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Tag: Berlin

Berlin: A City of Abundant Contrast

Berlin. The Capital city of Germany. What a weird, quirky, classy, oddball, and altogether extraordinary place.  We spend Friday-Wednesday here (a week ago, actually), and we certainly had a blast.

Before I go on about Berlin, I have some corrections to make to my last entry.  I mentioned last time that my parents would represent a majority of the people reading this.  As it turns out, I apparently have far more parents than I had previously assumed.  Thank you to all for taking the time to read my musings.  And thanks to Rachel and my family for continuing to be my biggest fans.

The first night gave us a chance for some culinary confusion.  Hofbraühaus (“HOFF-broy-house”) is a Munich standard, so we let at the opportunity to eat there, despite being nearly 600 km away from Munich.  With it a mere block away from our hostel, how could we say no to an early start to Oktoberfest?  (Spoiler alert: we couldn’t.)

Walking westward as the sun was setting, we had fun with some photography in the Lustgarten on Museuminsel (Museum Island), between Berliner Dom (cathedral) and Altes Museum (Old Museum – a very creative name).  Rick Steves says that the Berliner Dom “is a protestant assertion of strength,” adding that it “seems to proclaim ‘a mighty fortress is our God…and he speaks German!'”  Nineteen of the seven of us had a splendid time.

Ried in front of the Berliner Dom, making good use of the iPhone's Panorama function.

Reid in front of the Berliner Dom, making good use of the iPhone’s Panorama function.

Nineteen out of seven of us had a splendid time on our first evening in Berlin.

Nineteen out of seven of us had a splendid time on our first evening in Berlin.

We finished our excursion walking through the Brandenburger Tor, marveling that this was not something our parents could have done when they visited Germany 30 years ago.  The gigantic gate was near the Berliner Mauer (Berlin Wall).  Older readers may recall President Reagan challenging Gorbachev to “tear down this wall,” or perhaps remember news clips of people celebrating as the wall fell two years later.  Younger readers and tech-savvy people can relive these moments on YouTube.


 

Contrasts began early on Saturday morning.  Several more trains than we had initially expected were needed to get to Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, where 50000 people were murdered during the Holocaust.

Aside:  Germans today will deliberately say that the victims of the Holocaust were murdered, as opposed to having died or been killed.  You can be killed in an accident, or can die of natural causes.  Murder is entirely different.

 

I tried to imagine whether or not 50000 people would fit inside an area equal to that of the camp.  This doesn’t reflect any piece of reality – I was simply trying to imagine the size of a 50000-person crowd. 50000 is one of those numbers that’s just big enough that it’s magnitude is difficult to understand. I’m not sure many people have interacted with 50000 of anything in any kind of tangible way.

As though to remind us that our laughter and joy from the previous day would not be appropriate in this sacred, broken place, it was windy and rainy.  The sun kept to itself for most of the day, only revealing itself a few times in the afternoon.  Yet in the midst of the clouds and dark memories, there was still hope.  No matter how hard the wind blew, it could never erase the memories.  The trees would sooner topple and the buildings would sooner be reduced to dust than the Holocaust be forgotten.  Perhaps this is an ill-informed view of how civilizations rise and fall, but it certainly felt this way to me.

Statue in the building to mark the location of the Sachsenhausen furnaces.

Statue in the building to mark the location of the Sachsenhausen furnaces.

Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp

Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp

We need monuments like Sachsenhausen to help us remember the horrible things that people did (and can do) to people.  None of us perpetrated the Holocaust.  Very few people know anybody whom it directly affected.  Nobody really owes anybody else an apology for the past, nor do we need to assign blame to anybody alive today.  But we do need to remember that these things happened so that we can do everything to keep them from happening again.

After Sachsenhausen, we had quite possibly the least concentration camp-ish meal possible.  It was several huge plates of all kinds of meats, each with enough food to comfortably split it between four people.  It was fantastically filling, far beyond what any Sachsenhausen meal could have been for the people detained there.

Plate of meat for four at Zillemarkt.  This plate was about 50cm (20in) long at its widest.

Plate of meat for four at Zillemarkt. This plate was about 50cm (20in) long at its widest.

Following the meal, we went to Kaufhaus des Westens – KaDeWe, the largest department store in Europe.  There were somewhere on the order of six stories of everything from jewelry and perfumes to clothing to toys to food and much more.  Everything there seemed to have a markup.  Even Lego kits seemed to cost more than they should in a typical store.  This is a rather gutsy move for the store, particularly given the easily-referenced and well-defined prices of Lego kits.  We looked for Ritter Sport chocolate bars to use as a standard price reference point, but couldn’t find any.  Neither Nick nor I could tell if this was because the place was simply too large (which it was), or if it was because Ritter Sport is not classy enough chocolate for the normal clientele of KaDeWe (it very well might not be).

