Germany after the market attack: 鈥榝ree, together, and open鈥
Ordinary people in Germany and elsewhere are rejecting the temptation of hate and fear.
Ordinary people in Germany and elsewhere are rejecting the temptation of hate and fear.
Messages of solidarity from political leaders around the globe have flooded Germany in the two days since a probable act of terror killed at least 12 people and injured scores of others at an outdoor Christmas market in Berlin. 鈥淚n the fight against all those who ... threaten our societies, we stand at the side of Berlin,鈥 said a White House National Security Council spokesman in a statement.
The search for the driver of a large truck filled with steel beams that slammed into a crowd of holiday shoppers now includes a 鈧100,000 ($104,000) reward for information on his whereabouts. The Islamic State group has claimed it is behind the tragic attack although at this writing its involvement has not been confirmed.
Beyond the official condolences have come touching responses from ordinary people. In Berlin, hundreds gathered to say the Lord鈥檚 Prayer together. One Tunisian student in the German capital, the same nationality as a suspect wanted by German police, wrote 鈥淭here is no path to peace 鈥 peace itself is the path鈥 on a scrap of paper that he added it to a growing memorial of flowers and candles. 鈥淚 came back here today to show that everyone needs to fight for peace together, both Muslims and 海角大神s,鈥 he told Britain鈥檚 Telegraph newspaper. 聽
Another message left at the site affirmed that 鈥渓ight is strong[er] than darkness,鈥 and added 鈥淏erlin lives on.鈥
At a similar Christmas market in Britain, a country that in the late 20th century endured its own terrorist bombings by factions of the Irish Republican Army, marketgoers interviewed by the BBC sounded resolute.
鈥淚f you stop your life, these people have won,鈥 said a young mother shopping at a Christmas market in Manchester, England, who had brought her two young children with her.
Should the Berlin attack be confirmed as an act of international terrorism, its aim surely was to demonize the 1 million Muslim refugees being sheltered in Germany with the hope of creating suspicion of all Muslims. It also poses a stiff political challenge for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has backed the huge humanitarian effort and who will run for reelection in the fall of 2017.
In speaking to the German people after the attack Ms. Merkel resolved to hold firm to the democratic values of tolerance and inclusion that modern Germany has demonstrated to the world. 鈥淲e do not want to live paralyzed by the fear of evil,鈥 she said. 鈥淓ven if it is difficult in these hours, we will find the strength for the life we want to live in Germany 鈥 free, together, and open.鈥
Her words speak to all around the world who hold to the truth that love and brotherhood must triumph over hatred and division.