Film Archive

Land (Film Archive)

German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Filmstill Accidental Animals
Accidental Animals
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Animals caught by chance by Google Maps car cameras disrupt the claim of capturing the world accurately. Their appearance in the image creates – involuntarily – funny situations.
Filmstill Accidental Animals

Accidental Animals

Accidental Animals
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
10 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
German

We have probably all thought about the influence of digital logic and algorithms on our perception of the world at some point. This equally humorous and profound short film takes the interactive online tour service “Google Street View” as a starting point for an investigation of where the reality mapped by fifteen automatic cameras and the one perceived by human senses drift apart – and what the consequences are.
The “Accidental Animals” that happened to come across the lenses of Google cars defy the claim that every area, however remote, is reproduced as realistically as possible. Instead, their appearance in the frame produces unintentionally funny situations. Like glitches in the matrix, they remind us that we are watching only a patchy series of snapshots. Before we “drop” into a random place on the map, before we arrive to look around, the animals are already there. The fact that Google’s technology blurs many of those bird, dog and pig faces – like ours – to protect personality rights furnishes the directors with the perfect excuse for a provocative question: How is it that in this respect the algorithm acts more ethically than the humans who programmed it?

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Script
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Editor
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Producer
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Co-Producer
Ina Mikkat
Sound
Jana Baldovino
Sound Design
Gerhard Auer
Score
Timotheus Bachinger
Animation
Felix Klee
Filmstill Just Sea

Just Sea

Baħar biss
Franziska von Stenglin
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Malta,
Germany
2024
25 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
English

The camera calmly explores the holes and fissures of a cliff face, the traces of the ocean. The austere landscape seems to have fallen out of time. Only a few decades ago, fishermen threw their trap baskets into the water from here. Today, the sea around Malta has long been fished dry. Punta, a moustachioed islander, wants to have one more go.
A weir is woven from the hairs of a horsetail, a forgotten craft is demonstrated. An intercut Super 8 film documents the diversity of marine life in the past; its grainy images radiate something irretrievable. An octopus curls around a foot, a jellyfish floats through the eternal blue. Punta gazes melancholically at the sea, far beneath him the waves are crashing against the rock as they have always done. And yet the sight is deceptive, because he and we know that no fish will ever stray into his weir. The rough singing of a woman’s voice begins.

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Franziska von Stenglin
Script
Franziska von Stenglin
Cinematographer
Carlos Vásquez, Christian Öhl
Editor
Zuniel Kim
Producer
Franziska von Stenglin
Co-Producer
Emma Mattei
Sound
John Bartolo
Sound Design
Christian Wittmoser
Filmstill Barbara Morgenstern – Doing It for Love

Barbara Morgenstern – Doing It for Love

Barbara Morgenstern und die Liebe zur Sache
Sabine Herpich
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
108 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

For the first time in six years, Barbara Morgenstern, pioneer of German-style electronic intimate pop, works on a new album. Her laptop sits on a shoebox, in the privacy of her home she finds first lines and harmonies: “I like to be alone,” one song begins. One by one, musicians join her. Intuitive ideas take shape. A window has opened. Arrangements, rehearsals, recordings follow. Step by step, the music enters public space, images are produced, videos, narratives. Questions arise: New beginning or back to the roots? New Biedermeier or tough political comment? The bigger the band, the riskier the booking. The more crisis-ridden the environment, the more comforting the music-making.
Sabine Herpich shows the creation of a pop album as a working process. Her view is as unpretentious as her protagonist, her quiet observation not interested in story and glamour, but in closeness and comprehension. We understand why someone works as an artist, even if it is never explained. Barbara Morgenstern shares what moves her: “Labour of love / for the rest of the earth / I’m more than certain / that this still has worth.”

Jan Künemund

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Sabine Herpich
Script
Sabine Herpich
Cinematographer
Sabine Herpich
Editor
Sabine Herpich
Producer
Tobias Büchner
Sound
Sabine Herpich, Tobias Büchner
Sound Design
Dominik Avenwedde
German Distributor
Jürgen Pohl
Nominated for: VER.DI Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness
Filmstill Bedsores

Bedsores

Bedsores
Fritz Polzer
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2023
11 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

The world stands still. Gaudily painted cruise ships lie in the oil port of Augusta on the south-east coast of Sicily. Their lustre fades a little more every day. On the scorched, tinged 16mm film stock they seem as unfit for the future as the refineries visible behind them. When, if not in the early summer of 2021, would the time have ever been riper for reflection and reassessment?! Old, exploitative economic systems that keep people away from Europe and let only raw materials enter are in lockdown. Their future is unimaginable. But is there a way back? To the gentle sound of the waves, the birds and the insects, the smoke of the industrial plants wafts back into the chimneys. But the images have been damaged.

