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EVENTS

7 events you don’t want to miss in Germany this March

Featuring strong beer, parades and plenty of performing arts, March looks set to be an exciting month for events in Germany.

Participants of the St. Patrick's Day parade in warrior outfits and with shields run along Ludwigstraße in Munich in 2017.
Participants of the St. Patrick's Day parade in warrior outfits and with shields run along Ludwigstraße in Munich in 2017. Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert/dpa | Andreas Gebert

March 8th – 12th: Radar Ost in Berlin

If you’re a fan of performing arts, the Radar Ost International Theatre Festival in the capital is well worth checking out this March.

The Deutsches Theater in Berlin will host five intense days of theatre, exhibitions, concerts, performances and personal insights from and with artists from Eastern Europe.

READ ALSO: Berlin film festival shines stark spotlight on Ukraine

The fifth edition of the festival will focus thematically on the war in Ukraine and feature guest performances from Ukrainian, Belarusian, Georgian and Slovenian artists.

March 10th to April 2nd: Strong Beer Festival in Munich

Though most famous for Oktoberfest, Munich is also home to another beer-based celebration every year in March.

The Starkbierfest, or Strong Beer Festival, which traditionally takes place between Fasching and Lent, has been celebrated by breweries in the Bavarian capital since the 15th century.

Sarah Jäger, Bavarian Beer Queen, taps a beer keg at Paulaner am Nockherberg in March 2021. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Sven Hoppe

For three weeks, the beer halls and breweries throughout the city will flow with stronger varieties of beer – both in terms of alcohol and nutritional content. The tradition goes back to a time when monks brewed strong, nourishing beers to help them survive the weeks of lasting during Lent.

The main events will take place at Paulaner am Nockherberg, but you’ll find plenty of strong-beer-related festivities taking place throughout the city, especially at the Löwenbräukeller and the Augustiner Keller.

March 11th, 12th and 17th: St. Patrick’s Day Celebrations:

The feast day of Ireland’s patron saint, St. Patrick, certainly doesn’t go unmarked in Germany.

There’ll be parties and events in Irish pubs up and down the country on March 17th, but the Bavarian capital of Munich will host the biggest celebration.

The Irish community in Munich have celebrated the feast day on the weekend before the actual Irish national holiday since 1996 and this year will be no different.

A participant of the St. Patrick's Day parade, who has dyed his beard in the Irish national colours, plays a bagpipe in Munich, Germany in 2017.

A participant of the St. Patrick’s Day parade, who has dyed his beard in the Irish national colours, plays the bagpipes in Munich in 2017. Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert/dpa | Andreas Gebert

On the 11th, there will be a pre-parade party, an Irish mass at St. Ludwig’s catholic church, an “Irish Night” and a concert programme.

The highlight of the weekend will be the parade on Sunday, March 12th, which starts at noon at Münchner Freiheit and lasts around an hour.

The parade will be accompanied by an open-air festival with live music and dancing on two stages at Odeonsplatz. Munich’s Lord Mayor Dieter Reiter is the patron of St. Patrick’s Day and will perform together with the Paul Daly Band.

March 17th – 26th: MaerzMusik in Berlin

For ten days, the Haus der Berliner Festspiele and numerous other venues throughout the capital will host concerts, performances, musical theatre pieces and installations in a festival that promises to create “a place for the exchange of artistic knowledge through new encounters and shared experiences”.

This year’s programme has been developed by the artistic director of the Berliner Festspiele and music journalist Kamila Metwaly and her team with composer and conductor Enno Poppe as guest curator.

Highlights include concerts and performances by asamisimasa from Norway, Nadar Ensemble from Belgium, Riot Ensemble from London and Spółdzielnia Muzyczna from Poland.

The full programme can be found here.

March 18th – 19th: VeggieWorld in Düsseldorf

For vegetarians, vegans or just lovers of all things veggie, this two-day fair in Düsseldorf is a must-visit.

A saleswoman sells vegan chocolate at a booth at the Veggie World fair in Düsseldorf. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Sophie Brössler

Around 100 exhibitors will present their meat-free or vegan culinary delights at the Areal Böhler conference centre. Vegan kebabs, noodles made from chickpeas with vegetables, muffins without egg and milk and muesli made from hemp seeds are just a few examples of the tasty treats that will be on offer. 

