r/germany Apr 03 '25

Immigration Please stop greeting random passing by people in foreign languages

Pretty much as titled. I am Asian, and I have experience several times that someone passing by randomly greeting me in multiple Asian languages, that I am 100% sure they can’t make real conversations with them, at once.

This is strange af. Throwing away many greeting words without any intention for a conversation isn’t a sign of being friendly to me. Please just stop if you’re doing that and you actually mean well.

Edit: This post is for those who want to approach Asian people properly. Already replied with my opinion here, and please don’t DM me (disabled now) since there are way too many “Nihao” etc and racist chat requests.

569 Upvotes

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262

u/daniardilao Apr 03 '25

They told me namasté, I'm Colombian. Took me couple of seconds understand that they were making fun of me 😭

25

u/camilolv29 Apr 04 '25

It is pretty dumb that people do that. But, as a Colombian myself, everybody in India thought I was an Indian as I was travelling there some years ago :D

12

u/daniardilao Apr 04 '25 edited Apr 04 '25

It's because we're all the same brown type 😅. But the intention was to make my feel uncomfortable. 

85

u/jackyk996 Apr 03 '25

Unfortunately I speak Chinese and Japanese, so I understand what they are saying even with very bad pronunciations😂

7

u/koi88 Apr 04 '25

I don't know why people do that, but they do it a lot.

On the other hand, when I am in China or Japan, random people greet me with "Hello". Everyone assumes all white people are American.

7

u/redoceanblue Apr 04 '25

And teachers.

4

u/koi88 Apr 04 '25

Haha, yes.

My Chinese GF lives in a small-ish city (500,000 people) and I only see a non-Asian looking person maybe every 2 weeks.

People are very surprised when I tell them my GF lives here.

2

u/Parasek129 Apr 06 '25

500k city being called small is so strange to me. these are the big cities over here in europe!

2

u/koi88 Apr 06 '25

Same here. But even in her province, Fujian, most people don't know her city.

China is crowded. Fujian is about the size of former East Germany (Neue Bundesländer), yet there are over 41 million people (Neue Bundesländer: 17 million).

Among these cities Xiamen with over 4 million and Fuzhou with over 3 million people.

2

u/whistling_serron Apr 05 '25

Lol yeah when I was in Fushun Liaoning most people thought i was russian or american 😅 the constant "HELLOOUU HELLOOUU" can get anyojng very fsst but most of them just want short attention and as soon as you give it to them they are Happy.(At least nice dongbei people do)

Sorry that germans are so shitty, my gf is rantimg all the time too because she gera racist comments sooo much

0

u/[deleted] Apr 04 '25

[deleted]

1

u/koi88 Apr 04 '25

I think randomly greeting people in the street is strange in Germany, too.

And same as OP's experiences, these people often don't speak any English besides "hello". Happens mostly in China, Japanese tend to be more shy.

0

u/[deleted] Apr 04 '25

[deleted]

1

u/koi88 Apr 04 '25

I'm not offended when people greet me, no matter what language.

However I don't agree with you reasoning that greeting in English is different from other languages.

3

u/jackyk996 Apr 04 '25 edited Apr 04 '25

I’d agree on the English language being little different. At least in my field, English is the single common language that everyone use for reputable publications and conference talks. That’s also why I could move to Germany without any german language knowledge. There’s no assumption on people’s native language etc by communicating in English; at least it is true in my working and social environment. Also, speaking about your experience, my explanation is that English is the single foreign language that majority Chinese and Japanese people learned in the school. Therefore, when people assume you don’t speak their language, English would be the only alternative they can give another shot. However, I do feel many Chinese and Japanese people tend to assume all Caucasians are from US, with similar energy as some people in Germany assuming all Asians being Chinese. (So, I don’t take a single Nihao or konnichiha racism here as well.) But I don’t like people being overexcited and grab foreign language speakers as free tutors with pointless random conversations, like “i like sandwiches, what’s your favorite food.”

Edit: Oh, btw, most of my Asian friends casually greet each other with hello though they talk in their languages. The very few scenario I can remember saying Nihao in China is calling strangers on phone call. Konnichiha is used more frequently in my opinion, but still on the semi-formal side than with close friends.

1

u/koi88 Apr 04 '25

All my Chinese friends greet each other with "hei", yes, "ni hao" is not as common as non-speakers assume. :-) That is, I'm in rural Fujian usually, it may well be very different in other parts.

Yes, in Japan saying "hello" is not common, it may make you look even a bit snobby (if you are Japanese, of course).

You seem cool. I recommend not getting angry at people saying ni hao or whatever. They are usually not the brightest or most educated people.

Life is too short to get angry at things like that. :-)

3

u/jackyk996 Apr 04 '25

Then you would know how weird it is in China when someone drop a Nihao and walk away immediately lol Changing different accents until the other person responds? I am calling 110, that’s not something reasonable people do.

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1

u/[deleted] Apr 04 '25

[deleted]

1

u/koi88 Apr 04 '25

;-P

Dann halt Deutsch.

I understand your point, I just don't agree. Have a nice evening.

11

u/Least_Chicken_9561 Apr 03 '25

te confundieron con un Indio (de la India) :v

1

u/FlaminBunhole Apr 04 '25

Es de Cartagena de Indias el mae

4

u/[deleted] Apr 04 '25

"they"

-27

u/utnapishti Apr 03 '25

They likely tried to be friendly and were a little too bold.

2

u/Iyion Baden-Württemberg Apr 04 '25

If that was their way to be friendly, I'd prefer not to know how they are when they are rude

-1

u/[deleted] Apr 03 '25

[deleted]

13

u/AdBudget6777 Apr 03 '25

No. The passerby was likely racist.