Jan Künemund

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Fritz Polzer
Cinematographer
Fritz Polzer
Producer
Glen Sheppard
Filmstill The King of Spain

The King of Spain

Der König von Spanien
Leonard Volkmer
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
23 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

A young man apparently gets lost between his parental home in Lower Saxony, Berlin darkrooms and a flat share in Madrid. The clinical chill of the psychiatry reports is juxtaposed with a heart-wrenching diary text that resists being categorised too quickly. The images, too, speak a different language than the diagnosis: “Disoriented and not responding to his environment,” the initial anamnesis reads. But we see the film sequences trace and re-cast photographic evidence of getting lost, re-connect the narrator persona striving for self-empowerment with his environment. The protocol of a story of illness and treatment expands into an auto-socio-biographical document of self-location by artistic work – on life as lived.

Jan Künemund

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Leonard Volkmer
Cinematographer
Leonard Volkmer
Producer
Leonard Volkmer
Winner of: Golden Dove Short Film (German Competition)
Filmstill The Engineer’s Voice

The Engineer’s Voice

Die Stimme des Ingenieurs
André Siegers
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
21 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

A man’s voice from offscreen. He lists individual words, has problems of articulation. At first these are abstract terms, the screen stays black. Sky, street, village and house, however, are accompanied by suitable images. They take us into the speaker’s life. It is his house. These are his automatic shutters. We look into the kitchen where his wife is preparing something. He exercises in a specially equipped room. Later he sits in front of the microphone again, obviously recording his voice to preserve it. Another dimension opens between the recorded words and sentences and beyond the images. There is an inevitability in the room – and a great love. The robot vacuum makes its rounds. Who will put the words stored on the computer into a meaningful context later?

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
André Siegers
Cinematographer
Karsten Krause
Producer
Karsten Krause, Julia Cöllen, Frank Scheuffele
Sound Design
Kris Jakobs
Nominated for: Gedanken Aufschluss Prize
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Filmstill Good Things Take Time
Good Things Take Time
Jens Franke
Do you think of what a memorial is meant to remind you of? An enlightening tour of Leipzig, “City of Heroes” of the Peaceful Revolution, and the grey areas of a contemporary culture of remembrance.
Filmstill Good Things Take Time

Good Things Take Time

Gut Ding will Weile haben
Jens Franke
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
25 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

In autumn 1989, many Leipzig citizens lost patience with the GDR. Within weeks, they brought down a forty-year-old state apparatus resistant to change by rallies. Now their patience is tested again: In 2008, the German Bundestag promised the “City of Heroes” of the Peaceful Revolution a monument. Planning has been going on and on … Leipzig bears the waiting with equanimity; after all, it was not idle in the meantime. Right after reunification, the citizenry took charge of its culture of remembrance with such vigour that the monuments are piling up today. Looking up to the crown of the palm tree of the Nikolai Column, one had better take care not to step on a commemorative plaque, fall into a commemorative fountain or bump into a commemorative bell.
Classicist? Figurative? Abstract? What is the formal language a city chooses to tell itself its own history while it is practically still happening? Locals and newcomers roam the current Leipzig collection of monuments, a man ties his shoelaces on the big toe of the bronze sculpture “Step of the Century”. Do people think about what monuments give them to think about? The subtly framed and laconically presented impressions of the city are intermingled not only with the trademarks and emblems of lived urbanity, but also with the voices of local cultural delegates. They are thinking: about the pros and cons of accelerated remembrance.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jens Franke
Cinematographer
Jens Franke
Editor
Jens Franke
Producer
Martha Schwindling
Co-Producer
Marlene Oeken, Tuan Do Duc
Sound
Jens Franke
Nominated for: Gedanken Aufschluss Prize
Filmstill Houseprints

Houseprints

Hauspausen
Biko Erki, Stefan Koutzev, Nathalie Bailoukova
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
10 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

There are large paintings showing views of houses wherever you look. Each house is meticulously outlined; at first glance, they all look the same. Sometimes they keep their distance from each other, sometimes they seem to float in the void. Combined in ever new arrangements, these houses seem strangely unlocalised. With stencil and brush, Johannes Kloosterhuis is already working on the next painting. Each house has its own story, but perhaps the idea of privately owned homes is an outdated ideal, he muses aloud.
As he draws, Kloosterhuis thinks about different forms of living and housing. He himself prefers to look at the world from his window, enjoying the view of car park roofs, gardens and trees. His usually monochrome tableaux, though, have no horizon. Perhaps Kloosterhuis’s artistic vision are so fascinating because they develop an unfathomable life of their own. We get the chance to watch with the camera as they take shape, as a new miniature house, a new miniature fate emerges with every brushstroke.

