(Deutsch) Ich bin Journalist. Und seit heute auch noch ein bisschen mehr.

Serbian Soldiers clean their tanks in front of a Shopping Center in Belgrade o 16. October 2014

Cleaners in Belgrade

Serbian Soldiers clean their gear before a parade in Belgrade on 16th of October 2014.
Serbian Soldiers clean their tanks in front of a Shopping Center in Belgrade o 16. October 2014Serbian Soldiers clean their tanks in front of Hypo Alpe Adria tower in Belgrade o 16. October 2014Three Serbian soldiers clean their jeep before parade on 16th of October in Belgrade

A Walk Around The Park

Bought myself a new camera. Took a stroll around Volkspark Friedrichshain in Berlin. It took rougly 1 minute and 32 seconds to fall in love with the camera.*

 

 

 

 

* It is a Sony Alpha 7

Morocco at night

Morocco, Juli 2014

western sahara, morocco, africa, camles, sahara, cab

Cab Ride in the Western Sahara

western sahara, morocco, africa, camles, sahara, cab

Somewhere in the Sahara, July 2014

Joy

School Kids in Tibetan Regions of China, 2007

Warum ich bei Krautreporter mitmache

Rico Grimm, Krautreporter from Krautreporter on Vimeo.

1. Weil es so naheliegend ist, Journalismus nur durch die Leser zu finanzieren – und es trotzdem in Deutschland auf diesem Niveau noch nie ausprobiert wurde.

2. Dabei hätte dieses Modell Vorteile für Autoren und Leser. Weil wir Journalisten über Themen schreiben könnte, die wichtig und interessant sind, aber in anderen Medien nicht veröffentlicht werden konnten, etwa weil sie nicht aktuell genug waren, zu komplex oder schlicht das Geld in der Redaktion fehlte. Etwa solche Beiträge, die alle aus meinem Alltag stammen:

  • über einen Bundeswehroberst, der mit Verweis auf das Grundgesetz Befehle verweigert hatte, dafür vom Bundesverwaltungsgericht Recht bekam und seitdem nie wieder befördert wurde
  • über die ersten privaten Weltraumraketen der Geschichte – die aus Deutschland stammten, im Kongo getestet wurden und für ein geheimes Cruise-Missile-Programm der Bundesrepublik gehalten wurden
  • über die Boom-Region Irak-Kurdistan, der gerade sein erstes Fass Öl ausgeliefert hat (u.a. an Israel) und der Nukleus für einen eigenen kurdischen Staat werden könnte.

3. Weil ich noch weiter mit fotojournalistischen Formaten, etwa solchen kurzen FotoText-Porträts experimentieren will. Denn ich glaube, dass “Geschichte” bedeutungslos ist, wenn wir nicht erzählen, wie einzelne Menschen an ihr teil haben – und ihr Leben von ihr geformt wird.

4. Weil ich kein schlechtes Gewissen mehr haben will, wenn ich einen Text für ein Online-Medium schreibe – ob der Selbst-Ausbeutung, die das mit sich bringt. (Zur Info: 180 € vor Steuern für zwei Tage Arbeit sind nicht unüblich.)

5. Weil nichts so befriedigend ist, wie ein gutes Gespräch. Und das würde ich gerne mit den Lesern von Krautreporter führen. Mein großes Vorbild dabei: Ta Nehisi-Coats vom US-Magazin The Atlantic, der eine Kommentarspalte mit einem Abendessen vergleicht, zu dem der Leser eingeladen wird.

6. Weil der Hashtag #longreads abgeschafft gehört. Schließlich sollten lange, hintergründige Texte online nichts Besonderes mehr sein.

7. Weil Krautreporter das beste Argument gegenüber Verlagsmenschen für mehr Investitionen und Experimente wäre. In allen Häusern.

8. Weil ich nicht oft in meinem Leben ein Magazin gründen könnte. Und ihr auch nicht! Also werdet Mitgründer: www.krautreporter.de

tibet, china, buddhismus, monk, sunglasses

The Buddhist Cool

tibet, china, buddhismus, monk, sunglasses

Litang, China, 2007

The Volksfest

Scene at “Baumblütenfest” in Werder, Brandenburg, close to Potsdam and Berlin, May 2014

Weit schwimmen, lang fliegen

Drei Brüder streifen durch die Welt auf der Suche nach dem schönsten Ort der Erde und finden ihn nicht. Da treffen sie auf einem Hügel einen Wanderer: “Wo ist der schönste Ort?”, fragen sie ihn. Und er deutet wortlos auf den Horizont, an jene Stelle, an der sich Himmel und Meer vereinigen.

Die hungrigen Brüder fragen: “Wie gelangen wir dorthin?” Und er antwortet: “Fliegen müsst ihr oder schwimmen!” Und sie machen sich auf den Weg.

Sie schwimmen weit und fliegen lang und kommen doch nie an. Da kehren sie um und sagen zu dem Wanderer auf dem Hügel: “Wanderer, wir sind weit geschwommen und lang geflogen und haben ihn doch nie erreicht, den schönsten Ort.”

Und da sagt der Wanderer auf dem Hügel: “Das ist nicht möglich. Denn ich habe euch gesehen von hier oben, wie ihr geflogen seid und geschwommen. Ihr wart der Saum zwischen Himmel und Meer. Ihr wart genau dort, am schönsten Ort.”

Lykien, Türkei, Mai 2014

The End Of The World

Carnarvon, Australia 2006

Stars & Bucks

brands for everyone – In Ramallah you have your coffee at the Stars & Bucks Café, get a sandwich at Sub & Deli and call your friends with your Facebook phone

(there is an iHouse too but I did not photograph that one…)

SW #145

A maze and amazement go together, no?


Jorge Luis Borges

Indeed, they do.

A Witch At Jesus’

Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem, 2014

(Deutsch) Drama Ramallah

Ramallah, 2014

Wildfire

wildfire, australia, northern territory, fire, forest, nature, bush

Wildfire somewhere in Australia, 2006

A boy at the night market in Darwin

a boy on the night market at mindil beach in darwin australia stands among toys

A very good thing happened: With the help of friends I could recover my long lost collection of pictures I made in Australia, China, Cambodia in 2006 and 2007. I had not seen these pictures for years and last week they suddenly started to pop up in my dropbox folder. Every single “pop” was like a homecoming, like the family getting together again.

I will post a selection of these pictures over the next month. I start with this one from the Mindil Beach Night Markets in Darwin, Australia. It is one of my favourites. It taught me how wonder- and colorful documentary photos can be.

SW #128 – Pressure

Insanity laughs under pressure we’re cracking
Can’t we give ourselves one more chance
Why can’t we give love that one more chance
Why can’t we give love give love give love give love
give love give love give love give love give love
‘Cause love’s such an old fashioned word
And love dares you to care for
The people on the edge of the Night
And love dares you to change our way of
Caring about ourselves
This is our last dance
This is our last dance
This is ourselves
Under pressure
Under pressure
Pressure

Freddie Mercury, David Bowie

Coming Soon

Author Rico Grimm Category meta

Fouad the Welder – Zaatari Refugee Camp – III

September 2013

Zaatari – Refugee Camp – II

Kids in Zaatari refugee Camp for displaced Syrians, Northern Jordan, September 2013

#SW 121

 In politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword.

Alexander Hamilton, The Federalist Papers No. 1,

What happened to the leader of the free world?

Name of U.S. Presidents during Cold War:

Leader Of The Free World

Name after Guantanamo, drone strikes and the spying scandal:

Leader Of The

After government shutdown:

Of The

Photo: Wikipedia; download a png of this post here.

(Deutsch) SW #120

Die Waffen für zwei Weltkriege geliefert, nie eine Wahl gehabt, unter die Erde und in die Gluthitze der Hochöfen gezwungen, beide Kriege verloren, Millionen von Menschen getötet. Und nie, nie, niemals durftest du darüber reden. Sonst kriegst du auf die Fresse. Ich sag’ mal so: Aufrechter Gang geht anders. Wer das Ruhrgebiet verstehen will, muß sich mit diesem sehr komplexen, vielschichtigen, zähen Gefühl auseinandersetzen: Scham. Und er muß damit rechnen, dass er dafür auf die Fresse kriegt.

“Ruhrgebiet inszenieren!” von Michael-Walter Erdmann, Lettre International

(Deutsch) SW #119

Wäre das Land vernünftig statt sentimental, würde es aufhören, sich etwas vorzumachen. Es würde sich als das begreifen und benennen, was es ist: eine Klassengesellschaft.

