Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Ich bin ein Berliner



Oh, Berlin. We got back Monday morning from our long weekend in Berlin. We had an absolute blast!

This photo is taken from the roof of the Reichstag, which is the German Parliament building. This building is where the European portion of WWII ended. After the war, it was substantially changed, and this dome was added a few years back. The dome serves as a reminder that government should be transparent.

It was a nice break away from Paris in the height of tourist season. We stayed in a nice quiet area of Berlin, Savigny Platz. Our hotel room overlooked the square, we were right over a few sidewalk cafes. I think we hit the timing just right. We waited until Berlin recovered from it's bout of WorldCup fever, and the city was deserted. We waited in 2 lines during our 4 days there, both of them under 10 minutes!

We did some major museum hopping, the 3 day Museum Pass made it really easy to hit a lot of them:


  1. Museum of Arts and Materials - fun Art Nouveau glass
  2. Pergamon Museum- fantastic Pergamon marbles, and Babylonian gate
  3. Egyptian Museum - bust of Nefretiti is why its famous, but the rest of it was outstanding as well
  4. Art Deco / Art Nouveau museum - fantastic Zsolnay ceramic collection and extensive metalworks collection
  5. Picasso museum- too many plastic surgeon nightmares for me. Sarah loved it.
  6. Musical Instruments museum- walking canes that turned into mini violins, pianos in every way, shape and form.
  7. Gemaldegalerie - mind blowing Northern European painting collection

We also walked down Unter den Linden, formerly East Berlin gone totally Western capitalist (yes, you can see a Starbucks from the Brandenburg Gate). We visited Checkpoint Charlie, and the overpriced museum there, which shows you the different escape methods of escaping East Germany. And we went shopping on Ku'damm, we found German styles, sizes and prices to be much more to our liking than Paris!

We were totally emotionally drained after the new Holocaust memorial. Sometimes you happen on something unexpected, and it really blows your socks off. The top of the memorial is over 2000 cement blocks covering a city block . They are roughly coffin sized, but they are between 2-10 feet tall. You wander down in them and they tower over you. There was an exhibit you could tour which told the stories of victims, and really made you realize that they were individual humans. It also did a bit of shocking you with sheer numbers and scary photos. It made me afraid for the human race to think that people did that. I'm not Jewish, but I left crying. Don't worry, I did manage to recover.

We also managed to make some new friends in Berlin, one of them is a professor at UT, his German girlfriend who lives in Berlin, and also an art teacher from California. The Berliner took us to a biergarten in the neighborhood, which we enjoyed a lot. We also found a great asian fusion restaurant that had fantastic sushi rolls.

And as if this wasn't good enough, everything was *much* cheaper than Paris, which made it even easier to enjoy. Sarah's Birkenstocks were 18 euros, beer was half the price it is in Paris, and our hotel was 51 euros a night. sweeeeet.

We'll definitely come back to Berlin.

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