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Federal voluntary service: Tschamler hands over office to Mitschke

2020-09-22T19:07:54.349Z


Kristina Tschamler did federal voluntary service in the Badehaus memorial site for a year. As a farewell, she organized a cultural benefit evening.


Kristina Tschamler did federal voluntary service in the Badehaus memorial site for a year.

As a farewell, she organized a cultural benefit evening.

Waldram -

Kristina Tschamler, a Beuerberg high school graduate, completed her service as a federal volunteer in the memorial on Kolpingplatz for one year.

To say goodbye, she organized a cultural benefit evening herself, during which she looked back on her varied activities and, after the screening of the award-winning film “At the end of the tour, tourists introduced her successor André Mitschke.

“I couldn't have imagined this year to be more beautiful,” said Tschamler.

According to board member Jonathan Coenen, she worked a total of 1920 hours and accompanied 150 tours during this time.

Although the museum had to remain closed for several months due to the corona pandemic, Tschamler had plenty to do, for example, when preparing exhibitions.

"Actually, we don't want to leave you out," said the chairman of the bathing house, Dr.

Sybille Krafft firmly.

In addition to the around 50 guests, the mayor of Eurasburg, Moritz Sappl, did not miss the opportunity to come personally to see Tschamler say goodbye and to hand her two jars of honey from her home community.

“It's a year's harvest,” he said, explaining the symbolic meaning of his gift.

Badehaus-Verein board member Justine Bittner gave Tschamler a fabric whale, which was supposed to symbolize the journey from one sea to another body of water.

Turning your back on the bathhouse forever is out of the question for the woman from Beuerberg.

“Once you've set foot in here, you'll always come back,” Tschamler is certain.

Her successor is now the 18-year-old Waldramer André Mitschke.

“I've already helped out here a number of times in the past year and I'm looking forward to my job,” he said.

Before the evening ended with a convivial get-together on the garden floor, Dr.

Sybille Krafft combative.

“We will do everything we can to ensure that we can offer young people long-term employment here in the future,” she promised.  

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Source: merkur

All news articles on 2020-09-22

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