The Gasometer

The Gasometer is one of several unusual structures that I have glimpsed repeatedly over the years while biking through Berlin.

the Gasometer

the Gasometer

Like the spherical water tower in Park Gleisdreieck, reminiscent of a WWI-era pickelhaube helmet,

water tower at Gleisdreieck

water tower at Gleisdreieck

Prussian Pickelhaube helmet

Prussian Pickelhaube helmet

and the giant pink pipe at the west end of the Tiergarten,

pink pipe in Tiergarten

pink pipe in Tiergarten

I have wondered about the Gasometer’s history, use, and future.  Last Friday my questions were answered when Annette, her cousin Katrin and I climbed 420 steps to the top of the 80 meter tall structure. Continue reading

The Excitement of Spargelzeit

We are in the midst of Spargelzeit — asparagus season — here in Germany.  This asparagus is not the slim green variety that one typically finds in the US, but rather plump stalks of white asparagus.  White asparagus is the same species as green, but it is cultivated differently.  Soil is piled over the young shoots as they grow, and opaque tarps ensure that no light reaches the asparagus .  In the absence of sunlight, photosynthesis does not occur, and the stalks become etiolated — they remain white.

white asparagus

white asparagus

Fans of white asparagus (every German I know) claim that it is less bitter and more tender than its green counterpart.  The stalks also tend to be thicker, because the asparagus is allowed to grow longer.  The downside to white asparagus is that the thick skin has to be peeled before it can be eaten.  The peeling can be done at home with a vegetable peeler, but for €1.00, our local grocer will send a kilo of asparagus through this peeling machine:

asparagus peeling machine

asparagus peeling machine

rollers and blades

rollers and blades

peeled asparagus

peeled asparagus

I don’t think it took too many German machine engineers to come up with this contraption. It consists simply of pairs of rollers interspersed with fixed-blade vegetable peelers. Continue reading

Novelty and Nostalgia, Progress and Loss

In a recent New York Times article about the changing face of Brooklyn, A.O. Scott writes “Every city is simultaneously a seedbed of novelty and a hothouse of nostalgia, and modern New York presents a daily dialectic of progress and loss.”

The same could be said of Berlin.

Tacheles today

Tacheles today

Some weeks ago I came across a building called Tacheles that I had not seen in fifteen years.  It was more like the shell of a building, although that was already an apt description when I first saw it in January of 1998.  Back then I was visiting Germany — and Annette — for the first time.  Since Annette was working during the day, I spent much of that visit biking around the city and looking at buildings.

Berlin was rougher back then, more of a work in progress.  Numerous tower cranes punctuated the skyline like so many erector sets.  Postdamer Platz was a huge hole in the ground.  The latest proposal for the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe was being hotly critiqued. And although the Berlin Wall had been down for nearly ten years, the differences between East and West Berlin were still evident.  The majority of the drab GDR-era buildings in East Berlin had not yet been renovated (the German word is saniert, which has the same Latin root as “sanitized”).  I marveled at the pockmarked stone exteriors of many buildings in the East.  The East German government apparently had more pressing concerns than patching holes left by bullets and shrapnel from World War II.

Tacheles department store

Tacheles department store

Tacheles circa 1996

Tacheles circa 1996

One evening during that first visit to Berlin, Annette took me to Tacheles.  If she was trying to impress me, it worked.  Before World War II, Tacheles had been a department store in the city’s Jewish quarter.  The building was damaged during the war, and never repaired. Portions of the structure were demolished in 1980, and the rest was scheduled to be taken down in 1990, but a group of artists staged a protest that eventually led to the building being granted historic landmark status.  When Annette and I were there in 1998, Tacheles was a graffiti-tagged warren that included artists’ ateliers, funky places to eat and drink, and a small movie theater. Music and smoke hung in the air. Because sections of the rear wall of the building were missing, one could see into some of the rooms from the sculpture garden behind the building.  The menu at the restaurant where we ate was printed on an Eviction Notice for the building’s occupants.

Seeing Tacheles recently brought back memories of what Berlin was like in 1998, of who I was — a young man falling in love — and of who Annette and I were — a couple embarking on a shared life.  Berlin has changed, as have we.

