In the end, strategically positioned pavilions built using Euro-pallets and widespread media coverage of the project helped bring together 64 conflicting parties from a variety of fields over a period of two weeks. Although information regarding the participants was made public, the meetings themselves always took place in private. They were limited to two hours and assisted by professional mediators.
Many of the participants met each other personally for the first time. A few examples: the owner of a Turkish travel agency in Fürth talked with a speaker of the Christian Social Union whose radical statements on immigration policy had caused a stir. In Erlangen, fans of the regional soccer teams from Fürth and Nuremberg, who only knew each other from brawls after the games, encountered each other. Another discussion was held between members of an ultrarightist university fraternity and young punks. In Nuremberg, the representatives of a citizen’s initiative met with the construction tycoon against whose plans its protests were aimed.
The thoroughly positive assessment of the talks on the part of the participants – only two of the meetings ended prematurely – caused the Nuremberg Society for Mediation to continue organizing similar discussions during the next year. The key strategies of the project, such as isolating the conflicting parties from their accustomed surroundings and decreasing media pressure, were maintained. It was planned that the “Days of Enmity” would be held on a yearly basis, but in the end the event was only repeated once.
WochenKlausur: Geraldine Blazejovsky, Dagmar Buhr, Christoph Eischer, Pascale Jeannée, Wolfgang Zinggl
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