Siegfried, meet Ahmet: German weather systems get makeover
Move over, Siegfried
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Your support makes all the difference.Move over, Siegfried. Ahmet is on the way.
A journalists group named a low pressure system bringing frigid temperatures, dark clouds and snow to Germany on Tuesday the boy s name of Turkish origin in an effort to increase the visibility of the country's increasingly diverse population.
Ahmet will be followed by low pressure systems with Arabic, Kurdish and Greek names such as Cemal, Goran, Hakim and Dimitrios. The high pressure systems reaching Germany early this year will be called Bozena, Chana or Dragica, names with Polish, Hebrew and South Slavic roots.
In Germany, naming the systems that affect day-to-day weather changes isn't the sole province of meteorologists. Anyone can participate for a price: Naming a sunny high costs 360 euros ($442), while rainy lows cost only 240 euros ($295).
To make the weather more cross-cultural, the New German Media Makers, an association representing journalists with diverse backgrounds, bought a bunch of lows and a few highs for the beginning of the new year, Ferda Ataman, the head of the group told The Associated Press.
“So far, our weather had mostly typical German names only, even though some 26 percent of people in Germany have migrant roots,” Ataman, whose parents immigrated from Turkey, said.
The weather-naming project, which the group dubbed #WeatherCorrection, is a symbolic initiative demanding that Germany's diversity is better reflected across society.
The group is lobbying German media outlets to establish hiring quotas for journalists of color and journalists from migrant families. The group estimates that journalists of color are vastly underrepresented in the media in Germany. They say only between 5 to 10 percent of reporters and editors in Germany have migrant roots.
The low and high pressure systems will also have plenty of the traditional German names coming up in 2021, including Reinhard, Volker, Margarethe, Trudi and Waltraud.
In the past, cloudy low systems always had traditionally female names and upbeat highs had male name. The practice changed in 1998. Since then, male and female names switch places each year in the high and low categories.