From the BBC:
"German region of Saarland moves towards bilingualism"
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-25834960
"German region of Saarland moves towards bilingualism"
Germany's western Saarland region says it wants its next generation to be bilingual in German and French. It is part of a strategy to deepen economic ties with France, which borders the region.
Proposals by the regional government include bilingual teaching from pre-school age and requiring new state employees to be able to work in French. Government jobs would be open to French citizens too under the proposals which are being put out to consultation. English, currently the most taught second language, will remain important but French would become the main foreign tongue in usage in Saarland. By 2043, Saarland should become a multilingual region with the stress on French and German ties, according to the regional government. The Christian Democrat-led administration wants Saarland - one of the smallest German states with a population of just over one million people - to become "an indispensible and unavoidable bridge to Germany and a gateway to France". The region's "France strategy" is designed to attract business to Saarland, which relied on its former mining industry for much of its wealth.
^ This is a sign of the times as the Saarland has been back and forth between France and Germany. French troops were in Saarland until the 1950s when the citizens voted to join West Germany. It seems that the two countries can work together within this region and that is a good thing. ^
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-25834960
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