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Schweizerische Maturitätsprüfung Gruppe / Kandidat/in Nr.: ......

Frühjahr 2010, Zürich Name / Vorname: ...... ______

Englisch Normales Niveau Dauer: 3 Stunden / 60 Punkte

Bitte beachten: 1. Dieses Blatt und alle Lösungsblätter mit Namen, Vornamen und Gruppen-/Kand.-Nr. versehen. 2. Alle Blätter sind am Schluss der Prüfung abzugeben.

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IDENTITY CRISIS What does it mean to be authentically Swiss? These days the country isn't so sure. By Andrew Marshall

If my son were a watch, he might not be Swiss. No, that is not the title to a Surrealist painting. Let me explain. My son is Anglo-Swiss, born to a Swiss woman and her British husband (me), and holds passports to both countries. In other words, he is 50% Swiss, and that makes him all Swiss. A not-dissimilar legal privilege is extended to Swiss watches, which can only claim the celebrated tag "Made in " if at 5 least 50% of their production costs are generated in the country. But that could soon change, renewing a debate on what Switzerland's German-language newspapers refer to, in English, as "Swiss-ness." The government is thinking hard about new laws that will raise the Swiss share of those production costs to 60%. Forty million fake Swiss timepieces are made every year, most of them in China, claims the of the Swiss Watch Industry. Sales of the real thing are threatened, despite the 10 federation's slogan: "Fake watches are for fake people. Be authentic. Buy real." The new laws will also apply to products such as cheese and chocolate (but not, thankfully, to children). Enforcing them could be problematic, since identifying "Swiss-ness" is sometimes not as easy as it seems. Just ask McDonald's. Its campaign to assure customers that its ingredients are 100% "aus der Schweiz" took a knock last July when it emerged that the cow used in a poster was in fact Austrian. But then cows aren't the 15 only Swiss animals having an identity crisis. Nobody can deny there is something special about Switzerland. Just ask the Swiss. Their sense of exceptionalism is based on being both central to the world and remote from it. The country is situated at the heart of yet is not a member of the . It didn't join the until 2002, despite the fact that Geneva has the largest U.N. office outside of New York. It has tough immigration and 20 citizenship laws, but also one of Europe's highest immigration rates. A fifth of its 7.5 million population are foreigners, mostly from , but increasingly from Turkey, the Balkans and beyond. But as other countries have learned — not least my own, which in June elected two far-right members to the European Parliament — pride and exceptionalism can easily turn into isolationism and xenophobia. The country's most popular political group is the right-wing 's Party (SVP). It won nearly 29% of the 25 vote in the 2007 election with anti-immigration posters showing white sheep kicking black sheep off a flag- clad . In November the SVP even started a referendum to ban the construction of new minarets. Listen to its leaders, and you would assume that the picturesque Swiss landscape now bristles with minarets. There are actually only four in the entire country. The fifth, to be built near the capital, , got planning permission in July. 30 As the SVP's popularity shows, Switzerland has yet to make its peace with immigrants, despite how central to the economy they have been and — with a falling birth rate and aging population — are still. Postwar Switzerland was built by Italian "guest workers," many of whom eventually won the right to settle, and today perhaps a quarter of the nation's workforce are non-Swiss. This has not gone entirely unrecognized. On August 1 — Switzerland's 718th birthday — the Swiss National 35 Museum in Zurich opened a new permanent exhibition to show a history of immigration since the Bronze Age. In a section called "No One Has Been Here All the Time," visitors to the museum are reminded that many famous Swiss have foreign blood. Take tennis superstar Roger Federer: his dad was born South African. Exceptionalism is out of fashion these days. Global recession is a great leveler, its seismic shocks felt in big and small nations alike. Even Switzerland has not escaped the crisis. Its unemployment rate is now at its 40 highest. Switzerland's two biggest banks needed multibillion-dollar bailouts — UBS with public money, Credit Suisse with private — and, like bankers everywhere, they face the rage of ordinary people. In August, a civil action by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service forced UBS to reveal the names of thousands of tax- dodging Americans with bulging Swiss accounts. My son will likely come of age in a very different Switzerland. One day, he will vote in its elections and do 45 national service in its army. But he will always be half English and — since he was conceived and born in Bangkok — "Made in Thailand," too. Fake watches might be for fake people. But authentic Swiss are harder to define than ever, and that's something Switzerland should probably celebrate. from TIME, November 2009

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COMPREHENSION 1. VOCABULARY (12 Points) Answers on this sheet

A. Explain (in English) the meaning or give a synonym of the following words as they appear in the text (1 point each)

1. share (l. 7) 5. bristles with (l. 27)

2. emerged (l. 14) 6. settle (l. 32)

3. beyond (l. 21) 7. to reveal (l. 42)

4. ban (l. 26) 8. likely (l. 44)

B. Transform the following words - the forms needn't be related to the text (½ point each)

Give an abstract noun from: 1. extended (l. 4) 2. political (l. 24)

Give an adjective from 3. industry (l. 9) 4. fashion (l. 38)

Give an adverb from: 5. legal (l. 3) 6. history (l. 35)

Give a verb from 7. identity (l. 15) 8. blood (l. 37) - 4 -

2. QUESTIONS (6 points each / total 24 ) Answer each question in not more than 3 sentences

1. Why is the author's son compared to a Swiss watch? 2. Why is "Swiss-ness" hard to define? 3. The Swiss are said to possess "a sense of exceptionalism". Explain! 4. Why has the Swiss National Museum opened a new permanent exhibition?

ESSAYS (24 points) Write an essay of 250 – 300 words on ONE of the following topics.

1. How would you define "Swiss-ness"? 2. Could / Should Switzerland serve as a role model for other countries? 3. Minarets or no minarets – that is the question. Really?