VeggieWorld also features cosmetics that are free of animal testing or animal products. 

March 24th – April 23rd: Frühlingsdom in Hamburg

Three times a year the largest folk festival in northern Germany comes to the Heiligengeistfeld in Hamburg.

Popular amongst locals and tourists alike, the legendary spring fun fair is a huge spectacle featuring rides  – from the iconic Ferris wheel to rollercoasters – food stalls, fortune tellers, break dancers and much more.

The west entrance of the Hamburger DOM folk festival on Glacischaussee in 2019. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Markus Scholz

In total, there are over 230 different attractions on offer at this Volksfest which dates back over 700 years.

Every Friday at 10.30 pm the sky above the festival will also be lit up by a fireworks display.

March 18th – April 4th: Spring folk festival in Würzburg, Bavaria

Every year, three weeks before Easter, the first major folk festival in Bavaria begins in Würzburg. A large marquee and around 50 fairground rides, as well as traditional cuisine, trendy street food and drink stands, will put visitors in a folk festival mood.

The three-week festival boasts an impressive entertainment programme, featuring live music, line dancing, marquee boxing, tree scrambling and plenty of activities for kids.

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BERLIN

Anmeldung: Berlin to re-launch online housing registration in October

Finding an appointment at the Bürgeramt to register an address has long been an unwanted chore for new arrivals in Berlin - but from October, this gruelling ritual will be a thing of the past.

Anmeldung: Berlin to re-launch online housing registration in October

Every foreigner who’s lived in the German capital has experienced the stress of trying to find an appointment at the Bürgeramt, or citizens’ office. 

In order to register an address – a process known as the Anmeldung in German – residents generally have to scour a list of available appointments, sometimes waiting weeks for a spot or travelling to a far-flung part of the city to complete the process. 

From mid-October, however, the city has announced that people will be able to register and deregister their place of residence online. The Local has contacted officials to ask for the specific date in October that this is happening and will update this story when we receive the information. 

According to the Senate, the move will free up around 500,000 appointments that would ordinarily have been taken by the hundreds of thousands who move into and around the city each year.

Berlin had briefly offered online registrations during the Covid-19 pandemic, but removed the service once social restrictions were lifted. 

How will the new system work?

The online registration system is apparently based on Hamburg’s system, which was developed under the so-called ‘one-for-all’ (EfA) principle. This means that other states around Germany can adopt the same software as part of their digitalisation efforts.

People who want to register address will need to fill in an online form, provide proof of their new residence and also identify themselves using their electronic ID, which will either be an electronic residence permit or a German or EU ID card. 

READ ALSO: What is Germany’s electronic ID card and how do you use it?

After the process has been completed, a sticker for the ID card will be sent out via post.

Aufenthaltstitel

A German residence permit or ‘Aufenthaltstitel’ with an electronic ID function. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Daniel Karmann

This can then be used to update the information on a residents’ eID card and access the registration confirmation digitally.

Those who don’t have access to a validated electronic ID will need to either activate their eID function at the immigration office or Bürgeramt or register their address in person.  

In 2024, the service will only be available for single residents, but online registration for families is also in the pipeline.

Is Berlin making progress with digitalisation?

It certainly seems like it. This latest move is part of a larger push to complete digitalise Berlin’s creaking services and move to a faster, more efficient online system.

At the start of the year, the capital centralised its naturalisation office in the Landesamt für Einwanderung (LEA) and moved all citizenship applications online. 

Since then, citizenship applications have been completed around ten times faster than previously – though tens of thousands of applicants are still waiting for a response on their paper applications.

More recently, the LEA also announced that it had moved to a new appointment-booking system designed to end the predatory practice of appointment touting, or selling appointments for a fee.

Under the new system, many residents permits – including EU Blue Cards – can be directly applied for online, with in-person appointments reserved for collecting the new (or renewed) permit.

READ ALSO: What to know about the new appointments system at Berlin immigration office

Meanwhile, those who can’t apply online yet can access appointments by filling in the contact form, with the LEA hoping that this will deter people from booking appointments with the intention to sell them on. 

In another move to speed up bureaucracy, Berlin also opened a new Bürgeramt in the district of Spandau this September, with the governing CDU announcing on X that more new offices would follow in the near future. 

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