• Find the answers to these questions in the article
  • Now look in the text and check your answers.
  • Fill the gaps using these words




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    1,2 - THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY Elementary (2)

    Fill the gaps using these words: 
    reputation 
    attractive 
    federal 
    Holocaust 
    unemployed 
    skinheads 
    1. 
    If something is ___________ it is very pleasant in some way. 
    2. 
    If a person is ___________, he or she has no job. 
    3. 
    The ___________ was the organised killing of millions of people during 
    World War II. 
    4. 
    ___________ are young men who cut off all their hair. 
    5. 
    ___________ is the opinion other people have about how good or bad 
    someone or something is. 
    6. 
    ___________ means connected to the national government of a country.
    Find the answers to these questions in the article: 
    1. Where 
    is 
    Saxon 
    Switzerland? 
    2. 
    What is the NPD? 
    3. 
    How many NPD MPs are in the Saxon parliament? 
    4. 
    How many people died in the bombing of Dresden? 
    5. 
    When was the bombing of Dresden? 
    6. 
    When did Adolf Hitler come to power? 
    Now look in the text and check your answers. 


    ©
    Macmillan Publishers Ltd 2005 
    Taken from the news section in 
    www.onestopenglish.com
    Rebirth of the Reich land 
    Luke Harding 
    The German region of Saxon Switzerland is 
    very attractive with many hills, rivers and 
    forests. During the communist period, Saxon 
    Switzerland was in East Germany and was well 
    known as a centre for walking and water sports 
    like kayaking. Now it is famous for a different 
    reason. Sixty years after the end of the Second 
    World War, Germany's neo-Nazi political party 
    is coming back. 
    Last September there were federal elections in 
    the Saxony region. The neo-Nazi National Party 
    of Germany (NPD) won 9.2% of the vote, 
    giving it 12 MPs in the new Saxon parliament 
    in Dresden. Now members of the NPD are 
    trying to do things which make people notice 
    them. Last month, for example NPD MPs 
    walked out of the parliament during a one-
    minute silence in memory of the victims of the 
    Holocaust in the Second World War. Last 
    weekend the party and its supporters marched 
    in memory of the 35,000 Germans killed during 
    the attack on Dresden 60 years ago by British 
    and American planes. According to Holger 
    Apfel, the NPD's 33-year-old leader, the attack 
    on Dresden during February 13-14, 1945, was a 
    war crime. 
    Most German politicians are surprised by the 
    success of the NPD but this success has been at 
    a time when more than 5 million Germans are 
    unemployed. Many people do not trust the main 
    political parties. Edmund Stoiber, the 
    conservative leader of Bavaria's CSU party, 
    says that the situation in present-day Germany 
    is like the situation in 1932, when millions of 
    people were unemployed. One year later Adolf 
    Hitler came to power. 
    Frieder Haase is the mayor of Koenigstein, a 
    town 30km south of Dresden. He says the 
    situation is different now and it is not like 1932. 
    He says he wants to stop 1933 from happening 
    again. Koenigstein, with a population of 3,200, 
    is a small town in the middle of Saxon 
    Switzerland. During last September's elections 
    almost 20% of its population voted for the 
    NPD. Who, then, are the NPD's supporters? 
    "They look like you and me. They are 
    completely normal," says Haase. "They work 
    on building sites. They are women shop 
    assistants. They don't look like skinheads."
    German newspapers have different explanations 
    for the success of the NPD. They say it is 
    because Saxony was communist until 1989 or 
    because 18% of the population is unemployed. 
    They also say that many people do not like the 
    red-green government in Berlin. The NPD, 
    meanwhile, is working hard to increase its 
    support, particularly among young people - 
    with barbecues, discos and canoeing trips.
    The NPD's new MPs don't look like skinheads 
    either. They wear suits; they are in their 30s; 
    and they are very polite. Holger Apfel says that 
    other political parties do not take him seriously. 
    "We have very good local structures" he says. 
    The NPD's views are popular with some 
    German voters – and above all its argument that 
    it is time Germans stopped feeling guilty about 
    being German.
    Frieder Haase and other Koenigstein citizens 
    are fighting against the town's reputation as a 
    neo-Nazi centre. "The Nazi period is not going 
    to happen again," Haase says. "Germany lost 
    the First World War and in 1933 it was a 
    broken country. Then a big, powerful man 
    arrived - Adolf Hitler. Things are different 
    now." 
    The Guardian Weekly
    18-02-2005, page 20 


    ©
    Macmillan Publishers Ltd 2005 
    Taken from the news section in 
    www.onestopenglish.com

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