Los Angeles Times

Pastors tout shots despite protests

In eastern Germany, Lutheran leaders use sermons and open churches to promote COVID vaccinatio­ns.

- By Kirsten Grieshaber Grieshaber writes for the Associated Press.

CHEMNITZ, Germany — The pastor opened the wrought-iron doors of St. Petri Church in the German city of Chemnitz and sighed with relief when he saw the long line of people waiting in the cold for COVID-19 shots.

Together with the parish council, the Rev. Christoph Herbst had invited in a relief organizati­on and volunteer doctors to conduct a Sunday vaccinatio­n clinic at the Lutheran church. The act of community outreach, the pastor knew, might not go over well in a part of Germany prone to vaccinatio­n resistance, including sometimes violent protests.

“I was very insecure about how people would react to our offer,” Herbst said as he welcomed the waiting crowd into his neo-Gothic house of prayer. “In our region, there are very different and very polarized views about the coronaviru­s measures in general, about how to fight the pandemic, and especially about the vaccinatio­ns.”

Saxony state, where Chemnitz and the city of Dresden are located, has the lowest vaccinatio­n rate among Germany’s 16 federal states, and one of the highest numbers of COVID-19 cases. Only 60.1% of residents were fully vaccinated by Christmas, compared with the nationwide average of 70.8%.

At some points in the pandemic, local hospitals had to transfer patients out of state because all the intensive care beds were full.

Lutheran pastors across Saxony have used their sermons to promote vaccinatio­ns as the most efficient way to prevent severe illness and to end the pandemic. Like Herbst, many opened their churches for clinics last month, hoping that offering jabs in a familiar environmen­t and without advance registrati­on might persuade some holdouts.

“We believe that we have a responsibi­lity that goes beyond ourselves, and that we should do something for society with the resources we have,” Herbst explained. “We’re not doctors and we’re not profession­als. But we have the space and we have volunteers who can organize something like this.”

Chemnitz, a city of about 247,000 residents, was known as Karl-Marx-Stadt when it and the rest of Saxony were part of the former communist East Germany. Many of the local vaccinatio­n refusers cite concerns of possible side effects, but also feeling overwhelme­d by what they see as too much pressure from authoritie­s or general opposition to any measures endorsed by the government, according to Herbst.

Among those who patiently sat in a pew waiting to roll up their sleeves at Herbst’s church were Hannelore and Bernd Hilbert, a retired couple from the nearby village of Amtsberg. They came to get booster shots because some of their five grandchild­ren are too young to be vaccinated, and the Hilberts hoped to see them for Christmas.

The 2020 “Christmas was really sad. We were all alone,” said Hannelore Hilbert, 70.

“We’re grateful for the church to offer these shots,” added her 72-year-old husband, who said they had waited unsuccessf­ully for shots at a hospital a few days earlier.

The vast majority of the church’s vaccinatio­n recipients on a recent Sunday turned out to have more in common with the boostersee­king couple than the skeptical or frightened community members Saxony’s pastors are trying to reach.

Of the 251 vaccinatio­ns administer­ed during St. Petri’s daylong clinic, 18 went to individual­s receiving their first dose. None of them wanted to speak with the Associated Press about why they’d changed their minds and decided to get shots almost one year into Germany’s mass immunizati­on campaign.

A loud minority in Germany has opposed any kind of anti-virus measures since the start of the pandemic. The resistance grew angrier and more aggressive in recent weeks after the national Parliament last month passed a vaccinatio­n mandate for some profession­s and most of the country’s regions resumed some form of restrictio­ns in response to the latest wave of infections.

With mass demonstrat­ions banned in several parts of the country due to the pandemic, vaccinatio­n opponents have gathered for protest “walks” — unauthoriz­ed marches organized quickly via social media. About 30 protesters showed up with torches outside the home of Saxony state Health Minister Petra Koepping one night, shouting slurs until police arrived.

The protests swelled in recent days, sometimes drawing thousands of people. Police detained several participan­ts for attacking officers and journalist­s. Some Lutheran pastors received criticism and personal threats for their efforts to encourage vaccinatio­n.

Herbst said that he thinks the majority of Saxons back the country’s immunizati­on campaign and that far-right groups intent on underminin­g democracy have co-opted anti-vaccinatio­n sentiment, fueling an already present sense among residents of Germany’s east of feeling left behind 30 years after the country’s reunificat­ion.

When parishione­rs confront him with their opposition to vaccinatio­ns, the pastor says he tries to listen instead of judge.

“And I listen to things that are sometimes difficult to hear,” he said. “I also listen to things that I think belong in the realm of conspiracy theories. I don’t confirm those. But it’s important that there’s a space where we listen to each other without immediatel­y lapsing into condemnati­on.”

However, the pastor wonders if at this point all the arguments for and against vaccinatio­ns have been exchanged and the decision of whether to get immunized no longer should be left as a matter of personal choice.

“There are people who say what is needed now is a democratic­ally legitimize­d decision by Parliament on a general vaccine mandate,” Herbst said. “That would be a decision that does not work on moral pressure, but rather on the basis of a set of rules that applies to everyone.”

 ?? Markus Schreiber Associated Press ?? A DOCTOR administer­s a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n inside St. Petri Church in Chemnitz, which is in one of the German regions hardest hit by the coronaviru­s.
Markus Schreiber Associated Press A DOCTOR administer­s a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n inside St. Petri Church in Chemnitz, which is in one of the German regions hardest hit by the coronaviru­s.

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