Katja Kullmann, “Im kalten Nebel”

zaatari, kid, horizon, refugee camp, clouds,

Zaatari – Refugee Camp – I

zaatari, kid, horizon, refugee camp, clouds,

Zaatari Refugee Camp, Jordan, September 2013

(Deutsch) SW #118

Wir versuchen eine vernünftige Zeitung zu machen, aber weil die Welt absurd ist, wird das scheitern.

Pascal Pia, Herausgeber von Combat, der Zeitung der französischen Resistance

grandma

Grandma

grandma

Grandma, Amsterdam, October 2013

(Deutsch) SW #117

Hier lebt ein freier Mensch. Niemand schuldet ihm etwas.

Albert Camus & René Char, “La Postérité du soleil”, 1986

(Deutsch) SW #116

To grasp what is happening, we must set aside a number of deep-rooted prejudices. The first of these is the assumption that democracy presupposes secularisation. The second is the idea that a democrat is, by definition, also a liberal. Historically, this has not been the case. The American Founding Fathers were not secularists; for them, the separation of church and state was a way of protecting religion from government, not the reverse. The French Third Republic was established in 1871 by a predo­minantly conservative, Catholic, monarchist parliament that had just crushed the Paris Commune.

Oliver Roy

Orthodox Jews watch IDF soldiers during their oath ceremony on Western Wall Plaza, Jerusalem, in March 2013

In Jerusalem Again

Orthodox Jews watch IDF soldiers during their oath ceremony on Western Wall Plaza, Jerusalem, in March 2013

When the beards get longer, the hats weirder, the guns bigger, the domes more golden and the ailes more narrow, when the trams get too crowded, your roomies french, the politics more complicated, the stones whiter, the hill slopes smoother, the cabbies more rude and the sky clearer – then you know that you are in Jerusalem again. Hello!

uwe behrens berlin mordkommissar tatort schauen

Uwe Behrens, homicide detective in Berlin

uwe behrens berlin mordkommissar tatort schauen This is Uwe Behrens. He is a homicide detective with the Berlin Police Department. I had invited him to watch with me “Tatort” – a hugely popular crime series that gets screened every Sunday in German public TV (IchWerdeEinBerliner has got a thorough explanation of this phenomenon.)

Behrens joined the police straight after his A-Levels in October 1987. He was trained and soon started to work in the “fraud”-department. “I did very exciting things such as handling delays in filing bankruptcy petition”, he says ironically. For him this work meant too less of the real police work: getting out, talking to people, interrogating them. “We came with a horde of tax accountants to collect files and binders.” He soon switched departments. Since 20 years he is working now in the homicide department – and there was this one case he could not forget.

He was still a greenhorn in February 1993 as a man walked into a car shop in Berlin, entered the office, drew a shotgun and killed Doris Kirche, an employee at the firm since 25 years. She was an ordinary women in the Mid-Fifties and did impeccable work. Behrens and his colleagues did not know why somebody would shoot her. They looked for evidence, crumbs of clues. They did not find a thing.

“At one point I almost did not care anymore who shot her, I only wanted to know why this women had to die”, he says. Her death made no sense. Five years later they follow a new lead and they can arrest the murderers. Doris Kirche had to die because she did not want to move out of her apartment. Her landlord wanted to charge more rent but he could only do that if she moves out. So, he had her killed. If an episode of Tatort would feature such a plot line people would debunk it as a utter nonsense. But, well, here it is. Sometimes reality is banal.

Uwe Behrens, however, is not a fan of Tatort. He loves the US-show Dexter. It is about a homicide detective who hunts down murderers at daytime and kills other people at night.

(Deutsch) SW #115 – Tschick

Es riecht nach Blut und Kaffee.

Wolfgang Herrndorf, “Tschick”

(Deutsch) SW #114

Know your true measurements and dress your mind accordingly.

J.D. Salinger

kurdistan, berge, sprichwort, identität, amedi, irak, junge, landschaft, aussicht, haus, baustelle

Friends of the Kurds

kurdistan, berge, sprichwort, identität, amedi, irak, junge, landschaft, aussicht, haus, baustelle

The Kurds say: “The mountains are our only friends.”

Amedi, Iraq, April 2013

john dyke singer songwriter australia melbourne germany dyko berlin

How an Australian became a culture ambassador for Germany

john dyke singer sänger songwriter australia melbourne germany dyko berlin

This is John Dyke. He grew up in Melbourne, Australia and lives now as a singer in Berlin which is nothing special. Berlin is, thankfully, full of musicians. But Dyke is somewhat special because he does not live in Neukölln or Kreuzberg – he bought a house in the middle of the city and lives there now with wife, kids and a garden. And he sings about that life – in German.

