Israel:The Café Mersand in Tel Aviv: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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A project by the [http://www.goethe.de/ins/il/lp/deindex.htm Goethe-Institut Israel]
 
A project by the [http://www.goethe.de/ins/il/lp/deindex.htm Goethe-Institut Israel]
  
Author: [[Gisela Dachs]]
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Author: [[Israel:Gisela Dachs (Author) | Gisela Dachs]]
  
Photos: [[Noa Ben-Shalom]]
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Photos: [[Israel:Noa Ben-Shalom (Photos) | Noa Ben-Shalom]]

Version vom 12. Dezember 2012, 16:07 Uhr

© Goethe-Institut

Walter Mersand was a new immigrant from Germany who yearned for European coffee houses. In 1958 he set up Café Mersand – not far from the beach. Since then the interior décor has remained unaltered despite the change in ownership. Admittedly it is more reminiscent of an espresso bar. Customers sit on simple stools or benches without upholstery. Anyone frequenting this place is visiting one of the last real Yekkes (Jews of German origin) institutions in the country.

© Goethe-Institut
They were always – and still are – considered reliable, punctual, honest and extremely punctilious. But whilst such character traits were more likely to be associated with a bad reputation in the past, nowadays they have become desirable attributes. The thing is, being a Yekke is no longer a sort of swear word, it’s a term of praise. “I’m a Yekke” is something Israelis claim proudly if they have these (Prussian) virtues. Regardless of their origin.

German Traces in Israel

A project by the Goethe-Institut Israel

Author: Gisela Dachs

Photos: Noa Ben-Shalom