Eklat on Christmas Eve: Protests in the Freiburg Münster shake the community!

Eklat on Christmas Eve: Protests in the Freiburg Münster shake the community!

Freiburger Münster, Freiburg, Deutschland - On Christmas Eve there was a scandal during the Christmas mass in the Freiburg Münster. The service was well attended when the choral boys completed a song and suddenly a minute -long, sheer applause broke out. The praise was praised by the dismissed cathedral conductor Boris Böhmann, whose termination was unequivocally convicted of protesting circles. Archbishop Stephan Burger had to interrupt the liturgy after troubled calls against him came out of the service. The TV broadcast ended prematurely when Burger spoke again and was laughed at by some of the people present, such as oe24.at reported.

The unrest is the result of Böhmann's surprising termination, the reasons of which have not been announced to the public. A spokesman for the Archdiocese said that data protection regulations prevented the detailed reasons, but had the decision on the decision due to long -lasting conflicts in the cathedral singing school. This led to several labor court procedures. The mood outside the church continued to heat up because many visitors were involved who had nothing to do with the conflict itself. The cathedral factory fund also expressed itself sharply and described the protests as "at the wrong time in the wrong place", such as Insidebw.de

planned solutions and new beginning

In order to counteract the tense situation, the cathedral factory fund plans to have talks with parent representatives and choir speakers in early 2025. The responsible people emphasized that a "fresh start in the management of the cathedral music" was urgently needed. In an open letter, the new interim heads of the cathedral music were attacked, whereupon the fund defended their commitment. Personal attacks are "completely unacceptable," it said. The future of the cathedral music is now on the brink, and whether the upcoming talks will offer a solution.

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OrtFreiburger Münster, Freiburg, Deutschland
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