Monday, May 31, 2010

Berlin's Troublesome Past and Interesting Present

Berlin is a strange city. It is geographically huge (built for 7 million people) but population size, it's pretty small (about 3.5 million) and has a really high unemployment rate. The city itself is interesting, too.

Obviously, it has had a conflicted past - it was the capital of Prussia, the German Empire, the Weimar Republic, and the Third Reich, then was divided after WWII. With a past full of conflicts, Berlin has been rebuilt many times. One of the days, my friends and I did a walking tour of East Berlin (the side that was under Soviet control 1949-1989).

We saw the Jewish Memorial, which is something a little bit strange. It's this lot the size of a city block that has kind of rolling ground with rectangular structures of varying heights. The designer said specifically that there is no interpretation of it, just experience. And it's right in the middle of the city, so you can't be in the city without seeing it. Originally, the memorial was going to be a bus that people could take to see one of the concentration camps outside of Berlin, but it was decided that that would allow people who wanted to forget the past to forget it, but something large and immovable puts it out there.

We saw the largest portion of the wall that remains in Berlin, and we went to the Topography of Terror museum, which gives an in depth history and timeline of Nazi-era Berlin. It was a really well put together museum. It included quotations from historians and people involved in Nazi-era Berlin, as well as copies of documents and letters and things from the men who were in the top tiers of the Nazi party. The museum is literally cast in shadow by part of the wall, so it was like a literal reminder of some of the effects of WWII and the Nazi regime.

It was cool to see the painted sentiments that are still up on the wall. It really makes you think about the fact that families and friends were literally separated from each other, pretty much overnight.

1 comment:

  1. i'm really glad you had a chance to get to berlin. it's important for people to see and remember history as to be reminded to think for the future everyday and not settle for overpowering regimes, be they governments or corporations.

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