I will say a word or two now,
Why is the Ministry of Culture responsible for education? Shouldn't they be looking after precious German artifacts and the country's cultural heritage? I would have thought that the Ministry of Education is responsible for scholastic matters. Anyway, I am not happy with the German language curriculum and the dumbing down of German grammar and spelling.
Now in regards to East German teachers, perhaps the rationale behind making them re-qualify was to ensure that they weren't going to bring DDR attitudes and Stasi methods into West German schools. After all, education is about so much more than simply numeracy and literacy.
I love Bavaria. Though too much Catholicism and, outside of Munich, very parochial. My parents did contemplate relocating there once upon a time. They wanted to live in the Alps, but were counselled by a family friend, who hailed from there, against it. The climate was another reason ma and pa changed their minds. Instead my father did the next best thing and built a Bavarian style house in Sydney.
Major joblessness has always been a problem. I recall in the early '70s you already had to be a graduate to get an apprenticeship as a butcher/baker or garbo. I guess nothing has changed. Unemployment has always hovered in the double digits in my living memory. It is my guess that chronic unemployment of around 12 percent must be factored into German economic policy as a matter of fact. The welfare state is an economic entity in it's own right.
I am sure that much was gained when the two Germanies were re-unified. At least I was able to visit my maternal grans' birthplace. It was on the wrong side of the wall for much of my life and a place of personal fascination. My gran grew up in Hoppegarten, which during her childhood in the 1920s and '30s, was where the hoity-toity used to congregate. It also had a sizeable and permanent English population, being involved with horse racing, bookmaking and all that. There still are a few beautiful old mansions in that area, harking back to the glory days. I visited the local cemetary there, which is where my great-grandmother is buried and, to my surprise, half of the cemetary was full of English corpses. Many beautiful and ornate headstones dated back to the late 19th century and, even more surprising, the graves were still being tended unlike my great-nan's (full of weeds etc. - took us an hour to find it).
In '93, when my grandmother was still alive, we went to her birthplace and family home. It was around the time when a lot of expat East Germans, who had fled to the West even before the Wall was built, started to lodge claims over real estate left behind the iron curtain. We were walking around the horse stables, just having a gander and these people came at us yelling "Was wollen Sie hier - es gibt hier nichts zu holen! Verschwinden Sie!!!" They must have seen our West-German number plates, thus they obviously thought that we were there to size the place up and seize it. You could see the suspicion in their faces and I was bemused. Of course, once we explained our benign purpose they became quite friendly and were happy to show us around. Going back to my grandmother's birthplace was a wonderful experience in the sense that I was finally able to see the place of which I had been told so much during my childhood. We also visited my mother's birthplace. A tenement in Hoppegarten, which hadn't changed in all the years and, lucky for me, survived the Blitzkrieg. I like Berlin very much. It's a very beautiful city, full of interesting sights and people.
Overall Germany seems to be doing pretty good at the moment. People live very well there and the government is doing a lot to provide value for the taxes that citizens pay.
rapunzel