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One project finished - A Practical Guide to Memorials of Persecution and Resistance in and around Berlin

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 The first (though secondary) of the two projects that I worked on during my time in Berlin has been finished successfully. It is a practical guide for anybody who is in Berlin and wants to visit one or more of the 69 memorials and museums that appear in the guide. It includes a useful guide with a basic description, links to a website (for most sites) and the location in Google maps, plus information about opening hours etc. where relevant. The guide is called 'To Warn and Remember' and you can find it here . My cooperative project with House of One is in an advanced stage. I'm waiting for feedback and input from my Berlin colleagues, as soon as I have that (before the end of the month, I assume) I will finish, publish, and share the learning units based on 'The Man in the Clouds' .

Lessons Learnt

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Later, now that I've returnd home, I will write some sort of reflection, with some insights that I have gathered over the last two weeks. Until now, the blog helped me keep track of what I have done and seen so far, and whom I've met to work on the book project.

That's All, Folks! For Now.

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A fitting finishing touch to two and a half wonderful weeks: a(nother) guided tour of the Bundestag/Reichstag. Always interesting. After I get home tomorrow, and once I get settled again, I'll write a reflection. Or several reflections. I'll need some time to digest everything, after two weeks of work in the Netherlands, and two and a half weeks in Berlin.

Three memorials

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Three more memorials. First the Spiegelwand at the Hermann Ehlersplatz, near a former synagogue, with many, many names of victims who used to live nearby. Sorry, it was very difficult to take good pictures, because of the mirrors (Spiegel) and because of the market at the square. Plus another monument with mirrors, at the Hausvogteiplatz , in honor of the Jewish fashion store owners who had businesses at this square. On the stairs from U-Bahn 2 to the monument, there are 19 names and addresses of Jewish-owned fashion stores that were there until the 1930s. Finally, next to the Reichstag building, a monument for the 96 (!) Reichstag deputies who were murdered by the Nazis. Many of them in Brandenburg, Plötzensee or Sachsenhausen, places that I visited earlier during my visit to Berlin. Tonight, I have a reservation for a guided tour of the Bundestag. With that, I'm finishing 17 amazing, very well spent days in one of my favorite  cities. Tomorrow morning, I...

Christopher Street Day 2025 - Berlin Pride Celebration - Fighting Hatred

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On my way from Schoeneberg, I stopped at Wittenbergplatz (which always reminds me of Itzik Wittenberg , the FPO leader in the Vilna ghetto, though the place is called after a general/battle in the Napoleonic wars) to eat something. From there, I walked to my hotel, along with the Christopher Street Day parade, also known as the Berlin Pride Celebration, as it passed right by my hotel (which, as I wrote yesterday, happens to be near the Nollendorfplatz). The parade is a very colorful, friendly and quite loud event, with between 500,000 and a million people attending every year. The atmosphere seemed to be very happy and inclusive. This was 'my' first pride event ever. Mainly because I (almost physically) hate crowds and noise. But I really enjoyed watching all these shiny happy people. It was good to see so many happy people feeling safe, celebrating and supporting gay pride in the German capital today. If I learnt anything from the many museums and memorials that I have visited...

We Were Neighbors

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 At the Schoeneberg City Hall, where John F. Kennedy held his famous "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech, a reading room houses the 'Wir Sind Nachbarn' exhibition. This exhibition, which started as a local initiative, tells the stories of Jewish families and individuals who lived in the Schoeneberg and Tempelhof neighborhoods and who were deported to their death or managed to survive by hiding or fleeing abroad. All the stories that appear in the exhibition (I didn't count but there are many) come with copies of original documents, pictures, letters etc. On the walls are thousands and thousands of cards, mentioning the addresses (alphabetically) the addresses of families who were expelled of their homes, often with the place to were they were deported or managed to flee. Those cards are the work of one man, one of the volunteers who works at the exhibition told me. Unfortunately, the vast majority of the stories (including some videos with testimonies) are in German, on...

Visiting Brandenburg an der Havel

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On my way back to Berlin, after visiting Brandenburg an der Havel. The Brandenburg Prison is interesting, the information is very well presented, in German and English. I'm glad I went, but I would not take students there, it's not worth the 90 minutes' ride (and 15 Euro on top of the Berlin ABC public transport card). The Memorial for the Victims of the Nazi Euthanasia Program, on the other hand, would be a great addition to any visit to WWII sites in Berlin with students or teachers. It tells, also in German and English, a very dark and sad chapter in the history of the Third Reich in a clear, comprehensive and convincing manner. Including the continuity between the T4 program and Operation Reinhardt.