The following video entitled “What German students learn from refugees”, along with its accompanying text, is part of the Hamburg Integration Project, a.k.a. “OpenEyesOpenHeart”. It’s designed to force help native German youngsters to purge their inner Islamophobe — that is, to curb their natural tendencies to harbor hateful, xenophobic thoughts about the “refugees” that have been flooding Germany for the past three years.

Nash Montana, who translated the video for subtitling, said she didn’t have the stomach to translate the article, nor did she want to help the brainwashers any more than she had to. For those who can read German — and who have taken their Dramamine — the text of the original bleeding-heart bushwah may be found at Die Welt.

In lieu of the full text, Nash sends this overview, accompanied by her own commentary:

Hamburg Integration Project: Brainwashing German Students Brainwashing students: The Hamburg project “OpenEyesOpenHeart” wants to combat prejudice. It mediates contacts between refugees and students in Germany. Lena Lührmann created the project with a few others in August 2015. Ruba Sulaimane and Mohammad Al Badawi are members of the project. Both come from Damascus, and they share pictures of their travels from Syria to Germany, speak about what it’s like to live in Hamburg, etc. Ruba will be meeting with Angela Merkel on Friday to shake her hand, as the chancellor has honored the project as a shining light and example for successful integration and refugee assistance. At a presentation the project leader Lena Lührmann asked the German students which prejudices they were aware of about refugees. One girl said: “They take away jobs from Germans.” Another boy said: “They steal.” And that many of them have smart phones; how can they afford these at all? Instead of going into depth about this question, however, Lührmann answered with a question: “If you had to flee and you only had forty seconds’ time, what would you pack into your plastic bag?” Most of the students were in agreement: Papers, money and smart phone. How else could the refugees navigate through Turkey, Greece, half of Europe? How else could they stay in contact with their families left behind in war zones? The smart phone as a life saver, not as a luxury item. Lührmann: “You have to experience in real life the people about whom you only hear in the media, and then you can form your own opinion about them.” The forty-second scenario is completely unrealistic. Most of the young men and families who flee have planned their departure over the span of days, weeks or even months. From their points of view, the students had given the right answers: Papers, money and smart phones. But in reality the only things that seem to survive with the refugees are cell phones, and papers and money seem to have gone the way of the dodo bird. Children are impressionable, and they don’t have the cognitive abilities that their grown-up master manipulators have. That’s why they cannot defend themselves against ideological hogwash. Maybe the project leader Lührmann would have found more resistance if she had asked these questions of cognitively equal grown-ups. She would have been bombarded with questions such as: What exactly is it that one has to flee across half of Europe from?

Is Germany really the only safe country in Europe?

Why Germany at all?

Why does someone leave his wife and children behind and travel as a “refugee” halfway around the world?

What happened to their papers?

Why do “refugees” destroy their papers? The two Syrians have their own YouTube channel, but of course they don’t speak in German. It’s a channel for whose purpose is to give tips to refugees. They also have a website.

Many thanks to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

Video transcript: