Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Translator's Preface
- Dedication
- Black German
- White Mother, Black Father
- Our Roots in Cameroon
- My Father's Story
- The Human Menagerie
- School
- The Reichstag is Burning
- Circus Child
- The Death of My Father
- Berlin-Karlshorst
- Undesirable
- As an “Ethiopian” in Sweden
- On My Knees in Gratitude
- The Lord is My Shepherd
- The Nuremberg Laws
- War Begins
- Hotel Excelsior
- Munich
- Hotel Alhambra
- Cinecittà
- Münchhausen
- Thoughts Are Free
- Forced Laborer
- New Quarters
- Air Raid
- Fear, Nothing but Fear
- Aryans
- A Miracle
- Liberated! Liberated?
- The Russians
- Dosvidanya
- Victors and Non-Victors
- Mixed Feelings
- Lessons in Democracy
- Displaced Person
- A Fateful Meeting
- An Excursion
- A New Family
- Butzbach
- Disasters Big and Small
- A Job with the US Army
- A Meeting with Some “Countrymen”
- Show Business
- Reunion with My Brother and Sister
- Workless
- Theater
- Radio
- Television
- Hard Times
- In the Sanatorium
- A Poisoned Atmosphere
- An Opportunity at Last
- The Decolonization of Africa
- Studying in Paris
- A New Beginning
- The Afrika-Bulletin
- Terra Incognita
- African Relations
- In My Father's Homeland
- Officer of the Federal Intelligence Service
- A New Afro-German Community
- Experiences
- Light and Dark
- Homestory Deutschland
- A Journey to the (Still) GDR
- Back to the Theater
- Loss and Renewal
- Last Roles
- Reflecting on My Life
- Thanks
- Explanatory Notes
- Chronology of Historical Events
- Further Reading in English
School
from Black German
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Translator's Preface
- Dedication
- Black German
- White Mother, Black Father
- Our Roots in Cameroon
- My Father's Story
- The Human Menagerie
- School
- The Reichstag is Burning
- Circus Child
- The Death of My Father
- Berlin-Karlshorst
- Undesirable
- As an “Ethiopian” in Sweden
- On My Knees in Gratitude
- The Lord is My Shepherd
- The Nuremberg Laws
- War Begins
- Hotel Excelsior
- Munich
- Hotel Alhambra
- Cinecittà
- Münchhausen
- Thoughts Are Free
- Forced Laborer
- New Quarters
- Air Raid
- Fear, Nothing but Fear
- Aryans
- A Miracle
- Liberated! Liberated?
- The Russians
- Dosvidanya
- Victors and Non-Victors
- Mixed Feelings
- Lessons in Democracy
- Displaced Person
- A Fateful Meeting
- An Excursion
- A New Family
- Butzbach
- Disasters Big and Small
- A Job with the US Army
- A Meeting with Some “Countrymen”
- Show Business
- Reunion with My Brother and Sister
- Workless
- Theater
- Radio
- Television
- Hard Times
- In the Sanatorium
- A Poisoned Atmosphere
- An Opportunity at Last
- The Decolonization of Africa
- Studying in Paris
- A New Beginning
- The Afrika-Bulletin
- Terra Incognita
- African Relations
- In My Father's Homeland
- Officer of the Federal Intelligence Service
- A New Afro-German Community
- Experiences
- Light and Dark
- Homestory Deutschland
- A Journey to the (Still) GDR
- Back to the Theater
- Loss and Renewal
- Last Roles
- Reflecting on My Life
- Thanks
- Explanatory Notes
- Chronology of Historical Events
- Further Reading in English
Summary
One day I was handed a big paper cone filled with fruit and sweets and had to go to school. It was very close to our house. On the first day, a boy about my age came up to me beaming and said, “Want to be friends?” Of course I said yes. He was called Horst, was known as “Hotte”, had unruly straw-colored hair and freckles. His father was unemployed, like many other fathers. So like me, Hotte was allowed to eat the free school meals that an American Christian organization – I think it was the Quakers – provided for German children after the First World War. We met up, played and did our homework together. But his parents soon moved away and we never saw each other again.
All in all I really enjoyed school; I made a lot of friends there and always had company on my way to school. In the classroom we were still using slate boards in the first year, and ancient textbooks that had passed through the hands of generations of schoolchildren. I was a fast learner and was seated in the front row, where the best pupils sat. If you got bad marks, you had to move back, and if you were really unlucky you landed in the back row. Of course we all – it was a boys’ school – developed quite a strong ambition to move right up to the front.
My first teacher was called Mrs Hering. We pupils always shouted “Miss!”, because in those days most women schoolteachers were unmarried. Every time, she emphatically corrected that “Miss” to “Mrs”. But there were dark sides to my good relationship with other children and schoolmates. Whenever the boys got up to mischief, as boys do at that age – and I was usually involved, if only passively – I was the only one who could be identified, because of the way I looked. My foster mother's advice: “Keep away from the bad boys.” It didn't help much.
My father often came to visit us in Saarbrücker Strasse. Sometimes he took me with him on his walks around the neighborhood.
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- Black GermanAn Afro-German Life in the Twentieth Century By Theodor Michael, pp. 27 - 29Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2017