Steve & Silvia Do Berlin
December 2006
I really don't know how this happened; it was one of these things that
just happened without planning or thought. I just decided on the spur of
the moment to go Christmas shopping in Berlin for a few days, went
online, booked the whole thing and so off we went! Most of the
following pictures were taken by Steve who took it upon himself to
become the official photographer. This was probably also due to the fact
that our camera was the immensely cumbersome, if lovely, Canon OE5 which
weighs a ton and doesn't fit into my handbag :-)
Here's our sweet little plane, courtesy of EasyJet. Worth a mention that
the train tickets from Eastbourne to Gatwick cost more than the plane
tickets from Gatwick to Berlin. What *is* that?
So here we are. Berlin. Everything is
square. Really, really, REALLY square. Might be a Bauhaus
thing, who knows? But it is certainly a lot squarer than even New York,
somehow. Berlin is *big*. Not tall, high or massive, just
amazingly spread out over a very large area. That it was two cities for
half a century probably didn't help. Berlin is *flat*.
Not a hill in sight. That is a very good thing, considering how far you
have to walk to get from one point to another. There are four things
that help with that, though. These are: 1. Buses
2. Underground 3. City Railway 4. Taxis
During my stay in Berlin, I have come to LOVE taxis. One day I must
start a foundation for taxi drivers, or marry one; where would we have
ever been without them? How would we have found our way around? WHO, I
ask, would have provided comfort, soft leather seats, warmth and rescue
on a freezing night far from anywhere one might call home and a safe
journey back to civilisation after you got thoroughly and hopelessly
lost? Taxis. I *love* them. I bless the person who
invented them. Without them, this would have been hideous; with them, it
was very cool and much fun was had all around.
This is the NH Mitte hotel where we stayed. If you think, "Wow, that's
square ..." you're right. But that's Berlin. If it doesn't look ...
square, it won't be built, it seems.
Like the mooseses in Toronto, Berlin also has fibre glass statues for
sale & decoration to their local businesses. This is the Berlin NH Mitte
hotel bear. Pink and stripey :-) I keep wanting to put something on
their heads to carry for them, they're designed for that.
On the other side of the street to the hotel, I was intrigued by the
statue of a person being followed by some strange three legged arm
amputated pig man. One night I went over to look at it more closely and
found out that the building opposite was in fact, the Rumanian embassy.
Aaalright ... that makes sense, now ... ;->
On the topic of noteworthy buildings, this is Hotel Adlon near the
Brandenburg Gate, and if you look up, you can see the balcony from which
Michael Jackson dangled Blanket to cause a riot. Fascinating what
buildings can become famous for ...
One of the funny or disturbing things about Berlin is that you never
know what you're looking at, whether it is actually a "real" building or
a replica. Most of the buildings in Berlin are not original, because
Berlin was extensively bombed and East Berlin extensively de-constructed
of historical artefacts, so what you're looking at is usually either
brand new, or repaired to the degree it might as well be brand new.
Now they're trying very hard to disguise this and thus it is very
difficult when you're looking around to get any sense of history; the
place is out of time in the strangest way, and I've never experienced
such a sense of being time displaced in a major city, or anywhere, at
that. The building in the picture above looks very much
like so many others in Berlin, but that one is a survivor from before
the 2nd World War - this was Goering's headquarters, sporting big eagles
on the entrance columns which of course, were removed at some point.
Somehow this building survived all the global destruction essentially
unharmed - and now houses of all things, the German Internal Revenue
(the taxman!!!). How appropriate ...
Here is a "real" building - the Gedaechtnis-Kirche (Memorance Church)
which was left as a ruin, one of the few reminders you can still find of
the destruction of the war. Supported by a square tower, as it is now.
Very strange.
On one of our outings, I spotted this church and thought to take some
momentary refuge inside. I must confess to being really shocked to
discover upon opening the door, that this church had been gutted of all
things church related apart from the altar, which was still there, and
instead, housed an exhibition of sculpture.
