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Industriekultur

On November 8, day 2 of the celebrations for the 25th anniversary of the fall of the wall, I did the unthinkable - took a break from Berlin Wall-related sightseeing! It wasn't by choice - my Cultural Orientation in Berlin course was meeting in the eastern part of the city to learn about Berlin's industrial past.

We learned that in the 19th century, Berlin was actually a heavily industrialized city, and was known for being an industrial center to an even greater extent than the famous Ruhr Valley. We set out to see some traces of this history.


A sunny but cold day... good enough for a walk in the park
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Speaking of the Wall... Day 1

It's perfect that my latest post was about the Berlin Wall: two weekends ago, all of Berlin partied like it was 1989 - it was the 25th anniversary of the day the wall fell! The occasion was marked with a neat art project that made for some fantastic photos, so I had a great time.

Before we get there, though, some updates. I've been super busy, as usual! It's the time of year when I'm trying to compile internship applications but also trying to get some projects for my university courses out of the way. About that - my German has officially progressed to the point where I am contributing to class in front of other German political science students! Very exciting. 

Just today, in fact, I completed a group project in a public policy analysis course in which I had to moderate a half-hour discussion with 8 other students. The subject? Germany's Altersvermögensergänzungsgesetz. In other words, reforms of Germany's pension system. Yes, even just the name was complicated. But I managed! Just 3 months ago, there was no way I could have imagined that I would ever be able to lead a discussion in German about Germany's complex retirement system.

I also took a trip to Prague last weekend, so now this blog is officially behind the times again. Time to start catching up!

Friday, November 7 marked the beginning of Berlin's Mauerfall (fall of the wall) celebrations and was the first night that the big art project commemorating the wall went up. The art project was.... the Lightgrenze! That means "Border of Light," essentially. A "symbolic frontier of lights," the Lichtgrenze consisted of thousands of illuminated balloons that lined much of the Berlin Wall's former path through the central parts of the city. The moment I heard about the art project, I knew it would make for some great pictures. So Friday I soldiered out into the cold, headed straight for the epicenter of it all, and started shooting.


The balloons remind of us of the magnitude and location of the Berlin Wall. Way in the background on the left, illuminated in purple light, is the Brandenburg Gate

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It's All About the Wall

To wrap up our most recent weekend, I suggested going to the Berlin Wall Memorial, which I had read was one of Berlin's most highly recommended attractions. Plus, it's mostly outdoors, and the weather was once again awesome. So to the Berlin Wall Memorial we went! 

If you are getting the impression that a lot of the tourist attractions in Berlin have to do with the Berlin Wall and the division of Berlin, I would agree with you. Sometimes I wonder what all the tourists would look at if there were never a Berlin Wall! Berlin was a small city all the way through the middle ages and into the 18th and 19th centuries, so there are not many significant sights left over from that period of time. Instead, most of the historical landmarks in Berlin have to do with that much more recent period of history during which Berlin was split in two. As such, between all the information about the wall I've been reading and experiencing  lately, I consider myself a Berlin Wall armchair expert. So get ready for some fascinating facts!

The 96-mile-long Berlin Wall was built nearly overnight in 1961 when the East German government wanted to stem the flow of East German citizens fleeing into the West. A total of 2.7 million refugees had successfully escaped from 1949 to just before the wall was built. A mere 2 months before the first barricades went up, the East German government denounced rumors of a wall by announcing, "No one has the intention of erecting a wall!" But as we all know, a wall was indeed soon thereafter erected. As time went on, the East German government continually upgraded the fortifications. At first, the wall was relatively small and in some places consisted of just barbed wire. When you hear "Berlin Wall" and picture the tall, graffiti-ed, concrete wall you'll see in pictures below, you're thinking of a wall that was only built in 1980.

Did you know the fall of the wall was an accident? In 1989, the year the wall fell, East German premier Erich Honecker proclaimed the wall would stand for another 50 or 100 years. But soon, cracks in the East German regime began appearing. Hungary and Czechoslovakia opened their borders, allowing East Germans to pour out. Protests within East Germany broke out, most notably in Leipzig. The East German government tried to quell the demonstrations by announcing looser private travel regulations for East Germans that would slowly and gradually allow for some crossings through Berlin Wall checkpoints. 

