- brat" due to the
unprecedented wealth that
these former Yugoslavian gastarbeiters ac****ulate
compared to
their relatives that
still live in the countries...
- countries,
especially from the
former East Bloc nations.
Guest workers (
Gastarbeiter) and
their descendants, as well as
refugees from the
Yugoslav wars and...
-
Western and
Northern Europe increased significantly when in 1961
Turkish "
Gastarbeiter"
began to
arrive under a "Labour
Export Agreement" with West Germany...
- and in the late 1950s and 1960s
extra labour supplied by
thousands of
Gastarbeiter ("guest workers")
provided a
vital base for the
economic upturn. This...
-
Train Station was an
important distribution point for
guest workers (
Gastarbeiter)
between 1960 and 1973. At peak more than 1,000
guest workers arrived...
-
Migrant workers in Russia,
commonly referred to as
Gastarbeiters (Russian: Гастарбайтеры, romanized: Gastarbaytery), form a
significant part of Russia's...
- Yugoslavia) to
Marija and Ante. He
rarely saw his father, who
worked as a
Gastarbeiter in
Germany and
rarely came home.[citation needed] He
finished high school...
- was a
football league in
Germany for the
football clubs of
Yugoslav gastarbeiters during the
twentieth century. The
Jugoliga was
founded in 1971. "Jugoslawisches...
- two-thirds of
which were in West Germany,
where they were
known as
Gastarbeiters.
Significant numbers emigrated to Austria, Australia,
Sweden and to...
-
Russia consists of two
major parts:
Russian citizens and
labor migrants (
gastarbeiters).
According to the 2002
Russian Census there were 172,196 Moldovans...