The top of Potsdamer Platz's highest tower glows green in Berlin's chilly night air. This photo embodies a few components of Berlin's psyche: architectural beauty and art, the contrast between the old and the new, and a keen drive toward the future (U-Bahn station, Berlin, Germany)
But before I go any further, I want to mention that the German language threw me for a bit of a loop when I arrived. There are some reallyreallyreallylongwords in German (Hauptbahnhof for instance) which are a little hard to remember. It took a little while before I started recognizing that these reallylongwords are composed of separate, smaller words. For instance Hauptbahnhof is really three words: haupt+bahn+hof (which mean respectively, Main+Rail+yard). Once I realized this, getting around got a bit simpler.
Through an amazing coincidence of good luck, my friends Martin and Claudia (who I met in Peru) were waiting on the platform IMMEDIATELY OUTSIDE OF MY train car's door! They had no idea my car number or seat number, and I had no idea where they'd be. I literally tumbled off the train and into their arms! Cool welcome!
We said our greetings and caught up while on our way to their home in the former East Berlin. If you ever get the opportunity to meet Martin & Claudia, don't pass it up.
Their apartment in the former East Germany was wonderful. Behind this beautifully framed carved wooden door was a spacious, spotless, and cozy home: high molded ceilings, bright sunlight streaming in through big windows onto wooden and cork floors, and something delicious always making heady scents in some stage of preparation on the stovetop in the kitchen. Martin--as I knew before I came--is an amazing cook. (Outside the apartment, East Berlin, Germany)
Although they both were fully employed, Martin and Claudia, individually and collectively, took me around the city to see many of the city's amazing sites.
Kaiser Wilhelm memorial Church, at the end of Kurfürstendamm (Boulevard of the Electors) aka "Ku-Damm" shopping street. It was bombed on November 23, 1943. It is crumbling, but is kept as a rememberence of the havoc of war. On the near left, glowing blue through small panes, is the new church (West Berlin, Germany)
Looking toward the roof of Potsdamer Platz (Berlin, Germany)
During the holidays, Berlin puts on a light show. The Berlin Cathedral was lit with blue light on the top and a laser painted the green dots all over. I initially didn't like it, but as I kept looking, it grew on me more and more. It is a combination of a very old cathedral, and very modern lighting. A very cool effect (Berlin, Germany)
This is an overhead "map" of Sachsenhausen and the surrounding area. Orianenburg was the operation center of all concentration camps and Sachsenhausen served as a training facility for officers sent to command other concentration camps. The triangular section in the center is where all those interred were kept. The triangular shape was intended to provide extra security: a guard with a rifle in the central tower could shoot anyone at any point inside.
Sachsenhausen was intended to be a holding facility but not an extermination camp.
"Work will set you free" Entrance gate to the concentration camp (Sachsenhausen, Berlin, Germany)
Prisoners entering the "Neutrale Zone" would be shot without warning by the camp's soldiers. Beyond the gravel area is razor wire and a lethal electric fence. (Sachsenhausen, Orianenburg, Germany)
In Germany they first came for the Communists,
and I didn't speak up
because I wasn't a Communist.
Then they came for the socialists,
and I didn't speak up
because I wasn't a socialist.
Then they came for the unionists,
and I didn't speak up
because I wasn't a unionist.
Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak up
because I wasn't a Jew.
Then they came for me — and by that time
no one was left to speak up.
—Pastor Martin Niemoeller
As Claudia and I walked the grounds, I felt a reverence at the gravity of this place and the sting of its history. And as I tightened my scarf against the cold wind, I wondered to myself... "Who WERE these people and how could they be so cruel?"
And the answer came to me shortly thereafter. And it scared me. Hitler did not act independently in carrying out the holocaust. He convinced a large number of otherwise SANE people that what he was doing was right.
And the answer came to me shortly thereafter. And it scared me. Hitler did not act independently in carrying out the holocaust. He convinced a large number of otherwise SANE people that what he was doing was right.
It could have been ME.
And I wondered... I look Aryan enough that I would not have been in danger based on my appearance or my religion. How would I have felt when told I should join the SS? Would I have considered it an honor to "serve my country"?
How did Hitler do it? The same way it's done today:
And I wondered... I look Aryan enough that I would not have been in danger based on my appearance or my religion. How would I have felt when told I should join the SS? Would I have considered it an honor to "serve my country"?
