ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月8日 21時34分


They're bricklayers, bakers, carpenters, stonemasons. They hitchhike across Europe, instantly recognizable in wide-bottomed, corduroy trousers, white shirts and colored jackets. And they're known as “Wandergesellen,” or journeymen — a vestige of the Middle Ages in modern Europe. These young men (and women, too, these days) have finished their required training in their respective fields. Debt-free, unmarried and no older than 30, journeymen agree to stay away from home for at least as long it took to complete their traineeship — usually 2 or 3 years — plus a day. Their mission is to live by their wits, their trade and the generosity of strangers. The hardest part of their journey? Deciding when to end it. The responsibilities and monotony of a daily routine have a way of making the challenges of wandering from place to place seem fun. “You don’t have any overheads, you don’t have a family or a house to take care of,” said Arnold Böhm, a carpenter from Görlitz who spent time working in Cape Verde, Namibia and South Africa. “What you have is your freedom.” The photographer Tomás Munita followed these journeymen while on #nytassignment in Germany. Swipe left to see more photos.


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