It was 20 years ago when he first came here. He worked for the percussion company Sonor. And one day he walked into a bar and ordered a beer. “It was awesome to see that you order a beer in Germany and somebody only draws a line on your beermat to count the number of beers you had. The people trusted each other. Something like that would be unthinkable in England.”

John Dyke fell in love with the country. He stayed and is now something like a culture ambassador of it. The ‘Goethe-Institut’ is dedicated to promote German language and culture in the world and regularly books him for events from Usbekistan to New York.

(Deutsch) SW #113

Es gibt viele Büchsen der Pandora. Sie laufen rum, schreiben SMS und riechen dann auch noch so spannend.

Unbekannt

(Deutsch) SW #112

Die Zeit ist eine Maschine, die Leben zermahlt, das habe ich beim Schreiben dieses Buchs gelernt, aber hin und wieder gibt es auch Menschen, die die Zeit zermahlen.

David van Reybrouck, “Kongo”

(Deutsch) SW #111

Muawiya personified ‘hilm’, the wisdom and patience of the Arab sheikh: “I apply not my sword when my lash suffices nor my lash when my tongue suffices. And even if but one hair is binding me to my fellow men, I don’t let it break. When they pull, I loosen, if they loosen I pull.

Simon Sebag Montefiore, “Jerusalem. The Biography”.

(Deutsch) SW #110

Pictures don’t just speak a thousand words, they also speak a thousand languages.

Nick Bilton

Screenshot Quentin Tarantions "Django Unchained" USA Germany Essay Slavery Holocaust

History and guilt in the US, Germany, actually, everywhere

Screenshot Quentin Tarantions "Django Unchained" USA Germany Essay Slavery Holocaust

History and guilt

Can America face up to the terrible reality of slavery in the way that Germany has faced up to the Holocaust?

This is a very interesting read.For Germans, Americans, Israelis, Palestinians, Australians, Kurds, Turks. For everyone, actually. Because – without questioning the singularity of events – I cannot think of one nation who did not stomp over other peoples rights in its history. (If you can, let me know) Inflicting sorrow to their fellow humans is a common trait of all people. Take that into account, try to fully understand what it means that there is no “good nation”, no “light unto the nations”, no “God’s own country”, that in the end nations always do good *and* bad – it becomes a lesson of humbleness you can not forget nor ignore. That is why coming to the terms with the past is so important.

Photo: Scene from “Django Unchained”

(Deutsch) SW #109

On Jubilee Street there was a girl named Bee
She had a history but she had no past
When they shut her down the Russians moved in
Now I’m too scared to even walk on past
She used to say all those good people down on Jubilee Street
They ought to practise what they preach

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, “Jubilee Street”

(Deutsch) SW #108

Reisen – es macht dich zuerst sprachlos und verwandelt dich dann in einen Geschichten-Erzähler.

Ibn Batuta

(Deutsch) SW #107

Kurz vor seiner Abreise lernte er den berühmten Georg Forster kennen, einen dünnen, hustenden Mann mit ungesunder Gesichtsfarbe. Er hatte mit Cook die Welt umrundet und mehr gesehen, als irgendein anderer Mensch aus Deutschland, jetzt war er eine Legende, sein Buch war weltbekannt, und er arbeitete als Bibliothekar in Mainz. Er erzählte von Drachen und lebenden Toten, von überaus höflichen Kannibalen und Tagen, an denen das Meer so klar war, das man meinte, über einen Abgrund zu schweben, von Stürmen, so heftig, dass man nicht zu beten wagte. Melancholie umgab ihn wie ein feiner Nebel. Er habe zu viel gesehen, sagte er. Eben davon handle das Gleichnis von Odysseus und den Sirenen. Es helfe nichts, sich an den Mast zu binden, auch als Davongekommener erhole man sich nicht von der Nähe des Fremden. Er finde kaum Schlaf mehr, die Erinnerungen seinen zu stark. Vor Kurzem habe er Nachricht bekommen, dass sein Kapitän, der große und dunkle Cook auf Hawaii gekocht und gegessen worden sei. Er rieb sich die Stirn und betrachtete die Schnallen seiner Schule. Gekocht und gegessen, wiederholte er.

Er wolle auch reisen, sagte Humboldt.
Foster nickte. Mancher wolle das. Und jeder bereue es später.
Warum?
Weil man nie zurückkommen könne.

