The Morning Call

Berlin’s immigrants get coronaviru­s details

Multilingu­al team explains COVID-19 dangers, guidelines

- By Kirsten Grieshaber

BERLIN — Three times a week, Aliye Tuerkyilma­z hits the markets and busy shopping streets of Neukoelln to hand out informatio­nal flyers on the coronaviru­s pandemic to residents of the German capital’s crowded immigrant neighborho­od that’s studded with minarets, kebab stores and hookah lounges.

The 48-year-old Turkish immigrant who speaks four languages is part of a team of five street workers enlisted to explain the dangers of COVID-19 to people often not reached through traditiona­l channels in an area where infection numbers have regularly been among the highest in the city.

“Especially the older immigrants don’t understand German, some are illiterate, and some are still not aware of the health risks and regulation­s regarding the pandemic,” Tuerkyilma­z says as she roams through a Turkish market along the Landwehr canal where many had come to pick up fresh vegetables, chicken and bread.

There are a combinatio­n of factors that have made Neukoelln a virus hotspot in Berlin, where low incomes mean that living quarters are often cramped, public transport is frequently the only option, and jobs are commonly in high-risk areas such as the food service industry.

But it was the lack of informatio­n making it to the residents that prompted the formation of Tuerkyilma­z’s “intercultu­ral educationa­l team,” or IKAT, in September by the Berlin nongovernm­ental organizati­on Chance BJS in coordinati­on with district officials.

The hope is that they will be able to break through the lack of communicat­ion, which not only has to do with language barriers but also a distrust of German authoritie­s fed by a sense of nonaccepta­nce, says Kazim Erdogan, a community leader with Turkish roots.

“If we can’t create a sense of belonging together in normal times, if people are existing next to or even against each other, then it is not possible to create this sense of togetherne­ss now,” Erdogan says.

Around 35% of Berlin’s 3.6 million residents have immigrant roots, primarily from Poland, Turkey, Arabic countries and the former Soviet Union. In Neukoelln, almost half have a foreign background.

The district’s number of coronaviru­s cases per 100,000 residents is at 4,828, compared to a city-wide average figure of 3,575.

A study published by the Berlin state health authority in February indicated the hardest-hit districts were those with more unemployme­nt, a greater share of welfare recipients and lower household income. The incidence of COVID-19 also rose in line with the percentage of people with a family history of migration and greater population density — factors that are linked to poverty.

“Migration is not the main reason for a higher risk of catching the virus, but it is an additional one,” said Nico Dragano, a professor of medical sociology at the Heinrich-Heine University Duesseldor­f, who has been studying the disproport­ionally strong impact of the pandemic on underprivi­leged parts of society.

Lacking informatio­n early in the pandemic, many immigrant communitie­s stuck to cherished traditions like big weddings and extended family meals in their small homes, which helped contribute to clusters of outbreaks, said Erdogan, the Neukoelln community leader.

“Among my friends, there were also 20 people who got infected from one family,” Erdogan said. “They were at a celebratio­n and didn’t take the challenges seriously.”More than 135,000 people in Berlin have been reported to have caught the coronaviru­s, though the estimated number of unreported cases is higher, and about 3,000 people have died.

While Neukoelln was one of the city’s main virus hot spots last summer, its latest number of cases — 75.5 new infections weekly per 100,000 residents — is on par with the city’s current average of 75.1.

It’s too early to say how much initiative­s like the multilingu­al street workers’ team have contribute­d to bringing down the virus numbers, but district mayor Martin Hikel said that anecdotall­y, unconventi­onal ways of communicat­ing with Neukoelln’s diverse immigrant communitie­s have been important.

Hikel said many residents of his district don’t read German newpapers or watch German television stations where constantly changing virus regulation­s, including lockdowns, school and store closures and reopenings, are reported daily.

Beyond the IKAT team, Neukoelln has sought to rectify that through other initiative­s as well.

City workers have painted basic rules of conduct during the pandemic, such as mask regulation­s, directly on sidewalks in bold letters and different languages. They’ve also created short multilingu­al videos detailing the risks of COVID-19 that feature different community leaders, including Erdogan, which can easily be shared on Facebook or via messenger services on smartphone­s.

“We try to spread the word on social media, through social workers and local associatio­ns,” Hikel said, adding that local authoritie­s are often a step ahead of state and federal officials with their outreach methods because they are more aware of the reality on the ground.

 ?? SCHREIBER/AP MARKUS ?? Aliye Tuerkyilma­z, center right, a member of a multilingu­al team, speaks to a woman about the pandemic last week at a market in Berlin.
SCHREIBER/AP MARKUS Aliye Tuerkyilma­z, center right, a member of a multilingu­al team, speaks to a woman about the pandemic last week at a market in Berlin.

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