Berlin and London, August.
I'm much better and so glad not to be focusing on the stupid ankle any more. Since my last post I've been to Berlin with T and young S,and it was fun, even in temperatures of 37 deg (around 99F). On the first day we went right up in to the dome of the Reichstag Building where the internal temperature was hitting 40 degrees - 104F. The police (I was told) would have stepped in and closed the dome if it had got just a bit hotter. But, they didn't, and we survived without heatstroke. The central core of the dome is all mirrors and windows - dizzying and wonderful. This picture is taken from the bottom, looking up to the top of the dome.
As you walk round and round, slowly climbing higher, you get panoramic views over Berlin.
This is the Tiergarten park from the roof on which the dome stands, but as you see, we did go higher.
Online brochures exist with detailed info on this complex, symbolic and interesting group of buildings. But to stick to the Reichstag Building, it was built in the 1890s on the site of a palace belonging to someone called Count Raczynski (poor fellow, it seemed nobody warned him that this was the plan) It burned down in 1933, was patched up in the 1960s by the Communists as an exhibition hall, and finally remodelled after German reunification by Norman Foster.
The German parliament is now called the Bundestag, but the Reichstag Building was such a landmark that the old name was kept. Every detail of the rebuild was carefully thought out, even down to the MPs' violet-blue adjustable seating. Not only is "Reichstag Blue" a gorgeous colour, but, it was chosen to be politically neutral, and so has actually been copyrighted! (Made me wonder what colour one might associate with our own Houses of Parliament. "HP Sauce Brown", perhaps? And what colour would symbolise the US Capitol Building?)
Care has been taken not to obliterate all evidence of the building's past - I liked this section of preserved ruined wall, complete with graffiti from Russian Zone days. If you read Russian, please tell me what it says.
S. is a history nut and shares our own love of museums, so most of our time was spent in the city's many historical museums. My favourite was the DDR Museum, which offers glimpses of the weird world of Communist East Germany, known (misleadingly) as the Deutsche Demokratische Republik, since it was only democratic in name.
One thing the museum shows is that the ideas behind East German communism sounded pretty good. What's not to like about a job, a home and paid holidays for everyone? But as we know, the rhetoric didn't match the bullying reality, and the Wall was built to stop people escaping from this would-be political paradise. And if you visit the fascinating but uber-touristy Checkpoint Charlie museum,....say this isn't touristy -
....you'll see the many ingenious, pathetic and startling ways people risked their lives to be free of the DDR.
One thing the museum shows is that the ideas behind East German communism sounded pretty good. What's not to like about a job, a home and paid holidays for everyone? But as we know, the rhetoric didn't match the bullying reality, and the Wall was built to stop people escaping from this would-be political paradise. And if you visit the fascinating but uber-touristy Checkpoint Charlie museum,....say this isn't touristy -
....you'll see the many ingenious, pathetic and startling ways people risked their lives to be free of the DDR.
Still, I was touched by a few of the films in the DDR Museum which showed how, even under a corrupt and monolithic system, efforts really were made to create a better society. The gigantic blocks of Plattenbauten, though hideous to our eyes, did replace vermin ridden slums, and they did have have children's playgrounds, fountains and squares. And among the oldies visiting the museum, there were a few muted cries of joy at the sight of Clown Ferdinand children's TV programme and the dear old "Trabi" car.
I don't think many were nostalgic for the Stasi, though.
This is the Secret Police eavesdropping room, from which you can listen in to some of the bugs planted about the museum - pink arrow points to the listening-in point, with electric typewriter at the ready for your reports.
Another attention grabber was the unexpected group of nudist dioramas.
I don't think it was actually compulsory to have those paid holidays in the buff in the DDR, but in his fascinating blog, John Paul Kleiner suggests that taking your clothes off and "being yourself" might have been one way in which residents of Communist Germany could assert their own individuality.
The mighty German Historical Museum was S.'s favourite, and we spent a whole day there. It's excellent but very serious, focusing heavily on politics, trade and Germany's place in the wider world. I have to admit that while S. was considering the Hanseatic League, we spent some time in the museum's very pleasant riverside cafe. But in its section on the Weimar Republic of the 1930s, I spotted a picture which reminded me to visit the Käthe Kollwitz house next time I go to Berlin. As you see, when spotted casually from a distance, the picture looks like Hitler in his SS uniform.
Close up you see what it really is - Hunger. Disturbing, but brilliant, I though.
Käthe Kollwitz was recommended to me by a cousin, and reading about her life and visiting these Berlin museums (and also the Hiroshima Peace Museum) has made me aware of the lessons that Germany and Japan have, in general, learned from being the losers in war. The biggest of these seems to be that cooperation and peace serve ordinary people better than any amount of flag waving and foreigner-bashing.
And now I'm home, I'm more than delighted to be getting out into London again. Have been joining in with picking blackberries and elderberries in overgrown corners, and would pick rosehips except that they look so pretty on the bushes....
And I have been cycling to the South Bank where everyone had such a good time in the hot weather. Here's a "sandy beach" installed alongside the Thames. Ideal for amusing the tots.
The nearby fountain shown below also never fails to amuse. It shoots up "walls" of water unpredictably, at different heights, and adults and kids alike were so loving it in the boiling weather, even when clothed.
In the background you see a yellow tent with live music - some of it very quirky and lots of fun.
This was one of the acts - "Figs in Wigs", aka the "Dancing Beings" giving an eye catching performance of 70s dancing, and also running a pea-eating contest. No, I don't know what the point of it was either, but everyone had a good time. The London Eye was slowly going round in the background and the many eating places were sending up some good smells. And they don't even mind kids climbing on the sculptures here.....
We have just been to the Royal Academy Summer Show.... wow, was that busy. And full of astonishing pictures and ideas. But too much to write about right now, this post is long enough.
I hope you are continuing to enjoy your summer!
0 nhận xét