They are currently being persecuted according to some sources:
For example according to this website:
http://www.thenational.ae/news/world/europe/sorbs-fight-for-survival-and-protest
"(...) Open-cast mining for brown coal - a cheap but highly polluting source of power - has forced 30,000 people and 136 Lusatian villages to move since 1924. The energy group Vattenfall has recently submitted plans to extend its open-cast mining in five areas, which would mean bulldozing another eight villages and relocating 3,700 people. "The situation is dramatic. There's a real danger that no Sorb will be spoken anymore in the Lower Lusatia region in 20 years if this goes on," said Rene Schuster, a Sorb environmental campaigner. (...)"
And according to Robert Brytan, Sorbian activist and member of Domowina:
"(...) In Germany there are four officially recognized national minorities - Sorbs, Danish people, Frisians and Romani people. National minority rights in Germany are incorporated only in federal states, that is in lands. This is for example like if in Poland a certain national minority had been recognized and protected only in a particular voivodeship, and not in the entire country. So this is the main difference, that in Germany in federal constitution rights of national minorities are not protected. (...)"
"(...) What kinds of problems are bothering Sorbs nowadays? We have so called four points - education, financing, devastation of Sorbian villages by coal mines and discrimination. When it comes to education - education is one of the most important things for all nations, for all cultural or national societies, because through education language and culture are being shaped. Our Sorbian schools in Germany do not have the status of minority schools. So these schools are treated in the same way as normal German schools and subjected to the same standards - if for example there are not enough students in a particular class, such a Sorbian school is being shut down. For example the school in Chróścice (near Budyšin / Bautzen), where Ministry of Education did not take into consideration that this school was playing an important role for a national minority. Simply a German standard was applied and the school was liquidated due to not enough students in one year / age-group. And this is how they got rid of one of very few minority schools, which was playing a role of educational centre, national centre for a national minority, language of which is threatened with extinction. (...)"
"(...) When it comes to every-day situations, discrimination of Sorbian language, then I must say that we can often hear when walking along the streets various unpleasant comments. Most of Germans are not able to distinguish between Sorbian language and Polish or Czech languages, despite the fact that they have been living with us in the same territory already for 1000 years. These people were born here, were raised here and they still cannot distinguish these languages, they are confusing us with Poles or Czechs and we can simply hear nasty comments, for example that we are "parasites", or that we are some kind of "mafia", or even we are being called - using a very derogatory term in German language - "Polacken". (...)".
And here a destroyed Sorbian village of Wochozy (Nochten) - photos from this website below:
http://www.prolusatia.pl/index.php?...z-vancouver-z-kanady&catid=2:wszelkie-artykuy
The problem is that Sorbian minority population is artificially divided between two Lands - Saxony and Brandenburg.
If not independent, then at least they should be allowed to live in one Land - in such case they will have more influence on their own matters.
There should be a separate Land Lausitz (Lusatia) created between Saxony and Brandenburg. Perhaps it should have autonomy.
Sorbian women protesting for Sorbian rights in Berlin: