In the film, a family of Turkish immigrants migrated from Turkey, which had just used electricity and barely had enough food and clothing, to Germany in one fell swoop, achieving achievements including but not limited to the following:
1. As a worker on a construction site (with a clear shot of grandfather taking a shovel to dig the soil), in a big city, he undertook the living expenses of a family of five: education expenses for three children, rent for houses, milk powder for the younger son, etc. .
2. And within 3-5 years, I relied on the income of one person after coming to Germany to buy a house.
3. After giving birth to the younger son, the younger son immediately got German status.
4. As an immigrant, the youngest son married a second generation of migrant workers and married a German wife
5. The youngest daughter alone (husband dies, mentioned in the film) can raise her daughter to an adult, and receive a good education and talked about a British boyfriend.
Considering that Germany has a total population of tens of millions, it is roughly similar to the sum of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, and the degree of development is about the same. Compared with our country's central and western rural areas, Turkey seems to be just right, so let's change the context.
After nine years of compulsory education, a dog leftover from an ordinary rural village on the North China Plain worked hard while working in farming in his hometown. After he married Wang Dake from the same village, he raised three children. He was struggling to make ends meet. Worried, he found a contractor from the same village and went to work on a construction site in Beijing/Shanghai/Guangzhou/Shenzhen. He worked hard and thrifty, saving his income and sending it to his wife who stayed in the village to take care of three children. He worked for 3 years. He was warned by the eldest son’s teacher when he was visiting relatives in the township central school. The teacher at the central school told him that his son hadn’t come to school for 21 days. So he was saddened by his youngest son's reluctance to make progress, and made up his mind to bring the children around for a good education. So, he dragged his family back to Beijing/Shanghai/Guangzhou/Shenzhen, he went through the admission formalities for the three children naturally , and put more effort into the work. Not long after, his wife gave birth to him. After the fourth child, they were registered in Beijing/Shanghai/Guangzhou/Shenzhen for the child, and everything went well.
The sudden arrival of the little life made the house where the dog leftovers rented more and more cramped. After the dog leftovers returned to the hometown to inspect the current living environment in his hometown, he suffered from the dry toilets in his hometown and the occasional power outage (this should not happen in China). The dilapidated township central school (as of 2018, this North China definitely has) the leftover dog, worried about his quality of life, resolutely bought a house in Beijing/Shanghai/Guangzhou/Shenzhen .
Later, the children all grew up. The first three children were conservative in choosing the right partner, while the fourth child was awarded from Beijing/Shanghai/Guangzhou/Shenzhen which girl and mother-in-law. Favor, married a wife who was born and raised in the city.
. . . . . .
Applying our local context, the plot becomes like this, it is really hard to convince people!
It is amazing to think that the above achievements are obtained when a family even speaks German unfavorably, has a huge cultural difference, and is not in one country. I don't know whether it is our social absurdity or the optimism of German films.
The only thing better than the Germans is that our "hybrid" should not have questions about identity.
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