Localized version for English
Alzingen has the institutional Catholic infrastructure of an older European pattern — cathedrals, feast days, nativity scenes in the public square — even where actual Mass attendance is in single digits. The wider Luxembourg religious landscape: Historically Catholic and rapidly secularizing; substantial international population with mixed religious backgrounds.
In a place the size of Alzingen, the religious community is often the community. Leaving it means losing the main social infrastructure, and the rebuild usually involves finding support outside town — online groups, occasional trips to the nearest city, and the slow construction of a new social world.
In Alzingen, the cost of leaving is mostly internal and relational rather than legal or communal. The wider culture does not care whether you go to church. Your grandmother still does. That is the work.
If you are in Alzingen and carrying something from the religion you left behind — guilt, grief, confusion about what you believe now, a family that still asks when you are coming back to church — Elder X gets it. He has walked his own version of this road. He reads every message personally.
Whatever tradition you came out of, the rebuild follows a pattern. First you leave. Then you grieve. Then you figure out who you are without the container that used to hold your identity. Then — slowly, with setbacks — you build something new. Alzingen is where that sequence is playing out for you right now. Rage 2 Rebuild exists because the rebuild is the part nobody talks about, and the part that matters most.