East German government spokesman Günter Schabowski announced these new gradual measures on November 9 with a press conference, although he was unfamiliar with the details of the new regulations and unaware that the prepared statement he was reciting was making it sound to the world as though East Germans would be able to cross straight into West Berlin without restriction. When he finished his statement and the shocked journalists asked when the crossings could begin, he shrugged and guessed "unverzüglich" - immediately. When the press conference aired on the nightly news, East Germans took it to mean that the border crossings to West Berlin were open and appeared en masse at the wall's checkpoints. The overwhelmed border guards were also unfamiliar with the new regulations and unable to hold back the enormous crowds that had gathered. They simply opened the checkpoints, and East Germans streamed through and met equally ecstatic West Germans, who were waiting with champagne and flowers. The peaceful revolution was complete.

The wall disappeared fairly quickly from the cityscape, even before the official date of German reunification on October 3, 1990. Today, only 3 major sites still have the original wall standing in its original place, and the Berlin Wall memorial is one of them (I blogged about another here). Even in these places, the wall has been heavily damaged by wall-pecking tourists. If you want to take a piece of the wall home with you, simply head to the nearest tourist shop - nearly every tourist outlet has a pile of small concrete pebbles with a smattering of paint that are claimed to be part of the original wall. While there are plenty of legitimate, full-size sections of wall left over (including full-size sections available for sale), I don't trust those pebbles one bit.

And now, to the pictures!

The Berlin Wall Memorial, with poles marking the former path of the wall. It's hard to believe that this peaceful stretch of grass used to be heavily guarded
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Schloss Charlottenburg




Last Saturday, Berlin was miraculously blessed with awesome weather for what will probably prove to be one of the last times for the next 4 or 5 months. I knew it was time to head out and grab some sweet shots.

Destination of the day: Charlottenburg Palace, first built from 1695-1713 as a summer residence for the Prussian Queen, Sophie Charlotte. As far as palaces and castles go in the city of Berlin, this is the only major one. 


One can still find the symbol of the Prussian empire, an eagle

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Chasing History

Last week started just like every other week for the next few months will - a meeting with my tandem partner! Tandem partners are a great way to practice your speaking skills. You simply find someone whose mother language is the language you want to practice, and who wants to practice your mother language. Then you meet once a week and speak for an hour in one language and an hour in another. I successfully found a super nice German tandem partner, so I'm ready for my German skills to go through the roof! She already has perfect English, of course. Looks like the language help will be flowing in one direction in this relationship.

Last Friday, as Americans know, was Halloween. I almost forgot that was a holiday since it is not really celebrated here, at least to the extent in the U.S. One does not see Halloween decorations in the stores or on the facades of houses and apartments. Germans are actually somewhat skeptical of Halloween merchandise, since they see (probably correctly) any attempt to import holidays like Halloween as a way for companies to make more money of unwitting customers. 

But nevertheless, turns out the young German generation here knows full well what Halloween is and is willing to celebrate. My younger host brother went off to a Halloween house party with friends, and I heard other Americans' host siblings went trick-or-treating in residential neighborhoods. Additionally, advertisements for Halloween-themed parties suddenly popped up. We Americans went bar-hopping with some other American program alumni who were in Berlin and saw a decent amount of other costumed party-goers. So to an extent, Halloween definitely has taken root here.

I started out that weekend by following a walking tour (mapped out by none other than Rick Steves, of course) that passed through some of the significant East German and Nazi historical sites in Berlin. 


The weather was absolutely perfect, so I stopped to take some pictures in Viktoriapark first
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Pfaueninsel

Back with more updates! Lots is going on, as usual. Since my last post, two additional courses have started up - handball and German! 

Handball is one of two sports classes I'll be taking this semester (the other is ultimate frisbee, which starts this week). While the sport is pretty much nonexistent in the U.S., lots of Germans are either handball fans or players, including one of my host brothers. I had no idea what handball consisted of before I took the course, so I had to head to YouTube for some demonstrative clips. Check it out! It's a fast-paced combination of basketball and soccer. So far I've taken to it pretty well, scoring a few goals each week during our scrimmages.

Second, I'm taking another German speaking course to further develop my skills. German class has been a great way to get to know even more international students from countries like the Czech Republic, Poland, Korea, Italy, Switzerland, France, and, of course, the U.S. - there are two other Americans in my class, one of whom is from California as well. But you won't catch us speaking English to one another!

On Friday, October 24, our German class split into groups and went out all over Berlin to check out different destinations and report back what we saw. My group headed to Pfaueninsel (translation: Peacock Island), a small island on the outskirts of Berlin with lots of nature and, as the name suggests, peacocks.


The island's gardens were designed in the early 1800s, but the island's history goes back farther than that

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