The people who built this thing didn't build it to be an
exhibition space and I had a real sense of vertigo at this use of the
building. I asked at the information desk if and when the church had
been officially de-consecrated and the person didn't have a clue even
what I was talking about. Oh well. It is called Friedrichswerdersche
Kirche for what it's worth. Steve took the following
picture inside:
Wandering around Berlin, I can't help but get the feeling that they're
trying to erase the past here, not build upon it. They're trying to
erase the division and most of all, trying to erase the 3rd Reich, going
back to the Prussian empire state feeling. With it being illegal to
display Nazi symbols in Germany, I guess its understandable but the very
absence of eagles bearing swastikas anywhere, or any trace of the 3rd
Reich whatsoever, is really and truly disconcerting to a foreign
visitor. I was in the lobby of our hotel, waiting to ask
a question from the information desk person (all of whom were very
knowledgeable and extremely helpful, I would like to note!). Before me
was a group of tourists, five strong, which I would have thought were
Polish. They enquired about any sightseeing opportunities to "Hitler
sites, Nazi sites and museums". The information desk person, a man of
about 28 or so, stiffened noticeably, stopped smiling and said there was
a Holocaust museum, but no Nazi museums. The tourists were disappointed
by this news and declined the offer of booking a tour to the Holocaust
museum. The fact is that so many years on, the 3rd Reich
and the Nazis remains fascinating, especially for those who have no
experience or direct knowledge of the gruesome reality of the whole
deal. The larger than life personalities, the grand show staging, the
buildings, the costumes they wore, the global destruction and the
Shakespearian drama and tragedy, right down to a mother poisoning her
six children in the end is the stuff that legends of the ages are made
of, whether you like this, or not. Eventually, and this is my personal
opinion, both Berlin and the German people will have to come to terms
with that. There will be a Nazi museum and it will be packed with
foreign tourists. In the meantime, and just to show how
far this Nazi denial is in action, just look at this:
Any idea what we might be looking at here? Well you could
say it's a car park belonging to a number of apartment buildings.
That's right. It is also the exact spot where the
entrance to Hitler's bunker used to be, where his and Eva's bodies were
dowsed in petrol and set on fire, and below this car park, there is the
bunker, backfilled with concrete and apparently, way below the water
table and "most likely all rotted away by now". The
poster on the stand you can see there has been put up only a couple of
years ago to even acknowledge that "x marks the spot". Tourist buses
drive by slowly but no-one gets out.
It is FUCKING WEIRD, ladies and gentlemen, to stand
there and look at that. Psychotic. Repression and burying
of the past in real and visible action. But it won't last. I don't know
how long it will take, but eventually there'll be a bunker center there
with virtual walk throughs and a strange monument. That sign is the
first sign of that.
Want to guess what this is? It's ... the main Holocaust
memorial for the Jewish victims of the 3rd Reich. 6 million of them.
I'm sorry. I don't get it. I really don't.
I was told that there was some controversy over the fact that this
monument(al weirdness) was only dedicated to Jewish victims, and that it
left out all the others - gypsies, gays, handicapped people, dissidents.
Only five million of those, but still. Being half gypsy
myself, I look at that thing and think, well, perhaps it's just as well.
I can't imagine going to THAT and feeling that justice was done,
artistically, emotionally, or in any way you look at that.
What on EARTH must the design ideas that didn't get in have been like?
I cannot begin to imagine. Let's move on, swiftly ...
Or is that what is supposed to happen ...?
Here's a picture that you won't be seeing much longer, and this is
another effort at national psychotherapy in action, concerning the half
century divide between the two Germanies, east and west.
On the right, you have an old Prussian palace of some kind. Where it
ends and there's a gap, that's where the wall used to be at this point.
On the other side, you have this hideous lump of square black.
Where that is right now, there *used* to be the other half of that
palace, on the other side of the road. But the communists
in East Germany pulled it down, razed it to the ground and built in its
place, "the people's parliament" out of black slabs of concrete.
Wow ... Now, the current government of the once more
united, but still highly psychotic Germany, is tearing "the people's
parliament" down and are planning to re-build the other half of the
palace that once was there - hey! Then it'll be as though
nothing ever happened at all! My personal opinion on the
topic would be to leave the "people's parliament". ANYONE
who looks at that (and I think my cat would hiss and spit!) can really
get how soulless and joyless that building is, how artless, how godless,
even. Looking at that building gives you a real idea of just what the
communist years in the eastern part must have been like, more than
anything else I personally saw in all of Berlin.
Well, soon it will be gone and in its place, the
Prussian past will rise once more ... No, not the 3rd Reich, just to be
sure. Happy, healthy Prussia. And didn't they win against the French in
1871?
In the center of Berlin is a big park, larger than Central Park in New
York, which is a bit weird looking because none of the trees are older
than 60 years, on account of the starving and freezing population left
after the 3rd World War cutting down everything there once used to be
for firewood at the time.
In the middle of said park there stands this statue,
known to the locals as the Goldelse (Golden Elise). This
monument was created to celebrate the victory over the French 1871 and
the shiny golden looking things around its base and circumference are
actually French brass canons which were collected and used to make this
monument. Strangely, the monument wasn't bombed during
the Allied bombing raids (conducted mostly by the British and the
Americans) and stayed absolutely intact. After the war, the French tried
to have the monument destroyed - but unlucky for them, it happened to
end up in the British Zone and their request was denied.