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Biko Erki, Stefan Koutzev, Nathalie Bailoukova
Cinematographer
Biko Erki, Nathalie Bailoukova, Stefan Koutzev
Editor
Biko Erki, Nathalie Bailoukova, Stefan Koutzev
Producer
Kunsthochschule für Medien Köln
Sound
Biko Erki, Nathalie Bailoukova, Stefan Koutzev
Sound Design
Biko Erki
Nominated for: Gedanken Aufschluss Prize
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Filmstill Sky like Silk. Full of Oranges
Sky like Silk. Full of Oranges
Betina Kuntzsch
This cheerful animated collage recalls the first Interflug flight to Majorca in spring 1990. The sea may shine ever so blue, the GDR travellers remain mere onlookers in this holiday paradise.
Filmstill Sky like Silk. Full of Oranges

Sky like Silk. Full of Oranges

Himmel wie Seide. Voller Orangen
Betina Kuntzsch
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
10 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

Picture postcards, travel brochures and holiday photos are all this merrily caustic collage needs to portray moods and desires between the fall of the Berlin Wall and German reunification. In spring 1990, the first Interflug plane carrying GDR citizens touched down on Majorca. About the mediterranean colours of the island, the first-person narrator remarks in the voiceover: “We knew them from the postcards sent by our West German relatives. This was the West, this was West-West.” Ostensibly naïve, her recollections nonetheless develop an ironic undertone. However blue the sea shines in the photos, however loud the castanets play, the travel group with their East German money are never more than onlookers in this half-board paradise. Everything seems like an empty promise: the bursting oranges on the trees, the sumptuous breakfast buffet and the giant hotel pools.

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Betina Kuntzsch
Script
Betina Kuntzsch
Editor
Betina Kuntzsch
Producer
Betina Kuntzsch
Sound Design
Urs Hauck
Score
Moritz Denis, Eike Hosenfeld
Animation
Betina Kuntzsch
Narrator
Valeska Hegewald
Nominated for: Gedanken Aufschluss Prize
Filmstill The Family Approach

The Family Approach

Im Prinzip Familie
Daniel Abma
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
91 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

When parents can no longer fulfil their duty of care, the children’s world often falls apart. Nothing stays as it was. Suddenly it is no longer mum or dad who are in charge but the youth welfare system. Daniel Abma followed a youth housing group in a rural area over several years, showing professional educators who want to give five boys between the ages of seven and fourteen what they need most urgently, day by day: security, orientation, a home.
The documentary focus is not on the children but on those who take the parents’ place. They sometimes remind us of Don Quixote tilting at the windmills, for there is a diffusion of responsibility between school, youth welfare services, and absent mothers and fathers. Words fail when adults do not keep appointments, when those in charge capitulate in the face of racist bullying and propose some “time out” – for the bullied boy – in a psychiatric facility. It would be easy to denounce these mechanisms, but that is not the point Daniel Abma wants to make. His observation, both emphatic and reserved, looks questioningly into the gaps in the system – with those who are in danger of falling through and those who try to fill them with affection. He makes us suspect that the answer is not to close all the system’s gaps. It is people who are there for other people and take responsibility.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Daniel Abma
Script
Daniel Abma
Cinematographer
Johannes Praus
Editor
Jana Dugnus
Producer
Britta Strampe, Laura Klippel
Sound
Alexandra Praet, Christoph Walter
Sound Design
Alexandra Praet, Roman Pogorzelski
Score
Henning Fuchs
German Distributor
Camino Film
Broadcaster
Rolf Bergmann, Dagmar Mielke
Commissioning Editor
Rolf Bergmann, Dagmar Mielke
Funder
Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg GmbH, Deutscher Filmförderfond, BKM - Die Beauftragte der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien, FFA Filmförderungsanstalt
Nominated for: VER.DI Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness, DEFA Sponsoring Prize, Gedanken Aufschluss Prize
Winner of: Gedanken Aufschluss Prize, ver.di Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Filmstill There Are Many Doors in My Mother’s Home
There Are Many Doors in My Mother’s Home
David Kind
Family photos. A woman’s face is scratched out or overpainted. Fragmentary descriptions of the mother’s sudden outbursts are added. Approaching the trauma of an experience of violence.
Filmstill There Are Many Doors in My Mother’s Home

