A check conducted by YouGov and expelled by DPA on Wednesday shows that Germans consider they need a break.
An strenuous 72 percent consider that Oct 31st, Reformation Day, should be a inhabitant holiday each year, as will be a box in 2017.
In jubilee of a 500th anniversary of a Reformation, all of Germany will have a day of on Oct 31st 2017, since routinely a day is usually a inhabitant holiday in a former easterly German states.
Seventeen percent of Germans were opposite a suspicion that Reformation Day should be an annual inhabitant holiday.
Almost dual thirds (61 percent) were also for all sixteen of a German states receiving a same volume of open holidays each year. The same suit of people suspicion everybody should get a same volume as a state with a many open holidays – Bavaria.
Currently Bavaria, a especially Catholic state, gets 13 holidays per year, including days such as Assumption of Mary Day on Aug 15th and All Saints Day on Nov 1st.
Meanwhile northerners, in a lands of a protestant work ethic, have to make do with a parsimonious nine. Berlin, Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony all have this volume of holiday.
Only 13 percent of respondents were opposite a suspicion of all Germans removing a same volume of holiday (although this series rose to 22 percent in Bavaria.)
On a doubt of that days could be done inhabitant open holidays, 49 percent wanted a protestant Reformation Day, and 48 percent wanted a universal All Saints Day.
When it was suggested that a non-Christian sacrament could have a open holiday, 68 percent deserted this idea. Ten percent pronounced that a Muslim holiday would make sense, 9 percent wanted a Jewish holiday.
Article source: http://www.thelocal.de/20161228/how-germans-are-fed-up-with-bavaria-getting-all-the-breaks