We didn’t stay very long at KaDeWe.  There was simply too much to take in, and we had had a long day.  The excess and materialism was simply too much for either of us, so we went home for some much needed rest.  In an interesting symmetry to our morning and afternoon at Sachsenhausen, about 40 to 50 thousand people visit KaDeWe daily (per Wikipedia).


 

Sunday gave us a walking tour of the city.  We covered some of the same route we had taken on Friday, but the added historical context was much appreciated.  Berlin has had the interesting misfortune of being almost – but not quite – totally destroyed.  There’s a mix of old buildings and new.  The old ones embrace the grandeur of the emperors and kings of the past, the new ones celebrate rebirth and modernity, and everything in between serves as a reminder of the tumult of the 20th century.  The juxtaposition of old and new, of destroyed sites and recent modern development, and even of former East and West – these are all things of which Berlin is very proud.  Berlin is such a bizarre place because of all of these contrasts that define it, but these are the same contrasts that also make it the uniquely wonderful place that it is.


 

Almost as though an echo of Berlin, our group also let some of its contrasts show over the last few days – particularly with regards to travel style and planning.  A great many of us are seasoned adventurers.  We know how to deliberately get lost for the sake of new experiences, but we don’t stay lost for very long – there’s always a plan in place.  Sure, we can recognize the fluidity of our short-term plans, but this doesn’t prevent us from living in the moment.

Other members of the group, well, don’t seem to be that great at traveling.  The planning is there, but a combination of poor luck and incomplete follow-through has created some setbacks for them.  Fornutely for them (and for the rest of us who live and work with them), it seems difficult to really upset their equilibria.  If there is an edge over which they might be pushed, they sure seem to be far away from it.


 

We had the opportunity to do and see some more “touristy things,” or perhaps watch other tourists do touristy things. I try not to be an excessive travel hipster (just a little bit), but it can be fun and informative to watch tourists at popular sites. The crowds can sometimes be just as impressive as the thing at which they’re looking.

The "American Soldiers" at Checkpoint Charlie are neither Americans nor soldiers, and they barely speak English.

The “American Soldiers” at Checkpoint Charlie are neither Americans nor soldiers, and they barely speak English. A tour guide informed us that these men work as strippers after they’re done being soldiers.  I did not investigate the veracity of this claim.  I also do not know whether their alleged evening performance involves the removal of their fake uniforms.  Hopefully not.

Nick and I had good fun exploring the history of engineering at the Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin.  This wasn’t any specific exhibit – we just went around looking at planes, trains, and boats, all while considering the engineering that went into making them go (or the failures that made them stop going).  We’re told that this museum also has cars, but we didn’t get a chance to check those out.  Siemens was scattered everywhere in this museum.  Having completed an internship at a Siemens plant in Cincinnati last summer, I had to get some pictures of Siemens artifacts that we came across.

Siemens and Halske Electric Locomotive at Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin.

Siemens and Halske Electric Locomotive (a world first) at Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin.

Werner von Siemens bust at Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin

Werner von Siemens bust at Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin.  This guy adorned my ID badge this past summer.

Nick stands in front of a steam locomotive at the Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin.  Steam engines are basically giant heat transfer demonstrations, which appeals to us engineers.

Nick stands in front of a steam locomotive at the Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin. Steam engines are basically giant heat transfer demonstrations, which appeals to us engineers.

A fancy-dancy thrust-reversing jet engine, modeled by the ever-patient Nicks Sondag.

A fancy-dancy thrust-reversing jet engine, modeled by the ever-patient Nicks Sondag.

The below video is an example of something neither of my parents would have been able to do when they studied in Germany 30 years ago.  Doing this gave me chills, which doesn’t happen particularly often.

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Entrance

11:07

The clock said 11:07, but it was not a real clock. The clock was hand painted. Hand painted with the time reading 11:07. On April 22, 1945 at 11:07am, Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp was liberated by Soviet armed forces just outside of Berlin.

