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Denmark: Locals rip up Christiania’s famous Pusher Street

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Residents in Denmark‘s famous hippie enclave of Christiania on Saturday joined police, the mayor of Copenhagen and the Danish justice minister to tear up cobblestones on the neighborhood’s Pusher Street to make way for a restoration project.
Long revered as a libertarian, hippie paradise, Christiania has been plagued with drug violence in recent years.
Known as Christianites, residents grew weary of the situation and took the drastic decision to close the street last August, after the enclave registered its fourth murder in three years.
Local spokeswoman Hulda Mader told AFP news agency that Pusher Street had “deteriorated” and was “really not a very nice place.” Speaking of the scene in which hashish stalls had always returned whenever they were torn down, she said, “They fight each other, they fight people and they are violent.”
Locals happy that Pusher Street will now become something else
As locals, their families and friends tore up the street, Mader said, “We’ll take the cobblestones and give them to people who want some. That’s just a sign that Pusher Street is changing from a pushers’ street to something else.”
Copenhagen Mayor Sophie Haestrop Andersen said the commitment of Christiania’s roughly 1,000 residents was crucial to renewal plans. “It is the first time ever that they united and agreed to take a stand against the rising crime and insecurity in their neighborhood.”
The removal of the cobblestones is the first step toward integrating the community into the Danish capital. It will be followed by the city installing new water and sanitation infrastructure and repaving the street.
The Danish government had made its offer of 14.3 million kroner (€1.94 million, $2.1 million) in renewal funding contingent upon the removal and banishment of organized hash sales.
Anti-authoritarian collective and tourist magnet
Founded in 1971, the “Free City of Christiania” was created as a place that “belongs to everyone and no one,” with decisions about the organization of life in the then-abandoned naval base being taken collectively.
The enclave became a beacon of free-spirited collective living where cars and police were not allowed, the government had limited influence — residents disregarded building codes and often refused to pay utility bills — and cannabis was illegal but, nevertheless, tolerated.
The latter was increasingly seen as a thorn in the side of successive governments, often putting residents and authorities at odds. Still, the neighborhood was the most popular tourist attraction in the capital for decades.
Copenhagen Police Chief Simon Hansen said, “About five or ten years ago it was primarily locals. But right now we see that it’s mostly gangs and biker gangs that drive this drug market.” Increasingly, those gangs violently clashed with police.
Long a colorful tourist magnet, residents last year decided to close the city to non-residents for one day in August, “in hopes of freeing Christiania from the tyranny of gangs.”
Copenhagen police said they made roughly 900 drug-related arrests in 2023.
Christiania residents eager to start a ‘new chapter’
The aging residents of Christiania — one-quarter of whom are over 60 — say they hope that by ridding themselves of the scourge of drug gangs they can begin a “new chapter” and return to the ideals that once shaped the idyllic island community.
“We’ll paint the buildings and rebuild them and all sorts of things,” said Hulda Mader. “We want to be associated with what we were associated with before… art, culture and plays… making it a nice place for people to come and chill out.”
Residents say they hope to capitalize on the enclave’s lore and its beautiful surroundings of greenery, water and colorful facades.
Another element of the renewal plan is to construct new housing for some 300 additional residents, scheduled to begin in 2027. With locals saying they hope to attract young families with children.
The desire for renewal was showcased on Saturday morning when two young children from the enclave hoisted the first cobblestone pried from the street to wild cheers and applause from all those gathered.
(This is a Deutsche Welle story)


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