Many thanks to Nash Montana for translating this report from Politically Incorrect:

Insider report by an ex-refugee relief worker:

On Friday [August 20] a former refugee relief worker published a post on Facebook about his work with migrants. He was in the field for three years.

Now, for the first time, he reports about his daily experiences with “refugees”. These reports are very valuable. On the one hand, we learn from an involved person who has, for months, experienced situations, and the person’s stories are trustworthy and credible accounts of horrible circumstances. On the other hand, no one can accuse the person of being a “right wing agitator” attempting to exploit and/or instrumentalize the reality of it.

Farewell to Hope

In the end, the farewell was much easier than I thought, which is probably due to the exponential climb of my frustration, on all levels.

I have given up on my voluntary work as an assistant to refugees and migrants.

The many thousands of hours during which I tried to supply real help turned out to be utterly useless. Along with me, three other volunteer workers have also quit. There was no single defining incident. I had begun to notice that, for months, my work was senseless. Senseless in that the majority of the people with whom I dealt did not want to integrate. Senseless because the politicians actually consider integration to be unnecessary, as they merely need institutions and ghettos that are expected to return fat financial gains. And senseless because we helpers were left alone with our problems at work and we were shamed when attempting to discuss the topic of the racism that had been shown to us (and German society) by so many refugees. Real problems that required immediate solutions were being downplayed and sugar-coated. Female colleagues were spat upon just because they were women. And, coincidentally, on the very day it came out that I am Jewish, a tire on my car was slashed.