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“This is our day”: 150 guests and a full hall at the rural women’s day in Beuerberg

2024-02-23T17:23:42.466Z

Highlights: “This is our day”: 150 guests and a full hall at the rural women’s day in Beuerberg.. As of: February 23, 2024, 6:03 p.m By: Jannis Gogolin CommentsPressSplit Greetings: Vice district farmer Christine Oswald welcomed the approximately 150 rural women and guests of honor at the Beuerberger Gasthaus zur Mühle. First a secret meeting, then a demonstration: Green frontwoman Katharina Schulze's visit to the bathhouse was followed by farmers' protest.



As of: February 23, 2024, 6:03 p.m

By: Jannis Gogolin

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Greetings: Vice district farmer Christine Oswald welcomed the approximately 150 rural women and guests of honor at the Beuerberger Gasthaus zur Mühle.

© Sabine Hermsdorf-Hiss

150 guests gathered for Country Women's Day in the Beuerberg Gasthaus zur Mühle.

The conclusion: positive thinking is necessary in times of crisis

Eurasburg – Should you talk about politics or enjoy being together?

The Country Women's Day in the Beuerberger Gasthaus zur Mühle on Friday afternoon showed that both can be combined.

After a church service and champagne reception, 150 rural women and numerous guests filled the ballroom to celebrate the farmers' women's day of honor together.

“This is our day”: 150 guests and a full hall at the rural women’s day in Beuerberg

“There are enough topics that are exciting and invite discussion,” stated Vice District Farmer Christine Oswald at the beginning in the hall of the inn.

She led the afternoon on behalf of district farmer Ursula Fiechtner.

“But today we rural women want to leave that out.

This is our day.

And we really want to enjoy it,” she greeted the festival congregation after a piece by the music trio “G'freit mi”.

While Oswald's speech was short and emphatically apolitical, Peter Fichtner, district chairman of the Bavarian Farmers' Association (BBV), went into great detail and talked about politics big and small.

As reported, it was only on Wednesday that he had a personal discussion with the leader of the Green Party in the Bavarian state parliament, Katharina Schulze - and reported on the meeting at the bathhouse in Waldram at the Rural Women's Day.

The conversation “went perfectly” – until Schulze’s “politician gene” took over.

In the opinion of the BBV district chairman, when Fichtner asked who was responsible for the misery, she gave an inadequate answer.

Fichtner quoted the Green politician from memory: “It’s always the others’ fault.”

Checks from the proceeds of the Baiernrainer Dorfherbst and the Glentleitner Christmas market were presented on Friday at Rural Women's Day.

The photo shows (from left) Maria Lidl (vice district farmer from Weilheim-Schongau), Bernhard Schilcher (mayor of Bad Bayersoien), Stefan Fadinger (mayor of Gaißach), village autumn organizer Annelies Huber (Benediktbeuern/Bichl), Christine Oswald (vice district farmer) and district chairman Peter Fichtner.

© Sabine Hermsdorf-Hiss

Third District Administrator Klaus Koch (Greens) was less concerned with the question of guilt for the crises of this time.

He represented District Administrator Josef Niedermaier, who “currently represents our district in a Telekom conference room in Bonn.

Unfortunately we still have some dead spots.”

You can read the latest news from Eurasburg here.

The Beuerberg chef has the impression that social cohesion is crumbling in some corners - but provided a vague solution.

“We have to reshape society from below,” emphasized the Green district administrator.

“This requires positive thinking.

You country women have exactly that, you take things into your own hands.

We need people like you to just say, 'Let's do it.'”

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However, personal initiative and volunteer work have seen better times, said Kreisbauer Fichtner.

The core problem is bureaucracy.

“She has a stronger instinct for self-preservation than humans.” Annelies Huber confirmed Fichtner’s statements.

You quickly feel overwhelmed by “rules, requirements and dictated framework conditions”.

The country woman took the lead in organizing the village autumn in Baiernrain - with resounding success.

Last year the market raised 11,000 euros in donations.

Vice district farmer Oswald thanked Huber for her commitment with a bouquet of flowers.

“If we weren’t optimistic, we would have to stop,” said Huber.

“Without so many idealists none of this would work.”

Idealism is praiseworthy, but ideologies are not, emphasized the landlord and host of the Rural Women's Day, Eurasburg's mayor Moritz Sappl.

“Even if, as a farmer, you may see yourself as closer to the truth,” you have to be lenient with those “whose sole source of information is the Internet.

But it's supposed to be a nice day, so I'll stop now," said the town hall boss, before the next item on the program began: a happy get-together with coffee and cake.

The mood in the room was particularly good, and not just because Sappl kept his promise and everything political was over with it.

But also because the Sparkasse Bad Tölz-Wolfratshausen covered the costs for the coffee party.

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-02-23

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