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Karneval

Karneval parade

Karneval parade

Two weeks ago, Annette, Rani, Mamta and I attended Karneval in Bonn with Annette’s sisters and their families.  In Germany, Karneval is celebrated most enthusiastically in areas of the country that have historically been Catholic.  The state of North Rhine-Westfalia (“NRW”) where Bonn is located is the epicenter of Karneval celebrations in Germany.  Annette’s sister Susanne lives in Bonn with her husband Mortiz (a “Bonner”) and their three children.  Since Annette had lived in NRW during her high school years, she was familiar with the Karneval celebrations there, and was enthusiastic about our experiencing them as a family.

Karneval has its roots in Christian traditions leading up to Easter.  The celebrating begins in earnest on “Fat Thursday,” the Thursday preceding Ash Wednesday.  Six days of uninhibited excess end with Lent, a period of fasting and renunciation.  Rhinelanders take the partying seriously: the celebrations typically begin at work on Thursday, and most employees are not expected to return to work until the following Wednesday.  Each day parades are held throughout the region, with the largest being in Cologne on Rosenmontag — Rose Monday.

We traveled to Bonn on Friday afternoon, and returned to Berlin late Sunday evening. What we found at Karneval was an energetic mash-up of Halloween, New Year’s Eve and Spring Break. Continue reading

Law and Order in the Park

Several months ago while driving in Berlin, I was passed by an official-looking car that caught my attention.  I snapped this photo of it at the next intersection:

Ordnungsamt vehicle

Ordnungsamt vehicle

The word Ordnungsamt on the back of the car translates literally as Orderliness Department, although a more meaningful rendering might be Office for Public Order.  I know that Germans have a reputation for being orderly, but still I was surprised to see that a public office was devoted to maintaining order.  And I wasn’t really sure what members of the Ordnungsamt do.  Today I found out.

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Echoes of World War II

bombed excavator

bombed excavator

Annette, our daughters and I spent New Year’s Eve in Bonn with Annette’s two sisters and their families.  On the drive back to Berlin, I heard numerous reports on the radio about an explosion in the Nordrhein-Westfalen town of Euskirchen.  The operator of a large excavator working at a rubble disposal yard had been killed when his machine struck what was thought to be unexploded ordinance from WWII.  Windows within a 500 meter radius were shattered by the blast.  Debris from the explosion was found nearly a kilometer away. The authorities believe that this bomb may previously have been encased in concrete, as was sometimes done when defusing was not feasible.

Approximately one tenth of the millions of bombs dropped by British and American planes on Germany during WWII did not explode.  Every year, over 2,000 tons of unexploded bombs and other munitions are recovered.  Unexploded ordinance is common enough that companies routinely hire private bomb disposal teams to check that sites are safe prior to construction.  Safely disposing of the bombs is increasingly difficult as they decay over time. Continue reading

The Christmas Story

We spent our Christmas holiday at Annette’s parents’ house in the small village of Lauenhagen, in northeastern Germany. Although this was not my first Christmas in Germany, it was my first here with children.  Now that I speak a fair amount of German, it should have been simple for me to follow the rituals of Christmas here, but I have to confess that some of them still don’t make sense to me.

In America, we do a pretty good job of keeping Jesus and Santa Claus separate at Christmas time.  We all know that Christmas celebrates the birth of Jesus, a drama that is re-enacted in still lifes and living crèches across the country.  Perhaps we attend church on Christmas Eve to remember and celebrate the birth of Jesus.  And on the night before Christmas, Santa Claus, who with his elves at the North Pole has been working all year long on presents for the good girls and boys, climbs into his heavily-laden sleigh and, led by the red-nosed Rudolph, circles the globe.  He descends chimneys, delivers gifts, fills stockings, and downs milk and cookies.  Pretty straightforward.

der Weihnachtsmann

der Weihnachtsmann

In Germany, at least in the areas I have been frequenting, there’s a different story circulating — one that I am having trouble grasping.  Gifts are delivered sometime during the late afternoon of Christmas Eve.  The deliveries are made by “Christkind” (the Christ Child), who is helped by “Der Weihnachtsmann” (Santa Claus).  When I ask Germans how the Christ Child and the Weihnachtsmann get around the globe so quickly with all those gifts, they are evasive, and murmer that the Christ Child is sometimes depicted as having wings.  So how do these co-conspirators get into the houses, and how do they know that nobody will be around when they do?  Silence. Blank stares.  The obfuscation and ambiguity are all the more curious coming from Germans, whom I have generally found to be very rational people.

Since I am a guest in their fine country, I am inclined to give Germans the benefit of the doubt.  I am pursuing the theory that the Germans’ story of Christmas is a noble attempt to resist the commercialization of this holy holiday.  The teaming up of baby Jesus with Santa Claus could be a metaphor for keeping the true spirit of Christmas alive.  This may be the case, but frankly, I don’t see children buying it.  Better to tell children the truth about Jesus and Santa Claus — that they are two sides of the same celebration — because at least the true stories make sense.

Despite the lack of a coherent, reasonable Christmas Story, Annette, our daughters and I had a fun and relaxing Christmas with Annette’s parents and relatives.  The weather was too warm for snow, but we did go for a few lovely long walks and bike rides.  I have posted numerous pictures in the Gallery called “Christmas in Lauenhagen.”

Der Weihnachtsmarkt am Alexanderplatz

Germany does Christmas well.  Annette has tried her best over the years to transplant to New Hampshire a few of the Christmas traditions she most cherishes, such as Advent singing, Glühwein, and real candles on our Christmas tree.  But it’s not the same as being here.

Glühwein stand

Glühwein stand

During the last weekend of November, Christmas markets (Weihnachtsmärkte) sprang up all over Berlin.  In the simplest cases, these markets consist of a few huts where one can purchase mulled wine and warm snacks, with tall round tables around which to gather in the evening chill. However, most of Berlin’s Weihnachtsmärkte are much more elaborate. I noticed in early December that the local newspapers were running reviews of the dozen or so largest Weihnächtsmarkte in the city, rating them as best for kids, most romantic, best shopping opportunities, etc.

We went to our first Weihnachtsmarkt of the season a few weeks ago.  It was set up at the Gendarmenmarkt plaza, where one also finds the Berlin Konzerthaus, the French Cathedral, and the German Cathedral.  Annette was put off by our having to pay a €1 entrance fee (“I’ve never had to pay to get into a Weihnachtsmarkt!”), but the cost of admission turned out to be well worthwhile.  The numerous huts were attractively constructed and decorated, the food and drinks were good, and there were lovely handcrafts for sale.  On a central stage, six musicians dressed as angels performed Christmas instrumentals on dulcimers and harps.  Unfortunately, I neglected to bring my camera.

Several nights ago I set out with Rani and Mamta to document for this blog the Berlin Weihnachtsmarkt experience.  We considered going to the market at Potsdamer Platz, where we had seen sledding on an impressive man-made slope, and the huts were set up to mimic an aprés ski experience, but instead we decided to head for the market at Alexanderplatz.  What we found there was not what I had expected.

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Die Jagd

Annette has a number of uncles, cousins and in-laws who are hunters.  Her uncle Klaus is probably the most avid of her hunting relatives.  Fortunately for him, he owns several forests abundant in wildlife, and he has the means to organize multiple hunting parties each year.  These are parties in two senses of the word: a large group of people headed into the woods, and a celebration with family and friends.

1 treibingIn mid November, Klaus hosted his annual fall hunt near the hamlet of Lauenhagen, about one-and-a-half hours north of Berlin by car. Annette’s parents live in the village, as does her uncle Hartmut, who farms the surrounding land.  Klaus’s large country manor house dominates the approach to Lauenhagen.  Another uncle owns a house nearby.

The hunting party began with a dinner on Friday evening in the hunting lodge, a renovated stone barn located on the far side of the courtyard in front of Klaus’s house.  Annette and I missed the dinner because we had tickets to see a concert in Berlin that evening, but we arrived on Saturday morning in time for the pre-hunt breakfast.  We borrowed rubber boots  — Gummistiefel — and loaded up on eggs, bacon, rolls and coffee.  We then gathered with the other participants in the courtyard.

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Clärchen’s Ballhaus

0 Claerchens_Ballhaus

Clärchen’s Ballhaus

A few weeks ago, Annette began talking about visiting Clärchen’s Ballhaus. She said it was one of Berlin’s oldest dance halls, a place where one could go to ballrooom dance on any day of the week.

Talk of ballroom dancing makes me nervous, but I have learned to mask this involuntary response with stoic enthusiasm: “That sounds interesting. We should check it out sometime.”

Annette grew up breaking hearts on the (ballroom) dance floor. She loves to dance, and I am sure that the partners of her youth loved to dance with her.  I am a relative late-comer to ballroom dancing.  My parents offered to sign my brother Tom and me up for ballroom dancing lessons at the New Haven Lawn Club when we were in our early teens, but I considered myself too cool to take advantage of the opportunity.  These days, I am one of the less cool dudes on the ballroom dance floor. The lessons that Annette and I took together in Keene just haven’t seemed to stick.

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