Nee and I haven't really stopped moving in 10 days. When we have stopped moving, we fall asleep. I've decided to compress Berlin down into the following picture-and-caption story. It's not what I had in mind, but now that it's done, I think it wafts a redolence of our days in Berlin nicely.
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In front of the Konzerthaus, where we were intending to see a concert as part of Das Fest, a several day city wide festival of music, arts, and culture. Tickets were sold out so we changed plans around a little and went to Potsdam for a day trip instead (more on that in another post). |
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After getting off the U-bahn, we saw the Gendarmenmarkt and looked around for a bit (this is where we discovered the Konzerthaus). We were on the way to the Jewish Museum, which was a 20 minute walk down Fredrichstrasse, past Checkpoint Charlie (above) and lots of oh so Communist chain stores (and tourists!). One of the weirder and cooler things about Berlin is that at one point you're in West Berlin, and then you're in East Berlin (the traffic signals are different, depending, and that's how you really know), and then you're back in West Berlin, etc. |
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Left: The Jewish Museum in all its disorienting and strange beauty.
Right: From one of the exhibits at the Jewish Museum. Each face
represents one of the "forgotten" Jews of Berlin during the rise
of the Nazis. The interior architecture of the museum is meant to suggest the
disorientation and insecurity of Jews in Germany leading up WWII. Off-kilter
paths leading to dead ends with objects from the life of Berlin Jews on display
along the way, and different "axes" of transit, each representing a
different phase of European Jewish history, culminating at the top of a long
flight of stairs in the Middle Ages.
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Kathrin works at a very popular waffle joint called Kauf Dich Glucklich in hip Prenzlauer Berg, the Silver Lake/Echo Park of Berlin (in that it's now full of hip parents and trendy spots). Here's me eating real ice cream! And real waffles with real eggs in them! It was delicious, until about 3/4 of the way through, and then I hit the sugar-dairy wall. And there were LOTS of kids in there. So we ausfahrted (my own personal German slang for "blew that popsicle stand"). We then walked to an outdoor exhibit of remnants of the Wall. Waffles and the Wall. Good times! |
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The next day, Shenee and I visited the DDR Museum. It was laid out with really funky and creative displays and dioramas reflecting common items and scenes in Soviet East Germany. The highlight was the Trabi--a real Trabant, the DDR's answer to the compact cars of the west, on display for visitors to sit in and investigate. Shenee took a great picture of me in it on the first try (note the traffic signal in the background--these are still in use in the sections of Berlin that were formerly in the DDR). In order for me to get a good one of Shenee (without weird reflections on the windshield or lingering kids in the frame), we had to return three times. It was very trying. We felt like real East Germans. If real East Germans felt like herded tourists. Aside from the Trabi, we really enjoyed the mock up of a 70s-era DDR living room and bathroom, with real rotary phones and flushable toilets. The whole thing was kitsch in the very best way. |
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A good adopted Texan never leaves home without his trusty koozie. This
was my last beer of the night at Pony Bar Berlin, a smoky joint in (I think)
Prenzlauer Berg. We had intended to go to a jazz bar but it was PACKED, and
stank of gym socks. The jazz band, which we could see in the window from the
sidewalk, was solid, with a female bassist and drummer (the latter wore a 50/50
cap cocked sideways and wore Chuck Taylors and had a very odd, almost Mitch
Mitchell-esque style. At Pony Bar, we got to know some of Kathrin's friends
better. One, Rusty, is from Tennessee and is a writer--we had some great
conversations about the craft of writing and literature in general. His wife,
Paloma, just got a job as a translator for the UN (she's from Madrid).
They are now waiting to find out which country they'll be sent to--NY,
Santiago, Chile, Nairobi, and two others I forget. Very interesting, smart
folks. |
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On Thursday we visited the Memorial for the Murdered Jews of Europe (aka
the Holocaust Memorial) near the Tiergarten and the Brandenburg Gate.
It consists of concrete plinths of various heights spaced in long rows in a
kind of maze-like grid pattern across the plaza. The floor beneath you
undulates as you walk up and down the rows. Like the Jewish Museum, the effect
is to be intentionally disorienting, to mirror or suggest the experience of
being Jewish at this terrifying period of European history. Oddly, but I think
sweetly too, many people, young and old, slip into play mode while here, hiding
from each other behind the blocks and giggling as they search for their friends
and family. It's like an inversion of the 1930s and 40s where losing track of
one's friends and family had much more sinister implications. Shenee and I
walked more sedately through the memorial, although we did climb on top of some
of the lower ones and hop from plinth to plinth (which is how I got the view of
the memorial on the right. On the left, I'm combining Biblical Jewish history
and 20th century history by performing as Samson holding up the pillar of the
temple. Actually, I'm just being "cool." |
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After the memorial, we checked out the Brandenburger Tor (Br. Gate),
which was impressive but touristy. We hoped to find a bike rental place there,
but it's hard when everywhere you look you see bikes. How do you spot a tree in
a forest, especially when all the trees are zipping and zooming around you? We
walked for a few blocks before finding one off the main drag. It was actually a
souvenir shop run by Vietnamese, whom Shenee used as an opportunity to show off
her language skills (which, alas, in Vietnamese are much abated). They were
duly impressed (but didn't give us a discount, to my chagrin). With our trusty 21 speeds, we toured the Tiergarten and rode back to Schwanzes Cafe for some
refreshment. |
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That night we went to The Bird, a hip "New York style" burger
joint in (of course) Prenzlauer Berg owned by Americans--or if not owned by exactly, then pretty much run by American servers and bartenders. When Shenee and I ordered the veggie burger, our scruffy bro of a waiter sniped "you're in the wrong place" and then rolled his eyes and made and all but silent "ppfff" sound of dismissal when we said no to cheese. All part of the act of being "New York style" apparently, and we took it as such. They were actually all pretty nice and swift and the food was really good, especially the fresh cut fries. Aside from the mayonaisse being automatically served with french fries, I'd say this place is pretty authentically (hipster) American, right down to the ironic rudeness. On the right is a pretty good example of the 'tude of the place, but also typically Berliner.
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So that's it for now. I started writing this blog entry in Amsterdam three days ago, and now we're in Paris sitting in our fourth floor walk up in Montmartre. God we love this place. More on that to come (I hope).
1 comment:
I wonder that Shakespeare in a photo array with subheadings wouldn't be almost as sweet? Nah, no way.
Loved the photos and the subheadings --poetic in their own way b/c a picture of you and Shenee enjoying yourselves is worth > 1000 words.
Mitch Mitchellesque bassist made me smile - gym socks on the autre hand...not so much...
Nee using her Vietnamese language skills must have raised the shop owners' eyebrows a bit - a funny image - and no discount is no surprise.
Can't wait to hear more and see more when y'all return to Kullifornia. Just a heads up - there is a tropical storm south of Baja and the humidity and possible rainfall is headed northward - SD will feel like Miami by Sunday or Monday - LA a bit less.(courtesy of Pops, your Weather watcher)
Have a safe trip back!
love,
moi
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