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One of the deepest anxieties Indian nurses carry when considering Germany is the fear of cultural isolation - of being far from everything familiar, cut off from Indian food, Indian festivals, and the warmth of the Indian community. This is a real and legitimate concern. But the picture of India in Germany today is very different from what it was even a decade ago.
India is one of Germany's largest sources of skilled migrants. The Indian community in Germany has grown from approximately 100,000 in 2015 to well over 200,000 today. In smaller cities like Erfurt, Dresden, and Chemnitz - where JSJ places most of its nurses - the Indian community is smaller but active, close-knit, and growing. The smaller size actually often means stronger community bonds - you will know most of the Indian community in your city personally within a few months.
| Shop Type | What You Will Find | Where Available |
|---|---|---|
| Indian / Pakistani grocery shop | Full range: spices, dal, atta, frozen Indian foods, snacks, pickles | Most German cities with 100,000+ population; some smaller cities too |
| Turkish supermarket | Excellent for fresh vegetables, legumes, spices, yoghurt, halal meat | Virtually every German city - often the best everyday option for Indian cooks |
| Asian supermarket | Rice varieties, sauces, noodles, spices - broader Asian range | Major cities; some smaller cities |
| REWE / EDEKA / Kaufland | Basmati rice, chickpeas, coconut milk, yoghurt, basic spices | Everywhere |
| Amazon.de | Almost any Indian grocery item can be ordered and delivered within 1–2 days | Nationwide - essential for remote locations |
Indian restaurants exist in virtually every German city of 50,000 or more. In smaller cities, there is typically at least one Indian or South Asian restaurant - often run by Bangladeshi or Pakistani families with menus familiar to North Indian palates. These become important social spaces for Indian nurses - a place to eat something that tastes like home, particularly in the first months.
| Festival | How It Is Celebrated in Germany |
|---|---|
| Diwali | Community gatherings in Indian cultural centres, temples, and private homes; events organised by Indian associations in many German cities; Indian colleagues often gather to celebrate together |
| Holi | Events organised in major cities - some are large public events attended by Germans and Indians alike; smaller cities have community gatherings |
| Navratri / Garba | Garba events organised by Indian cultural associations in cities with larger Gujarati communities; less common in smaller cities |
| Eid | Celebrated by Muslim Indian and South Asian community members; mosques and community gatherings in most German cities |
| Christmas | Germany takes Christmas extremely seriously - Weihnachtsmärkte (Christmas markets) are a cultural experience Indian nurses universally enjoy |
For nurses in smaller cities where organised Indian community events are less frequent, the solution is simple: create your own. Groups of 4 to 8 Indian nurses cooking together for Diwali, hosting a Holi gathering, or making biryani for a Sunday dinner become the community anchors.
Hindu temples exist in several German cities - Frankfurt, Berlin, Hamburg, Hamm (the Shree Swaminarayan Mandir is one of the largest Hindu temples in Europe), Stuttgart, and Munich. Sikh Gurudwaras are present in Frankfurt, Hamburg, Cologne, and several other cities.
For nurses in smaller German cities, the nearest temple may be an hour or two away by train - accessible for festival days using the Deutschlandticket. Online bhajan groups and spiritual communities on WhatsApp and YouTube also serve as important daily connections to faith.
Almost every German city with an Indian community has at least one active WhatsApp group - organised by city, by profession, by religion, or by region of origin. These groups are invaluable for finding grocery shops, getting advice on German admin, organising festivals, and emotional support during adjustment.
JSJ maintains its own WhatsApp support network for placed nurses. As part of your pre-departure briefing, we will connect you to existing Indian community groups in your placement city so you have a network before you land.
Almost every Indian nurse who arrives in Germany reports the same pleasant surprise: the Indian community is warmer, more organised, and more welcoming than they expected. There is a shared understanding among Indians in Germany that supporting each other is part of what makes the experience work.
You will not be alone. The Indian community in Germany was built by people who were once in exactly the position you are in now - new, adjusting, and finding their feet. They remember that feeling, and they will help you navigate yours.
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