rfisher
Let the skating begin
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Good grief. Don't make him learn two languages at the same time!
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Mayer-Virtanen entered too. Wasn't she supposed to skate pairs this season?
German Fed. announces that Franz Streubel has officially retired.
Participants of German nationals:
https://www.eislauf-union.de/files/users/skoehler/TeilnehmerDM2018.pdf
I think Quadjump meant German not English.
The article also says that this was his last chance to get the requirement in time for the Olympics![]()
Could be done a long time agohttp://www.eurosport.de/eiskunstlau...uno-masot-weiter-offen_sto6410969/story.shtml
Here's the link to the article. My German is lousy. Must force bf to translate later. But I do understand König saying that he and Aljona has invested a lot of work in this project, but they can't help Bruno learn the language, he must do that himself. "I already speak German".
Oh dear...
I don't understand why the German Government can't step in and grant him citizenship due to exceptional circumstances?
And before people jump down by throat... it does happen and as a naturalised German citizen myself whose parents live in Germany, I can assure you that many people less deserving than Bruno have been granted citizenship without passing a language test (certainly not a written one!). My grandparents can barely speak a word of German just by way of a personal example
Could be done a long time ago
- He did mandatory language test for citizenship on 10th November, results by the end of November
- Due to scheduling (don't know if personal, or administrative) it it won't be possible to repeat the test, and therefore the participation in the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, in February 2018 wouldn't be possible because of the missing German passport.
Quote Alexander König:
"That could have been done long ago. It's really annoying that now only a limited amount of time is left. I've made it clear to Bruno when we spoke about it . We put a lot of work in our project - Aljona and I. He has to learn the language himself, I already speak German."
The remaining paragraphs are about Aliona, Nelli and Stefano when they gained their citizenships. Stefano Caruso is the best example. He was Italian, Eu citizenship and therefore a different process than Aliona and in particular Nelli.
And do you're grandparents have German citizenship?
This and "persons of German ethnic origin" who (once) were living outside of Germany are the ones who need no language test. The possibility of winning an OGM does not qualify for this, no matter how much we regret this.Yes, they do. As do many many other Jews from the former USSR who are not required to take language tests. My mother actually works at a Jewish Community Centre. Most of her clients are pensioners (with acquired German citizenship) who speak no German and none of them are OGM hopes for Germany
This and "persons of German ethnic origin" who (once) were living outside of Germany are the ones who need no language test. The possibility of winning an OGM does not qualify for this, no matter how much we regret this.
Participants of German nationals:
https://www.eislauf-union.de/files/users/skoehler/TeilnehmerDM2018.pdf
What a pity that the German fed hadn't entered Weinzierl as a subBock is off the roster at Warsaw Cup.
So her 135pts of Minsk do count towards the #olympicrace.
So in theory it's still possible, but I guess, the first girl is out.
Girl has not given up yet!What a pity that the German fed hadn't entered Weinzierl as a sub
Oh man.... I can't believe Germany (my country of birth) doesn't have a provision to grant him citizenship on the ground of exceptional circumstances.This and "persons of German ethnic origin" who (once) were living outside of Germany are the ones who need no language test. The possibility of winning an OGM does not qualify for this, no matter how much we regret this.
Heartwarming idea, this pensioners from the Center competing as OGM hopes.
Oh man.... I can't believe Germany (my country of birth) doesn't have a provision to grant him citizenship on the ground of exceptional circumstances.Australia (my country of choice) has just made Harley Windsor's partner one of us and I'm yet to hear her say something more than, "I'm happy", but who cares...
Ok Bruno, don't let us down, will you...
Kötting in entries; sounds almost worth a trip to record it. I bet @alchemy void would pay horrendous sums for footage![]()
Bock is off the roster at Warsaw Cup.
So her 135pts of Minsk do count towards the #olympicrace.
So in theory it's still possible, but I guess, the first girl is out.
Exceptional in this context is Bruno's unique skill set. He has something with value to offer that no other citizen has - the ability to partner Aliona at this point in time. That's the difference to your health care workers, as commendable as their service is. That Germany doesn't care is probably not quite on the mark, considering consensus about public funding for sport. The partnership has cost taxpayers' money and Germany should forgo the return on its investment? Not the best option imo.I work in the medical field and the majority of nurses and caretakers here in Germany are Eastern Europeans who work extremely hard, long hours for very little money. None of them would get German citizenship without passing a language test. And these people are saving lives on a daily basis without getting any recognition. Isn't that more exeptional than winning an Olympic medal? Why should Bruno get better treatment than people who actually contribute to German society? Because in the end Germany wouldn't care if Aljona and Bruno would win a medal. Most people don't even know who Aljona is after all these years and another Olympic medal wouldn't change it.
Bruno already gets so many advantages, more than Aljona and Robin ever did because the German fed actually supports them financially. He only had two jobs : skate and pass the damn language test. He had 2 or 3 years to do so.
There are more deserving and hard working people who should be getting German citizenship than Bruno and, as much as I would like to see Aljona at the Olympics, I hope the German government does the right thing and won't just hand him citizenship.
Exceptional in this context is Bruno's unique skill set. He has something with value to offer that no other citizen has - the ability to partner Aliona at this point in time. That's the difference to your health care workers, as commendable as their service is. That Germany doesn't care is probably not quite on the mark, considering consensus about public funding for sport. The partnership has cost taxpayers' money and Germany should forgo the return on its investment? Not the best option imo.![]()