Two communities, a river flows between them, the Moselle. It forms the national border. On the German side of Perl, on the Luxembourg Schengen. The children of both locations go to the sports club in Perl, come to Schengen to go swimming in summer. The secondary school, the Schengen Lyzeum, is worn by Saarland and Luxembourg, but is on the German side. The parents soak up in Schengen, buy food in Perl. The paths are short, two kilometers are from town center to town center. As a matter of course it goes back and forth across the river. The region is closely overgrown. “We live the European thoughts,” says the Mayor of Schengen Michel Gloden, member of the liberals in Luxembourg.
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