How did Hitler do it? The same way it's done today:
- Have charisma
- Reward those who follow you
- Vilify/punish/kill those who do not follow you
- Discourage independent thinking
- Start small, build incrementally
- Preach that you are a superior people
- Preach that the minority you wish to oppress is inferior (and that depriving rights to them is analogous to denying the right to eat at the dinner table to a dog)
- Continue upping the ante (restrict them: take away more rights: deny them the right of privacy... disallow them from leaving the country)
SS Troupe barracks (Sachsenhousen, Orianenburg, Germany)
My chill from the day ran deep
(Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, Berlin, Germany)
(Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, Berlin, Germany)
Germany is a dynamic place and has made many changes throughout the years. This is the marker for the Berlin Wall, which once separated East and West Berlin. It reads, "Berlin Wall 1961-1989" (Berlin, Germany)
Across the city, where the former wall stood is now this stone marker. In this picture, it can be seen across the sidewalk, the bike path, and the street. This is one more historical reminder of how much things have changed in Germany [The rectangular metal tile in the middle of the grey sidewalk is the same shown in the blow-up above] (Where East Meets West, Berlin, Germany)
Claudia is from East Berlin, and on a day out riding bikes and exploring, we came across a retro/antique shop. Inside were these very cool plastic plates, cups, saucers, etc. To me, they looked almost like a play-set. Claudia told me that these were the cups, saucers, and plates that EVERYONE had in East Berlin when she was growing up. Plastic was all that was available, and all meals, from casual to formal, were served on only these (Antique shop, Berlin, Germany)
This picture is cool because it shows one of the great ideas I saw in Berlin and also in Barcelona: Rental bicycles. Martin and Claudia had two bikes, and there were three of us, so I am holding onto my rental bike. It felt quite sturdy, was well-maintained, and it had a scooped tail end. Note the performer making bubbles in the background with two wands. (Berlin, Germany)
On our bike tour around the city, we stopped for coffee down a graffiti/art filled alley (Berlin, Germany)
Graffiti Artwork (Down an alley in Berlin, Germany)
Graffiti Artwork (Down an alley in Berlin, Germany)
The German state is serious about art: it employs artists to work on projects around the city. In the alley coffee shop, this kinetic sculpture delighted me (Down an alley in Berlin, Germany)
On one of my final nights in Berlin. We headed to a great wine bar and met up with some friends of Martin & Claudia. Some of them were also fluent in Spanish, German, and English. I am always impressed by their ability to seamlessly flow into another language. Most of the time they spoke in English (even to one another) out of consideration to me (Berlin, Germany)
Although I could hardly repay their kindness with a single dinner, I took Martin and Claudia out to eat on our final night together. Here we share our final toast. Thank you guys!!! (Berlin, Germany)
One of my final memories of Berlin (yes, I have a taste for the absurd). This lady is taking her favorite plant on a trip somewhere (To the Airport! Berlin, Germany)
At the airport, I checked in to my AirBerlin/LTU flight (connecting in Frankfurt). I had a hard time finding the gate, then they gave me a hard time and swabbed my breathing machine (YAY! LAST TIME I HAVE TO DEAL WITH THAT!!!!), and I waited.
And after transferring in Frankfurt, I knew, as I walked through the threshold and down the tube toward the airplane door, that the next soil I would put foot on was American.
I was going home. Home. Yes--home. For the first time in over a year, I was going home. During my trip, I was so busy getting from place to place, dealing with daily shock/horror/delight and being "in the moment" that I frankly hadn't thought much about being home. And my emotions started to burble forth from out from the depths.
We landed.
At the airport (and even now as I recall the event), when I got to passport control, the agent stamped my passport and said, "Welcome home"... Never before had two words impacted me so significantly: I cried.
It is an amazing thing to be an American. America is such a tremendous country. It has flaws--many of them--but compared to most other countries I have seen, the United States has a lot of things going right that so many others do not.
And the chance to do what I had just done--travel around the world--is a chance 99% of the world will never have. Most people living in third-world nations couldn't even conceive of the idea, much less achieve it.
To be sure--I worked hard and saved for many years to do what I did--but I recognize the fact that I was born in America as one of those significant factors that allowed me to have these experiences.
I know I am a lucky man.
When I left the country over a year ago, I spent one day with family in Los Angeles. I book-ended my trip by finishing where I'd started: in the place of my birth. I landed in Los Angeles, where I was greeted by my father and Lillian. Here Lil and I make my first breakfast back on American soil: Matzo and eggs! YUM! (Los Angeles, California, United States of America)
Ding! And with that--it's done: Monika met me at the Phoenix airport with a smile and a bouquet of flowers. [The last time I was in this airport was over a year ago when my brother dropped me off to depart on my trip. I had to call him to return to the airport because my sleep-deprived mind had forgotten my passport on the car seat.] (Home: Phoenix, Arizona)
When I arrived back to Phoenix, something very big and significant was over. Scooter v2.0 was done.
I have done things and had experiences that few ever have, or ever will. The person I AM--is not the same. It will take me years to sort it all out completely. I still feel a little numb--I know I haven't yet felt the full depth or breadth of what I have just completed.
But for now, it would be time to re-connect with family and friends, enjoy the holidays, and engage in the final part of my sabbatical.
It is time to collect my thoughts, draw some preliminary conclusions, and begin work on my next big project: creating Scooter v3.0.
Posted: 2009 Jan 29