禁漫天堂

Menu
禁漫天堂
Search
Magazine
Search

Advice - Making Friends in Germany

Bhejl

I鈥檓 not sure if this is allowed here because I don鈥檛 have a question. I have some advice for expats in Germany who say they can鈥檛 find friends because Germans are cold and distant. I鈥檓 in several online expat communities, and this seems to be a very common theme.

Let me first say that I am a US-American living permanently in a small town in southwest Germany since 2012. My husband is German, and if you met him on the street he would be one of those above-mentioned. He is not out on a Saturday afternoon to make friends, and when he is in line at the supermarket he is not there to be friendly. I think many US-Americans miss the vacuous smiles of their compatriots, but you won鈥檛 often find that in Germany. Germans smile when there鈥檚 a reason to. But I digress鈥

Here鈥檚 the thing: If you want to make friends in Germany, you need to be the active one. I have one piece of advice that every single person reading this can do easily no matter whether you live in a big city or a small village.

JOIN A VEREIN AND VOLUNTEER!!!

A Verein is a club, and there is a Verein for every possible interest under the sun (excepting underwater basket-weaving). What are you interested in? Photography? Chess? Any sport? Speaking English or Italian? Helping people with disabilities? Gardening? Cooking? Hunting? Hiking? Singing? Exchange programs? Search on your city鈥檚 homepage for 鈥淰erein鈥 and see which ones are officially registered. Contact the organizer and request to join. Ask if it鈥檚 a problem that your German isn鈥檛 very good yet. Join a Wandergruppe 鈥 you don鈥檛 need to speak good German in order to walk/hike with a group of people.

In the US lifelong friendships can begin so mundanely as 鈥淵ou鈥檙e from Germany? Cool! My neighbors have a German shepherd!鈥 Connection established, friendship commences, and the next thing you know they're knocking on your door to borrow eggs and sugar. Germans tend to need time to decide if you are worth the effort, and this can take years. Do not expect instant friendships here.

When you become active in a Verein you are already spending time with people who have something in common with you. Show them you have something to contribute, that you will help and join in when & where you can.

And if one Verein turns out to be not your cup of tea, find a different one. There is sure to be a Verein out there for you. Even if you don't make friends fast enough for your taste, you will be involved in something that is good for you and/or helps the community - how can you go wrong?

See also

Living in Germany: the expat guideReasonable TV provider/configurationFinding a job as a non EU from the BalkansLiving in Germany and working for a UK CompanyMoving to Germany but continuing to work with UK counselling clientsJoining my wife in Germany, can I work?Any Filipinos in Lower Saxony Germany
beppi

Thanks for your very good post.
Not only is it allowed, but also more than welcome on this forum.
I will suggest it to be made sticky (meaning it stays on top of the "recent posts" list) and hope others will add more good advice about this topic, which all foreigners in Germany face.

DanieMarie

I definitely second this advice! Great post :)

Timber22

Hello, Getting involved in groups(Verein) is good. Has anyone here joined the Facebook group Expats in Hamburg?
Question about volunteering. Are there shelters for people or Animals that one can volunteer at? I volunteered at the Animal Shelter here in Poland and walked dogs that lived there. I didn't make good friends but Znajomi/Bekannte/Acquaintences. I looked at one Hamburg Animal Shelter and typed in Freiwillige but only got links to extraneous articles or sites. Nothing about, "join us and volunteer".聽 Danke.

beppi

Great ideas, Timber!
Animal shelters are called "Tierschutzverein" or "Tierheim" in German - and they all need volunteers.
Shelters for homeless people are called "Obdachlosenheim", but often use other, less discriminatory sounding names (which are less easy to find).
Refugee shelters are usually called "Unterkunft f眉r Gefl眉chtete" or just "Unterkunft" (which literally means accommodation and thus doesn't help in your searchj).
It's probably best you ask around in your area after you arrive. The city admisnistration or major charity organisations can probably help (Rotes Kreuz, Caritas, AWO, ...).

Titus E

An informative post, Thank you!