There Are Many Doors in My Mother’s Home

In den Wohnungen meiner Mutter sind viele Türen
David Kind
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
18 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

We all know photos with painted-over or cut-out faces. The repeatedly inserted hand that works on family pictures with pens and other utensils seems like a refrain. The attempts at eradication are audible. They are a dissonance transferred to the body. Scratch, distort, remove. Usually a woman’s head.
Even if the narrator speaks in the third person, even if the hand may not be his hand, these could be his own experiences. The fragmentary descriptions revolve around a mother who beats and tortures her children. It is a childhood in permanent fear. How do you deal with the memories and scars in adulthood? Can the experience be put into words at all? Why do you feel strangely alienated from your siblings who suffered the same? David Kind’s essayistic approach to the trauma of violence is questioning. The doors of the title are opened with extreme caution.

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
David Kind
Script
David Kind
Cinematographer
David Kind
Editor
David Kind
Producer
David Kind
Sound
Florian Puls, Fabian Habecker, Konrad Ruda
Sound Design
Konrad Ruda
Filmstill The Vagabond’s Garden

The Vagabond’s Garden

Lichter der Straße
Anna Friedrich
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
86 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

What does it mean to live a nomadic life in Germany today? How do people see you when to keep moving is more important to you than possessions and social status? What are the prejudices faced by people who work outside the 40-hours-per-week regular job model and want to be fulfilled? To get some answers to these questions, Anna Friedrich walks part of the way with four women who prefer travelling to settling.
The journeywoman Magdalena loves the intensity of permanent new beginnings, but travelling also keeps her from working in her dream job as a qualified farmer. As an activist, Johanna lives in her refurbished van, which she has parked at various spots for years, and frequently takes part in political protests like forest occupations. Elwera, a former tightrope artist, and her granddaughter Ghislaine belong to the Yenish community who move from market to market, continuing a generations-old tradition. Director Anna Friedrich uses the conversations to shed light on her own longing for being on the road, but also for a critical reflection of the settled world in the eyes of these women. The potentials of a nomadic existence thus emerge – and how they are in danger of wasting away between settlement permits and garden fences. Stepping to the other side of the fence opens possibilities.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Anna Friedrich
Cinematographer
Robin Angst, Ray Peter Maletzki, Leonard Schmidt, Anna Friedrich
Editor
Federico Neri, Miro Schawalder
Producer
Stephan Helmut Beier, Ray Peter Maletzki
Co-Producer
Thomas Beyer, Andrea Wohlfeil, Filmuniversität Babelsberg KONRAD WOLF
Sound
Alejandro Weyler, Anna Friedrich, Elisa Malter
Sound Design
Irma Heinig
Score
Max van Dusen
Broadcaster
Thomas Beyer
Nominated for: VER.DI Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness, DEFA Sponsoring Prize
Filmstill Moria Six

Moria Six

Moria Six
Jennifer Mallmann
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
82 minutes
Greek,
German,
English
Subtitles: 
English

There was an eery silence after a fire had destroyed the Moria camp completely in September 2020. Not just locally, but in public discourse. The world did not seem particularly concerned with the inhumane conditions in other camps on Europe’s external borders or the countless pushbacks in the Mediterranean. Nor did the arrest of six adolescents who were accused of arson resonate in any audible way – though even a second glance at the circumstances of the investigation and the criminal proceedings revealed the actions of the Greek judiciary to be questionable. Not to mention the underlying refugee policy of the European Union.
Jennifer Mallmann dares to take this second glance with her film. At its centre is her correspondence with Hassan, one of the convicted youths, who tells her of his everyday life, his desires and fears from prison. Calm, precisely framed images document “normality” on the fringes of Fortress Europe. They show how strategical isolation and the ensuing structural exclusion work. If you want to know how our community of nations imagines its future you only need to look at the newly-built futuristic high-security camps, where new arrivals are treated like people who have committed serious crimes.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jennifer Mallmann
Cinematographer
Sina Diehl
Editor
Maxie Borchert
Producer
Matthias Drescher
Co-Producer
Max Brunner, Svenja Vanhoefer
Sound
Vincent Egerter
Sound Design
Timo Kleinemeier
Score
Clemens Gutjahr
Nominated for: VER.DI Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness, Gedanken Aufschluss Prize, DEFA Sponsoring Prize, Leipziger Ring
Winner of: DEFA Sponsoring Prize, Leipziger Ring
More to watch
Filmstill Pain That Comes in Waves

