Rama dama

Rama Dama or Ramadama (Bavarian: "We are cleaning!") is called in Bavaria an organized cleanup, collecting waste in public space (both in nature and in residential areas), under the voluntary involvement of the population. The organization is taken over by communities, schools, associations or citizens' initiatives.[1]

Background

"Rama dama" in East Timor

Thomas Wimmer, the then Mayor of Munich, called on 29 October 1949 to "Rama dama" for the first time. It was about the elimination of the war damages and screes in the city. More than 7500 volunteers followed the call. Wimmer also worked with a shovel. In total, more than 15,000 cubic meters of rubble were collected that day. The term remained as designation for the common, honorary tidying up.[2]

Similar events for collecting waste by voluntary are happen outside Bavaria, too.

gollark: You can't just teach safety of every random technological thing in school.
gollark: I feel like if someone won't let you cut it they also won't let you burn bits or set it on fire.
gollark: Wouldn't setting the tree on fire or something be bad?
gollark: Isn't that 0.3 million times current world GDP?
gollark: Venus isn't very good either, nobody would mind if we removed it, right?

References

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