Berlin     Last Updated: 27-Jun-03

Every day should start off with a good breakfast, and our hotel, the Honigmond, fit the bill.

Honigmond hotel & Restaurant  Coffee (bottomless cup!), salami & cheese, scrambled eggs, rolls  Orange juice, muesli with fruit salad, hard-boiled egg, ham, pickles, cheese 

Next day, Josef's strudel & coffee 

The hotel had been suggested by Ed Ward, an American journalist who has lived in Berlin for many years. Ed, an expert Jazz critic, writes for many publications, also writes album liner notes, and is a guest correspondent for Terry Gross' Fresh Air on NPR, offered to take us on his 3-hour walking tour around Berlin. Of course, we managed to stretch it to more than 5 hours, not counting the beverage breaks. We are not worthy to capture the range of detail which he described, although we can hopefully reflect a small part of the cynicism and humor.

Ed Ward and Scott 

Most of the tour took place in the old East Berlin, and many remnants remain, including pieces of the Berlin Wall, marked paths of the wall, and a stark (in the English sense, not the German one) memorial. There is a Wall museum (which we did not visit), and, of course, the museum at Checkpoint Charlie (which we had visited on previous trips).

One of many sites of the wall    Site of the first death by an attempted escapee - Ernst Mundt on 4-Sep-1962 

Wall monument 

Museum  Roswitha gets a new perspective 

Ed's tour took us through numerous sites of Jewish history in Berlin. Before WWII, Berlin had a significant Jewish population, and there are numerous sites associated with this, both positive and negative. Reform Judaism was founded here by Moses Mendelssohn, and his grave is near monuments and a school he founded as well. A major synagogue was saved from the Kristalnacht violence (9-Nov-1938) which hit many Jewish institutions and individuals throughout Germany and Austria, but was destroyed by bombing during the war (1943), and was reconstructed. Like many Jewish facilities in Germany today, it has significant police protection. Various atrocities of the war and Holocaust are commemorated through plaques and sculpture scattered around the city, including the abduction of individuals and burning of books. The latter is a large underground library, visible only through a small glass window in the middle of the square. The shelves are empty.

Grave of Moses Mendelssohn 

Berlin Synagogue  Plaque commemorating salvation from Kristalnacht and bombing  Wilhelm Kruetzfeld was a commissioner who helped to save the synagogue 

Bronze memorial to those abducted from their homes 
Memorial - a missing building, with names of the families who lived in each flat    Scattered around Berlin - names and abduction dates, at the places where they lived 

Commemoration of the Nazi student book burning at this Unter den Linden square on 10-May-1933 

Old East Berlin had one type of Walk/Don't Walk signals, and West Berlin had another. Both are still in use, and there is a significant effort to preserve the East Berlin signals; one can even find them on posters, postcards, and stickers.

East  East      West  West 

Speaking of endangered species, many elements of Communist Berlin are under assault. Some have been removed, and some are under the gun. There has even been debate about the removal of a prominent symbol of East Berlin, the radio tower on Alexanderplatz.

The Alexandertower    Tower and etched metal monuments showing 'Communism is for me!' 

New communist structures may not survive old icons 

Marx, Engels, Ashkenaz  Communism has shown its cracks 

Grafitti coats much of Berlin, and there are a number of artists whose work is quite recognizable. Ed has followed up on several of them, and told us a little of their stories.

A grafitti artist caught in the act  Ed and a piece from a paper Grafittist 

One guy, the Bananen Sprayer, uses his grafitti as commentary on the Berlin art scene. If a gallery is worthy, we will award them a banana at their doorway. (We did see a few cases where he had gone back and crossed them out.) A relatively new hotel which commissioned a different local artist to do each room, and which tries to be very ecologically sound, got a special version of the banana. The hotel is across the street from a building famous within Japan (reflected in the window in the photo below) - Mori Ogai lived here in 1887 and 1888; he translated several well-known German works, including Faust, and is said to have invented modern Japanese literature.

A good gallery  Art hotel  Banana Dove  Mori Ogai house 

Graffitti is not the only art. Many galleries flourish, and there is much public art, both old and new. While much of the old architecture was destroyed, some has been reconstructed, and much is new (although not all of it is good...).

Dead chickens studio  DC's kinetic frog - insert one Euro 

  New gallery and living 

Museum Insel  Detail of bridge to Museum Insel 

One of two almost identical buildings 

Reichstag with new dome  Reichstag 

  Gothic spire   
  Angels and bullet holes  A keystone 

Berlin's buildings often surround inner yards, or Höfe. They can be delightful or hideous. A series of well-known connected Höfe have been renovated (along with their surrounding buildings) to make stores, restaurants, and art spaces. Sadly, the weak economy has resulted in problems for many of the businesses. In one of the Höfe, at a bicycle rental place, we found a conference cycle, designed to let eight people to go biking together while having a meeting.

Oxymoron at the Hof  Conference cycle 

Berlin has long been a center of culture and learning, and has produced many significant artists, writers, and its share of Nobel Prize winners. Ed's tour included some graves which he had recently discovered.

Berlin University Physics Institute Nobel Prize Winners 

Playwright Berthold Brecht and his wife  Composer Paul Dessau 

Of course, no tour can be complete without appropriate food. Ed is also a foodie, with claimed skills in BBQ - at least he had found a car license plate to attest to it. Sadly, it was not on his car, just one in the street. Still, we were impressed.

Follow that car! 

We did not eat here.

What could this be?    Big Hamburger Street 

The first night, we ate with Ed at a typical Berliner restaurant (Gambrinus), and the next we went to one of his favorite pizza joints (along with a huge group of loud students).

Soup, sweet malt beverage  Liver with apples, onions; Holsteinschnitzel w/egg, potato, fish, salad, pilsner 

Insalate misto  Truffle oil pizza!  Ravioli 

This short stay in Berlin was enriched by our time with Ed. We appreciate the sharing of his time (no doubt more than planned), his knowledge (great because of its cynical twist), and his humor. We learned and saw much that we would not have seen otherwise. Danke!

Sans Souci is a huge palace complex and park which lies to the Southwest of Berlin, in Pottsdam. The main palace and gardens are built in the French style.

  Sans Souci   

Grand staircase 
Fig trees on each level 
Sans Souci 

Lunch! (Grillhendl and bratwurst) 

The very bizarre Chinese Pavillion  Chinese figure  Chinese figures 

   

Time for a rest... 

 

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