Local rumour has it that the English officers used to polish it in their
spare time, voluntarily ... Whether this is true or not,
I could not say. The Wall
It is important to understand that in Berlin, the wall wasn't a dividing
line, but it was built all around the three western allied parts of
Berlin. This was because all of Berlin was INSIDE of the old Eastern
GDR, and if you could get into it anywhere, you'd be given a West German
passport and off you went.
There was an attempt to take over all of Berlin by
blockading it and not allowing food into the Western sector; so the
Americans launched what remains to this day the biggest air support
operation which lasted for a whole year, with planes ferrying in
everything for the population, one landing every 60 seconds to keep West
Berlin alive. It worked and the Soviet Union gave up, but
the encapsulation of Berlin remained until the wall came down finally in
1989.
In the absence of a Nazi museum, the most visited locale in Berlin is
probably Checkpoint Charlie. We spent a really interesting afternoon in
the wall museum, which contains items such as an old VW Beetle with a
hidden compartment under the engine, used to transport single
individuals to freedom; a hand made hot air balloon in which two
families escaped; a wooden cart used to transport soil from a tunnel
that was dug; and very helpfully, a cinema that showed a movie of an
escape with English subtitles. We watched this and it gave certainly
Steve a much better idea what it was like in the East German part, or
why people would go through such length to plan their escapes.
Former GDR frontier marker stone.
Steve & a piece of wall
Can't help writing on the wall ... :-)
The Curse Of The Inca Gold
We went to see an exhibition we came across in the Friedrichstrasse
called "The Curse Of The Inca Gold". This was good fun,
especially as I managed to hire a postgraduate archaeology student for
10 euros for two and a half hours to give us the personal low down on
what we were looking at. We looked at fascinating artefacts, insured for
4 million euros, from the Aztecs, Moche and Nasca and right at the very
end of the exhibition, came across a silver dog's head which was
apparently the one and only Inca artefact in the entire exhibition. In
jest, I said, "I want my money back! This is called the curse of the
Inca gold, and not only isn't anything here cursed in the slightest,
there isn't any Inca gold at all!" The poor German
archaeologist took me seriously and explained hurriedly that it was a
marketing matter and people wouldn't come for uncursed Moche and Nasca
exhibits; I thought it was seriously funny. The collection was good and
really, I didn't mind at all that the only actual Inca thing was a
silver dog's head. The Spanish were pretty comprehensive in their
destruction of the Inca culture and the robbing of their things; what
was actually in the exhibition were all items found much later, in the
1900s, during digging up burial sites and such.
Fernsehturm
Wherever you go in Berlin, you see the tower with the ball stuck on it;
Steve expressed the wish to go on it and so we did. Now
here's German efficiency for you. When we went to New
York, we queued for the Empire State building for about five hours and
it was hellish as an experience all around. On this
occasion, we took a taxi to the foot of the tower. We
bought two tickets for 8 euros each. We got on the
elevator, went up on the tower, walked around it and were out back on
the street in less than 15 minutes all told. Yay! to
efficiency in visiting such structures, is all I can say :-)
Shopping In Berlin
Berlin is famous for its Christmas markets. We visited a number of them
and I got quite excited and bought lots of stuff there. Steve was
disappointed because whilst we were there, Berlin was having one of the
warmest Decembers since records began and he wanted snow.
I apologised for the lack of snow and try to explain that although the
thought of snow is very romantic, the reality of it, and walking around
in it in our trainers, would be a different story altogether. However,
we come from a place where it virtually never snows and I don't think my
tales of suffering made any impact on Steve, who hasn't experienced what
it is like to trudge round a German fair or Christmas market when your
feet are like blocks of ice. The glow-wine was good and
so were the Bratwurst, the Kartoffelpuffer and on one occasion, the
Gruenkohl :-) Well, *I* thought these things were good. Steve remained
very suspicious of the local cuisine and preferred to stay with Pommes
Frites and steaks most of the time :-)
Gendarmenmarkt by the Opera House
Is it a cheese stand? No! It's a soap stand! LOL!
Berlin used to be a showcase for the capitalist cause at one time, like
holding up a sign to the consumer good deprived East Germans to say,
"Keep digging those tunnels to freedom, and all these shiny goodies will
await you in wonderland!" To this end, there is a big
department store called Kaufhaus Des Westens, or Kadewe abbreviated,
"Department store of the West" which is a sort of Berlin mecca for
shoppers.
Personally, I truly HATE department stores. I
have panic attacks in them, and the thought of visiting them gives me
palpitations. Nothing personal. I dislike visiting Harrod's just the
same as Macy's and Kadewe is no exception. Still, Steve wanted to look
at the toy department and check out the local video games, so I braced
myself for impact and we went to the Kadewe.
"... und vor Paris steht Micky Mouse ..."
Ah! Finally a real Berlin baer!
I was surprised (and Steve bitterly disappointed!) to find how deeply
traditional German toys still are compared to the UK. An absolute
dominance of traditional dolls, teddies, wooden toys of all sorts and
board games (bored games, I call those). This wasn't just
Kadewe either. Yes, there were specialist shops around for more modern
endeavours such as computer games, anime related goodies, trading cards
and such, but I must say I found it intriguing that the same toys I saw
in stores 40 years ago are still so much in vogue. In the UK, it's the
other way around. If you want traditional toys, you need to go to a
specialist store and the general trading is much more 21st century. Good
or bad, I couldn't say, just something I noticed and which surprised me.
I was quite excited to visit a Berlin "troedelmarkt", car boot sale type
thing, but again the absence of anything even vaguely 3rd Reich related
was just WEIRD. Please don't get me wrong - I'm not a
collector of Nazi memorabilia, but to see all these plaques, stamps,
books, flags, hats, statues, uniform buttons, old currency from the
Soviet Union, of Lenin, Stalin, of the old GDR, EN MASSE and there to be
just absolutely nothing from the 3rd Reich on sale just makes you feel
you have landed in one of those strange alternate realities that is
different from what you thought you knew or remembered.
Also, with so many antique stalls, the temporal gap in the wares is
astonishing. This also holds true for the many antique shops in Berlin
as well.
As it was, I purchased something not German at all - I
found two Indian messenger tubes which I really liked and after a bit of
haggling, got both for 40 euros. Bargain!
Out & About In Berlin
When you are in Berlin, how do you know you are in the previous East
part? Simple. Look on the roads for tram lines!
In the West, the trams were deleted in the 1970s when petrol was cheaper
than air as was done in most major cities around that time; in the East,
the trams remained and now are once again, quite competitive as a way of
ferrying people around. We travelled around freely and
bought tickets every so often; I don't know if we bought the right
tickets, or if we should have bought more but in all the time we moved
about Berlin on the underground, city trains and the tram, I never saw
one single conductor, not one person who checked anything anywhere, not
a porter or railway official, and there were no turnstiles or automatic
ticket collecting machines whatsoever. The tour guide
told us that Berlin was 80 billion euros in the red. Which is twice as
much as the debt of all of California. Not bad for a single city of just
three million inhabitants. I bet they lose a mint on their multifarious
public transport systems, too.
We found an Irish pub in the Hackisher Markt. It is funny. Wherever you
go, even on the moon, so I'm told, there is an Irish pub. Good! A nice
oasis in a square world ... :-)
Unter Den Linden
Brandenburger Gate At Night
Potsdamer Platz
We found a traditional German fairground. Steve also went into the spook
house and on the roller coaster; unfortunately he whizzed by too fast
for the photo to have worked out!
One of my three main personal EmoTrance experiences took place here on
this Ferris Wheel. I don't know quite how long it's been since I've been
on one of these, or I might never have been - they are free swinging
gondolas with benches and no safety harness, good old fashioned, and
turn in all directions as well through the central post. I got really
frightened at the top and ended up clinging to the central post, which
in turn made Steve more than nervous. But I managed to get it under
control with a good bit of ET. Now that's a situation where ET scores
over EFT, because at the time, I really couldn't let go off the central
post and would not have had any fingers with which to tap!
A random image I asked Steve to take for my amusement - that man has got
a sausage roasting stomach shop! One euro per sausage. Does it get hot,
I wonder?!
Berlin Zoo
What do you do on a Sunday in Germany? Well, you go to the zoo.
Berlin zoo occupies a very old and traditional site, very prettily
landscaped, and located not far from the city center.
Here are some pictures.
The fish who looks like I felt on the day
The flat tiger.
Upon seeing this, I exclaimed, "Oi! What is this! I
was promised three dimensional animals in the zoo brochure - and this
tiger is FLAT!"
The hairy thing
Silvia attempting to ride a hippo
Steve not attempting to ride the hippo
A lone meerkat (Steve was looking forward to those but only one showed
its snout on the day)
Feeding the sheep - obligatory, absolutely.
Flamingoes most likely wondering why the hell it is so cold ... again
...
Hey! A real panda!
Steve stroking a fish :-) Apparently, " ...it was slimy, mummy!"
Last night (candlelit dinner of locally bought foods) at NH Berlin Mitte
... and a final picture after breakfast before getting ready for the
airport!
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