Pain That Comes in Waves

Pain That Comes in Waves
Irem Schwarz
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
19 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
German

Pregnancy, birthing and parental care are strongly charged social roles. The partly absurd public discourse about them – reinforced by hyper-positive media images and stereotypes – makes natural concerns feel less and less natural. Evolutionary necessities have been turned into ciphers whose collective emotional over-forming leaves next to no space for personal experience. In this phase of life, self-awareness and external perception often diverge substantially. There is usually little room, neither for fears and doubts nor for any other emotion, outside the generally prescribed bliss. Prenatal stages of development seem pre-defined, standardised, tried and tested. Little can be done “right”, much “wrong”. Every decision for or against a pre-natal optimisation measure counts. Nothing is left to chance.
But what if chance strikes anyway? When the ultrasound diagnosis yields a painful result? How does obstetrics, obsessed with detail, handle deviations from “the plan”, how does it deal with the fact that statistically one in six pregnancies ends in miscarriage? Filmmaker and editor Irem Schwarz’s found footage collage is a haunting combination of terribly omnipresent cliché imagery that addresses these relevant questions in a voice that is more than just her own.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Irem Schwarz
Editor
Irem Schwarz
Producer
Irem Schwarz
Sound
Marc Lehnert
Score
Damian Scholl
Animation
Xenia Smirnov
Filmstill Abode of Dawn

Abode of Dawn

Sonnenstadt
Kristina Shtubert
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
105 minutes
Russian,
German,
English
Subtitles: 
English

The winters in the Siberian taiga may be long, but at least Moscow is far away. In the early 1990s, a religious community lead by former traffic cop Sergei Torop settled in the endless landscape at the foot of the eastern Sayan Mountains. After a religious revival he calls himself Vissarion, wears flowing robes, long hair and acts as the Son of God on earth. Misty-coloured portraits on which “the Teacher” gazes obliviously into the distance hang in the homes of his followers. Together they have created the model town of “Abode of Dawn”, also called “Sun City” by the locals, to build a new society.
Director Kristina Shtubert travelled to Siberia five times between 2013 and 2022. Her gaze is observational, less concerned with the search of faith and meaning than with the question whether the Sun City dwellers are happier here than in their discarded lives. And what would their alternatives be? More and more, the long-term observation turns into a post-Soviet narrative of a faded-out state. Meanwhile, the militarisation of the country progresses. Moscow is coming closer.

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Kristina Shtubert
Cinematographer
Hanna Mayser
Editor
Dietmar Kraus, Calle Overweg, Adrienne Hudson
Producer
DFFB Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin
Co-Producer
Kristina Shtubert, Rolf Bergmann
Sound Design
Sasha Valent
Production Company
DFFB Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin
-
Andreas Louis, Margarita Amineva-Jester
Nominated for: Leipziger Ring, DEFA Sponsoring Prize, VER.DI Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness, MDR Film Prize
Filmstill Game Changers

Game Changers

Spielerinnen
Aysun Bademsoy
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
86 minutes
German,
Turkish
Subtitles: 
English

“You got to try to live your own life,” Arzu, one of the football players from the Turkish-Kreuzberg girls’ team Ağrı Spor, demanded in a 1995 film by Aysun Bademsoy. Today she is in her late forties and leads her own life, like her former teammates Türkan, Nalan and Nazan. Bademsoy visited the four of them for the fourth time, following their lives, recalling their visions for the future from back then. And this time she also talked to their daughters, some of whom on the brink of adulthood, who also think about adaptation, tradition, religion and culture. Little has changed between then and now, being German remains a difficult question to answer for every generation.
Aysun Bademsoy has produced a delicately layered work of German-Turkish perspectives in which female concepts of identity are reflected back at a society where integration is formulated only as expectation. “If others don’t accept that we are Germans, how are we supposed to accept that?” Selin, Türkan’s daughter, asks. You don’t need to know the other three films to understand “Game Changers” – and to appreciate the significance of this project which now spans almost thirty years. The best thing about it: Football is being played again!

Jan Künemund

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Aysun Bademsoy
Cinematographer
Ines Thomsen, Isabelle Casez
Editor
Maja Tennstedt
Producer
Alex Gerbaulet
Sound
Ivonne Gärber, Camilo Garcia Castro
Sound Design
Titus Maderlechner
Nominated for: VER.DI Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness, Gedanken Aufschluss Prize