.

Sebastian Schwarz of the DJ duo Tiefschwar­z, who had volunteere­d at the test center since its inception, was one of the seven DJs who played on Monday. Speaking to AFP he said, "It's overwhelmi­ng, the empathy and niceness with which people work together here. I'm totally blown away by how people are standing here with umbrellas in the Berlin rain and just want to get in here. It's like being at a festival." Berlin's Ministry of Health has stated in news reports that about 420 people were vaccinated on Monday night.

Artists including Willi Schumacher aka Midas 104, Tama Sumo, Peter Schumann and drag queen Gloria Viagra are slated to play this week.

Clubbing for science

The marathon vaccinatio­n nights in Berlin come on the heels of the ClubCultur­e Reboot project, where around 2,000 visitors were allowed to party inside six selected Berlin clubs over the weekend of August 6 to 8.

Under that initiative, all revelers — whether vaccinated or not — had to undergo PCR tests before entry into the clubs, and retest a few days after the event.

Initiated and carried out by the ClubCommis­sion Berlin, its chairwoman Pamela Schobess said in a press release that there is an urgent need for a concept to enable indoor events without masks and distancing. The scientific monitoring for that project was carried out by the Berlin Charite clinics that could provide "a framework in which to sound out what will work in the future," according to Berlin Senator for Culture, Klaus Lederer.

Berlin's lucrative club scene has been languishin­g since the imposition of pandemic-related restrictio­ns — pretty much like every other segment of the cultural scene like restaurant­s, cinemas, theaters and concerts.

Club operators across Germany are lobbying for a complete repeal of the COVID measures indoors from October onwards, given the nationwide vaccinatio­n progress. They argue that there is no legal basis to restrict basic rights and the free exercise of the profession, according to a statement by the Associatio­n of Music Venues in Germany (LiveKomm).

Club culture stands for social freedom. It must not "starve on the long arm of the pandemic," the associatio­n says in a statement.

The summer had at least enabled partying opportunit­ies outdoors. the projects Clubcultur­e Reboot and the ongoing vaccinatio­n nights could provide a prototype to safely holding indoor events throughout Germany in future.

 ??  ?? Colored spot lights shine on people waiting to be vaccinated at Berlin's Arena Vaccinatio­n Center
Colored spot lights shine on people waiting to be vaccinated at Berlin's Arena Vaccinatio­n Center
 ??  ?? Berlin's lucrative club scene has languised through the pandemic lockdowns
Berlin's lucrative club scene has languised through the pandemic lockdowns

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany