(5 Jul 2019) GERMANY KITCHEN
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 3:50
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Hof - 18 June 2019
1. Radishes, lemons and a courgette
2. "Kitchen on the Run" container in Hof town centre
3. Various of Kitchen on the Run stall
4. Sign reading (German): "We Are Open"
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Victoria Hugelshofer, Kitchen on the Run:
"Projects like this provide a platform for people to come together and experience something they might not experience in their daily life because they might be able to meet people that they don't come across in their work or in their free time."
6. Various of Kitchen on the Run team interacting with visitors
7. Close of fruits on a bench
8. Participants chopping carrots and parsley
9. Close of girl preparing food
10. Various of participants preparing food to be cooked
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Ghaith Hanki, Kitchen on the Run:
"There's a lot of people that - they have a misunderstanding, or they didn't really understand what the meaning of, yeah, the reason why the people are here. It's not because of poor or like bad life and they want something, it's just bigger reason."
12. Various of adults and children cutting strawberries and oranges to make a dessert
13. Orange peel
14. Woman juicing oranges
15. Close of woman n juicing oranges
16. SOUNDBITE (English) Ghaith Hanki, Kitchen on the Run:
"As Germans say, the love going through the belly, like the stomach as they say, also in Arabic we say that, but we get that actually, because Germans really like the good food, the tasty food."
17. Various of participants waiting to start dinner
18. Various of participants eating dinner
19. SOUNDBITE: (English) Gerald Schoning, Participant:
"I enjoyed the rice but also the meat, it was completely new for me, but I think the food was quite simple food, international food, so I enjoyed it."
20. Various of people eating dinner
LEADIN:
A shipping container kitted out with a kitchen is doing the rounds in Germany, visiting towns and cities across the country.
The aim is to bring refugees and asylum seekers together with other residents, so they can share a meal and learn more about each other.
STORYLINE:
Three times a week, an innocuous shipping container folds out into a welcoming stall.
Kitchen on the Run is a non-profit initiative which organises meals for carefully selected groups of people around Germany.
Funded by a 200,000 Euro (230,000 US dollars) grant from the German Federal Government, the project aims to bring people together.
Some attendees are refugees and asylum seekers, while others have grown up locally.
"Projects like this one provide a platform for people to come together and experience something they might not experience in their daily life because they might be able to meet people that they don't come across in their work or in their free time," explains Victoria Hugelshofer from Kitchen on the Run.
Towns and cities compete to have the Kitchen on the Run team visit them and set up shop for a stretch of seven weeks.
Every summer, they visit at least three towns or cities.
For Kitchen on the Run, one key element in choosing which town or city to visit is its size.
An area with a population of fewer than 50,000 people is ideal.
In larger cities, cultural exchange and mixing with ethnic minorities is easier.
So the focus is on smaller, more isolated rural communities instead.
The team picks a central location in each town to set up the kitchen.
Three times a week, they are joined by a pre-selected group of 25 people from a cross section of society.
Clients are reminded:
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