The mayor of Apolda, Germany, visits Rapid City for the first time.
Andrea J. Cook, Journal staff | Posted: Tuesday, October 9, 2007 11:00 pm
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RAPID CITY -
Apolda's Burgermeister Rudiger Eisenbrand lives in an "American
style house," so the Apolda mayor's first visit to America is
especially exciting.
"We started living
in an American house and now we are going to get to know the
country," Eisenbrand said.
Eisenbrand and his
wife, Sabine, traveled to Rapid City with a group of 13 Apolda
students and two teachers who are spending two weeks in Rapid City
as part of the Sister City exchange program.
Like all Apolda
visitors, the Eisenbrands are staying with a host family - Daniel
and Barbara Gammeter.
Eisenbrand met
Rapid City Mayor Alan Hanks on Tuesday. The men huffed and puffed
their way to the top of Mount Rushmore National Memorial and spent
the evening at a dinner hosted by Ron and Vivian
Jorgensen.
Eisenbrand speaks
little English and Hanks speaks no German, but with the help of
Gudrun Roppernach, a teacher from Apolda, the two mayors managed to
draw some contrasts and comparisons between their
communities.
"There are a lot of
similarities, but there are also some differences," Hanks said.
Both mayors deal with many of the same issues and problems, he
said.
Apolda, which is a
community of about 25,000 people, has 30 commissioners in contrast
to the 10 who represent Rapid City's 68,000 citizens, according to
Hanks.
Eisenbrand told
Hanks that with so many representatives it's hard to get things
done. Hanks noted that unlike Rapid City's non-partisan city
council, seats on Apolda's commission are political.
"We're both
struggling to find additional money for infrastructure," Hanks
said.
Eisenbrand, a
former computer teacher, joked that he had "kind of a mid-life
crisis" when he decided to run for office a year ago.
"That's a
life-crisis," chuckled former Rapid City Mayor Ed McLauglin.
McLaughlin was mayor in 1993 when Jody Ketel and Vivian Jorgensen
first suggested forming a sister city relationship with
Apolda.
Hanks, who faced
eight candidates and went through a run-off election, was amazed to
learn that Eisenbrand won by a popular vote of more than 78 percent
against only one other challenger.
When they visited
Apolda in 1993, Ketel and Jorgensen were the first American women
to visit the former eastern block country after the end of the Cold
War, Jorgensen said.
This fall, 51
Apolda residents will have shared homes and cultures with Rapid
City residents over a period of three weeks.
The sister city
link between Rapid City and Apolda, forged in 1994, is frequently
used as a model by the American Consulate in Germany, according to
McLaughlin.
The sister city
bond between Rapid City and Apolda has created many long-lasting
friendships, Jorgensen said.
After growing up
under the restrictions of the East German government, the freedom
to travel wherever they want is a great experience for all of his
countrymen, Eisenbrand said.
Apolda also has
sister cities in Sweden and in France, he said.
"Most overwhelming
is the friendliness and hospitality of all the people," he
said.
"We were taught in
GDR times that capitalism/imperialism is the worst, and that people
were not friendly," said Roppernach, who is making her fourth visit
to Rapid City. "And, this is really not true. We want to bring many
people together from Apolda and your town."
Contact Andrea Cook
at 394-8423 or andrea.cook@rapidcityjournal.com