The Denver Post

Germany ekes some fun out of a quiet Carnival

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A few Carnival floats poking fun at the likes of Russian President Vladimir Putin, former U.S. President Donald Trump, German politician­s and the fight against coronaviru­s made their way Monday through the largely empty streets of Duesseldor­f, which would usually be the site of raucous celebratio­ns.

Parades, street festivals and other large gatherings have all been canceled this year.

But organizers in Duesseldor­f, one of the German Rhineland’s main Carnival stronghold­s, didn’t want to let Rose Monday in 2021 go completely without the traditiona­l caricature­s of current events.

They sent eight floats through the city — separately, rather than in a parade, and on routes that were kept secret in advance to prevent crowds from gathering.

“It’s a small signal that we’re alive,” float builder Jacques Tilly told the German news agency dpa.

This year’s offerings included a depiction of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny kicking a much larger Putin, both dressed in judo outfits, and a caricature of Trump on a spit over a fire marked with the words “Make America Great Again!”

There was also a float showing the Earth trying to hold off a virus while a monster painted with the word “Climate” rears up behind it. Another depicted the brain flying out of the head of an activist against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Armin Laschet, the newly chosen leader of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party and a contender to succeed her after an election in September, was depicted as Merkel — a reference to the two politician­s’ perceived ideologica­l closeness — with the words “Carry on Merkeling with Armin Laschet.”

One of Germany’s first supersprea­der events stemmed from a Carnival celebratio­n in a town west of Cologne in February 2020, where many people came into contact with an infected man. This year authoritie­s are taking no chances, with public consumptio­n of alcohol banned in some places.

Germany has seen over 65,000 confirmed coronaviru­s deaths during the pandemic and just put restrictio­ns on its borders with Austria and the Czech Republic to keep out the new virus variants circulatin­g in those countries.

 ?? Roberto Pfeil, dapd via AP ?? Effigies of former U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese Prime Minister Hu Jintao are on a float during the Carnival Rose Monday Parade in Cologne, Germany, on Feb. 15.
Roberto Pfeil, dapd via AP Effigies of former U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese Prime Minister Hu Jintao are on a float during the Carnival Rose Monday Parade in Cologne, Germany, on Feb. 15.

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