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German-Turkish signs at McDonald's decried as racist

May 17, 2017

The McDonald's sign in one language points customers towards a wealthy, safe part of town. A sign in another language points towards a run-down neighborhood. Can you guess which sign is in German?

Symbolbild - McDonald's
Image: Getty Images/K. Tribouillard

A McDonald's in the German city of Mannheim caused a stir on social media on Wednesday after customers discovered a pair of signs in both Turkish and German. The two signs, the franchise owner said, were meant to be inclusive for all his customers.

The only problem was that the sign in Turkish directed customers to a location in a seedier part of the city, while the sign in German pointed customers in the direction of a wealthier district.

"Are you serious? …what bastards!" said one local on Twitter, accompanied by several comparisons to the Nazi regime. Another user accused the fast food franchise of "racial segregation," implying that that "Turks belong in the rundown neighborhood, the Germans in the high-class neighborhood":

According to local media, the franchisee, Manfred Büch, tried to explain the situation. Büch owns three McDonald's franchises, and with one closing, he wanted to direct his customers to the two others restaurants he owns.

"We have worked together with international employees for 25 years, every day without any racist incidents. To be accused now of discrimination makes us speechless and sad," Büch said in a statement. Speaking with news outlet Die Welt, Büch elaborated that he "had never dreamed" he would be accused of something so sinister and added that he had asked a Turkish firm to make up the signs.

'Should have known better'

But Mannheim's municipal Migration Committee was still concerned. Committee member Fatih Ekinci told the local Mannheimer Morgen newspaper that many citizens had complained of feeling maligned by the signs, placed in a prominent location in the city's market square.

"I don't think he did it on purpose," Ekinci said, "but someone who has had so many immigrant and minority employees should have known better."

Die Welt reported that McDonald's itself apparently felt the matter important enough to issue its own statement, saying "discrimination has no place in our restaurants. This is clearly a misunderstanding, and we applaud the franchise owner for his swift reaction in removing the signs."

Although the situation was dealt with quickly, it highlights how Germany still has some way to go in dealing with its relatively new role as a country of immigration.

Elizabeth Schumacher Elizabeth Schumacher reports on gender equity, immigration, poverty and education in Germany.
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