Daniel Kehlmann, “Die Vermessung der Welt”

(Deutsch) SW #106

Flirting in German is a bit like bulldozers making love

@NeinQuarterly

Gunter Voelker, owner of "Deutscher Hof" Erbil, Irak

Gunter, the German Cook in Iraq

Gunter Voelker, owner of "Deutscher Hof" Erbil, Irak

This is Gunter, he owns a German restaurant in Iraq, in Erbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan. Ordering a beer in his restaurant was a small home-coming for me. Because the beer was brewed 10km away from where I grew up. The food Gunter cooked was the same my grandma always prepared for me.

Gunter comes from a small town in Thuriniga, in the middle of Germany. Him owning a restaurant in Iraq was not a propect he could have fathomed some 25 years earlier. It was the fall of 1989 when he went for “a walk” and demanded freedom of movement, when he demonstrated against the government of the German Democratic Republic. In a childish move of vengeance this government enlisted him for military service. A couple of weeks later the Wall came down and the East-German forces were reunited with their West-German counterparts. Gunter stayed in the army and did what he had learned. He cooked. In Bosnia, in Kosovo, in Kabul. It was in the Afghan capital that he opened his first restaurant in 2003. Times were good at that time in Afghanistan. Everybody was optimistic, Gunter recalls. With every bomb attack this optimism vanished further, making him closing his restaurant in the process. 30.000 Euros were lost. He started again in Iraq. Same story here: many Internationals, optimism, no competition. This time it worked. Gunter wants to open his next restaurant on the island of Sri Lanka.

When I was asking Gunter what he thinks of Germany, if he would go back, he replied: “What could I possibly want there?”

(Deutsch) SW #105

Man sagt, Kurden haben die schönsten Augen, weil ihr Sprache verboten ist und ihr Leben in ihren Augen zu lesen ist.

Hesam Misaghi, an Iranian dissident

iran hesam misaghi blogger bahai dissident

This is Hesam Misaghi, a 25-year old Iranian. Other Iranians are electing a new president today. He lives and soon studies in Berlin and has not seen home since three years. He is a dissident, he took part in the so called “Green Movement” which almost toppled the Iranian regime four years ago. But only almost.

But the oppression started for Hesam even earlier – because he is a Bahai, a member of a religious group that the Iranian government dsicriminates against. Once, he was five year old, did he visit his grandparents. This happened (in his words):

The door bell rang and when my grandparents opened they saw two bearded guys who began to search the apartment. After they found the library of my grandpa they confiscated his books. My uncle had deposited his whole collection of Tin-Tin-comics there. My favourite adventure was Tintins Journey to the Moon and I had to watch helplessly how these bearded guys took away the comics. They were not stupid, they knew exactly that Tintin is harmless. But they liked them and they had the power to take them away. I was really sad.

It started with comic books, in 2009 the police threatened to arrest him because he was a dissident blogger. They had already jailed seven of his friends. Hesam had to flee.

thomas w. bundeswehr active fence syrien türkei patriot 2013 april

Thomas W.

thomas w. bundeswehr active fence syrien türkei patriot 2013 april

This is Thomas W., technician with the German army. Being part of a Nato-deployment, he was stationed in South Turkey for three months. Look at his shoulders, they tell alot about him – because they are empyty. Thomas W. wears his uniform badge on his breast.

He is a optimistic, funny guy from Hamburg trying to cope with the boredom of this deployment. In the back of the picture you can see the improvised workshop where he and his team tend to the cars and trucks of the German units.

You can read my full (German) report about this Nato-Operation here.

The Empire of Mind

Exactly 80 years ago the Nazis burned books on public squares all over Germany. They burned writings by Erich Maria Remarque, Erich Kästner, Sigmund Freud, Kurt Tucholsky, Karl Marx – to name just a few. It was a portent, typical for every dictatorship: First they wanted to eliminate ideas than they grew bolder and wanted to kill all the people behind them.

It was in Sulaymania, Iraq, that I was reminded of the burning piles of books in Germany. A kurdish musician and his girifriend showed me this German PhD-thesis about the “Music of the Sumerians”. Saddam Hussein had banned the book during his rule. But the couple managed to get a copy from Beirut which they cherished alot even though both could not understand a word of it. The book was a token of their heritage and history.

Saddam Hussein had failed, the Nazis had failed. The empire of mind is stronger than the Third Reich ever was or any brutal regime ever will be.