I can honestly say that after visiting this memorial, I am a changed person. It is one thing to read about the horrors and disgusting events that took place in concentration camps, but to see it first hand and walk where tens of thousands of people were systematically exterminated, is something that I cannot really fathom into words. Myself, along with the entirety of my group all do not know how to describe it. The minute you walk in, you immediately feel pure evil. As you walk past the execution pit you want to drop to your knees and wish that this never happened. As you walk past the crematorium ovens you think this is a dream and that this is not real. As you read the names of the people killed, each name getting harder and harder to fight back tears, you wish you could unsee these things.

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This quote can be seen before entering the crematorium.

The trip to this memorial has changed my life forever. Even trying to find pictures to use in this blog was hard for me to go through without getting a stomach ache. I will only be posting two pictures from the camp itself. The rest I am withholding.

 

I did not want this post to be depressing but I figured I would start with this because it was the first thing we did as a group in Berlin.

Berlin however was very beautiful and incredible. It was hard to believe that over 70% of the city was completely and utterly destroyed after the second world war. Some of my favorite parts of Berlin were all of the museums I was able to visit. Included with the trip is a 3 day pass to museums in Berlin. Depending on what museums, you could get in for free. In total I was able to visit 6 museums, 5 of which were covered by the program. Myself along with other members of R-95 went to the Altes Nationalgalerie, Altes museum, Neues Museum, Pergamon Museum, and the DDR museum. The DDR museum was very interesting because it was an interactive museum involving life in East Germany under the German Democratic Republic (It was also the only museum we had to pay for). But with our student discount we were able to go through the whole museum for 4 Euro. Also one of my personal favorite sites was the Brandenburg Gate. Brandenburg Gate

This was actually the monument I wanted to see most when coming to Berlin and I can say that I was not dissappointed. The gate itself dates back to the 18th century, but was very badly damaged during the second world war. Victoria the goddess of Victory ontop of the gate is actually not original. The first statue ontop of the Brandenburg Gate was the goddess Eirene or Irene who was the daughter of Poseidon and was the goddess of peace. This Victoria statue is actually the third to be ontop of the Brandenburg gate because during the Napoleonic wars, Napoleon took down Eirene to be brought back to Paris.

Another beautiful masterpiece of architecture was the Berliner Dom or the Berlin Cathedral. This massive cathedral is the largest in Germany and also one of the most beautiful.

The Berlin Eye in the background

The Berlin Eye in the background

Beliner Dom1

Beliner Dom2

Underneath the cathedral lies the eternal resting place of a number of Hohenzollern family members in the crypt.

Another must was the Berlin wall and the famous Checkpoint Charlie (which now is sort of a tourist attraction than an actual checkpoint).

A little stretch that was left standing

A little stretch that was left standing

Checkpoint Charlie

 

Berlin overall was spectacular and I wish our group had more time to explore, even with five days, we could not see it all. Also I forgot to mention that our group was lucky enough to stuff ourselves with some of the best food I have ever had, all covered by Valpo. The meal itself included various specialties from around the Berlin area. I would have included a picture but our entire group literally inhaled both platters before a single photo could be taken, not to mention there was enough food left over to feed the entirety of Scheele hall for 6 weeks.

After Berlin, myself with a couple of my friends from the group decided to go to Bremen and Hamburg. Both places were absolutely fantastic. I just wish that we could have stayed longer.

Bremen Town Hall

Bremen Town Hall

Underneath the Bremen Town Hall lies the Rathskeller restaurant which is over 600 years old and is home to the largest wine selection in all of Germany. Needless to say, our entire group had a fabulous time there.

Hamburg Town Hall

Hamburg Town Hall

Hamburg was also quite amazing. Hamburg is home to Germany’s largest exporting port and also great fish and the infamous Reeperbahn. Y’all can google it cause I ain’t explainin it. Either way, Hamburg was amazing and like Bremen, I wish I could have stayed longer.

This trip so far has meant so much more to me than I could have ever imagined. I am so thankfull that I have this opportunity to see the world and learn about it from first hand interaction. Everywhere you look there is history to be told and lessons to be learned. This has been one of the best decisions of my life and I am already sad that it will come to an end sooner rather than later.

Our group will be traveling again this upcoming week so expect another long time before posts. I hope you enjoyed and if you have any comments or requests please leave them! This is Austin Pittman signing off from Reutlingen. Good night.

First Trip: Part 1 Berlin

So, having been in Germany for a grand total of three weeks, we decided it would be a grand idea to take a ten day trip to Berlin, Hamburg, and Cologne. Seriously.

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Kaiser Wilhem Memorial Church, left unrestored in remembrance of the horrific damage WII caused not just here, but everywhere.

 

Technically, the Berlin trip was a part of our Modern Germany class. Nothing is more exciting as a college student than a field trip. (Excepting free food and naps.) Learning about the Friedricks and Wilhems of Prussia is great, but their importance doesn’t really sink in until you see building after gorgeous building funded by the Prussian monarchy. There are many of these buildings in Berlin. We also visited Sachsen-hausen Concentration Camp and the German History museum to continue learning about Germany outside of the classroom.

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No, I do not know why Super Luther is a thing. Seen outside the Berlin Cathedral

We were in Berlin from a Friday to a Wednesday, so there was plenty of time outside of class to go exploring. Berlin is a fantastic city to walk around in and admire the architecture. I loved exploring the neighborhood of Savignyplatz, where our hotel was located. There were fun restaurants and shops everywhere, gorgeous turn-of the-century buildings, and (most importantly) two fantastic bookstores underneath the S-bahn: one for fiction, biography, and philosophy; and one for all kinds of art-based non-fiction (film, music, architecture, art, etc.). I bought a book one rainy afternoon, and read and enjoyed fantastic hot chocolate at a cafe three doors down from the hotel, which was delightful.

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Platter for four at the Zillemarkt in Berlin, just a few blocks from our hotel. Yes, this was a ridiculous amount of food.

Since this was a longer trip, we visited so many places that I started losing track. We went on a bus tour that highlighted key sights in East and West Berlin, including the Checkpoint Charlie Museum and a few sections of the Berlin Wall (Cue Pink Floyd). We toured the Berlin Cathedral, took pictures in front of Humboldt University (where Einstein and Max Plank taught!), visited the Brandenburg Gate, marveled at the beautiful Schloss Charlotenburg and its extensive grounds, admired Art Nuveau at the Bröhan Museum, and ate authentic Berlin Currywurst.

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Train rides across Germany are long if you do not amuse  yourself.

(As a side note, while they might not always be there on the exact minute, German trains, buses, and subways are pretty much the best. Easy to understand maps, signs showing the train, its final stop and stations between are everywhere, and they-re pretty much always clean. Plus, even in second class, the inter-city Deutsche Bahn trains are very sleek. They have automatic glass doors between compartments. It’s like a science fiction movie. Maybe James Bond?)

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Courtyard and Alley to Orangienburger Strasse

There’s my update on our Berlin adventures. I will explore some of our tourism in more detail, along with Hamburg and Cologne, when we arrive back in Reutlingen. Right now: Hamburg. Tomorrow: Cologne. I’m excited for more trains!

Venturing Out: Berlin and Cologne

After a long, exciting, challenging, wonderful week of travel around Germany, I’m finally back “home” in Reutlingen. It’s funny, being away this week made me actually start referring to Reutlingen as my home, and while I had a blast exploring other cities, it is good to be back. In total, we had 10 travel days for this trip. For the first five, the whole group got to see just about everything there is to see in Berlin with our professor as tour guide. After that, we got to split up into smaller groups to travel wherever we wanted, which for me, meant Cologne. I’m pretty sure it would be impossible to include everything we did into one post, but I’ll try my best to summarize the highlights.
Since we arrived in Berlin relatively late on Friday night, I think of Saturday as our first official day there. That day, we started off on a rather somber note with a tour of Sachsenhausen, a concentration camp. I had never been to a concentration camp before, but I had heard that it was an intense experience. It was actually very different from what I was expecting. I had thought that most of the camp would be left in its original state, but to my surprise, much of it had been renovated to make it feel more like a museum. Still, I found that the as-is parts of it had the greatest emotional impact on me. It’s hard to describe the feeling you get when you’re standing on the same ground where thousands of people suffered so greatly, not all that long ago.

     Sunday was our first real chance to explore the city. Since I’ve been to Berlin once before, our city tour was an opportunity for me to get reacquainted with the place I had come to love. I tried to contain my excitement as we passed all my favorite landmarks, but throughout the week, I made it my mission to go to several places I visited on my first trip and take similar photos of them, sort of like a then-and-now comparison. Of course, the logical place to start was the Brandenburg Gate.
     Included in our trip, we each received a three-day museum pass that was valid at 50 museums throughout the city. After a few group tours of the big ones, we had 2 days to split pup and go to the ones of our choice. After we were all museumed out, there was one thing I had left to do. Last time I was in Berlin, I went to a specie section of the Berlin Wall that was still up and had murals painted on different sections, many of which are wildly colorful. I had no idea where this place was anymore or what it was called, but I had to find it again. After over an hour of leading 2 friends to the forgotten corners of East Berlin, I found it and once again, took a picture of my favorite mural.

After Berlin, we were on our own. It was a little intimidating to go traveling for the first time without the whole group, but as it turned out, our 2 free days in Berlin served as great practice in how to navigate a foreign city by ourselves. In fact, we never really got lost, and being smaller, Cologne is a little easier to handle than Berlin. We saw all the big attractions there, the cathedral, the Rhine, and a few museums. We found some good restaurants, lived the hostel life, which actually isn’t as terrifying as I expected, and made it back safe and sound.

Now we have one more week of classes, before we’re off to Lutherland and beyond on Friday. Because that’s a long way away, I’ll try to have a new post in the meantime, so be on the lookout for that soon!

Hodgepodge Berlin

For our second class trip, we went to Berlin for five days and though it may seem like a long time, we barely skimmed the surface of everything the city has to offer. Germany’s capital, Berlin is known for so many different things. From its history dating back to the 1700’s to the more modern history with being the capital of Nazi Germany and the airlift during the Cold War, Berlin has seen a lot of changes throughout time. With all these changes has come a very unique and lively atmosphere of the city.

Brandenburg Gate

Ampelmännchen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I wasn’t sure what to expect when going to Berlin. I had heard about all the different sites to see but whatever preconceived notions I had before going where blown away once we arrived. The city is filled with so many different types of people and interests. On one block, you can  see people who are going to see the newest performance on one of Berlin’s many of stages, history buffs staring at buildings from World War Two, families taking their kids to the zoo, and  shoppers taking full advantage of the open  air markets. With this hodgepodge of a interests, it was hard to choose where to start digging in to the city. We wandered around the markets, toured the famous museums, climbed up a cathedral to have the perfect view of the city, and peopled watched by the Brandenburg Gate.

And then came Berlin at night. If I thought there was too many options during the day, the night was even worse. No offense to Valpo, but every night there are always theater performances, ballets, Jazz lounges, sports bars, and  crazy dance clubs. It was definitely not an issue of what is there to do, but which one to choose from. We tried to experience all the different types of nightlife by going to the clubs, bars, and a musical performance.

Berlin Cathedral

Berlin has definitely made my top ten of my favorite cities. Berlin has definitely kept up with the modern times but doesn’t forget its past. Even coming back exhausted from sensory overload, Berlin still had more to see. I think that even spending years in that city, there would still be more to see. This just gives me another reason to go back to Berlin in the future.

 

Check out more of my pictures from Berlin, as well as the rest of my study abroad trip at https://plus.google.com/photos/113496106333285759017/albums?banner=pwa

 

The Coolest City in the World

The title might be a misnomer. I obviously haven’t visited every city in the world. But I’ve traveled a lot, and by far the coolest one I’ve seen is Berlin. The Reutlingen program brought us to Berlin for a “class” trip for 5 days, and during that time we were able to explore Berlin and learn about all of its crazy and important history and its culture. And even though we didn’t have class per say, just being in that city and touring around and talking to people was so much more informative than sitting in a classroom. So here I’m gonna outline a bit of what we did while there.

We arrived in the late afternoon on Friday, and were set free to explore on our own til the following morning. First order of business after a long train ride was dinner, so we wandered around until we found a typical German restaurant that looked good. Turns out we made the best decision of the day right there, their crispy baked half duck and apfelstrudel was AMAZING. And even despite all the restaurants in Berlin, it was so good that we had to return later that week.

Brandenburg Gate

Wall museum and remnants of the wall

The next morning we met up with Professor Malchow to take a guided tour of the city. During the extremely interesting  tour, we got to see the Brandenburg Gate, the Reichstag (the German Parliament building), parts of the old Berlin wall, Checkpoint Charlie, and the square where the famous photos of Hitler speaking to gathered ranks of Nazis were taken, among many many other places. The tour guide also taught us about the deep history of Berlin, from the Hohenzollern dynasty to Nazi dominance and through the end of the Cold War. It was amazing to see all the places where some of the most well-known history actually happened. That night, a few of us decided it would be really cool to go see an opera or a classical concert or something of the sort, so we found that the famous Deutsche Oper (German Opera) was putting on Das Rheingold that night. Which I had seen as part  of my German 351 class a year ago broadcasted live from Chicago. But seeing it in person (and in Germany!) was so much cooler.

One of the palaces from the bottom of their terraced garden (!)

The next day we took a day (well, afternoon) trip to Potsdam, about a half hour train ride from Berlin. We had heard there was a pretty cool palace there from Frederick the Great called Sansoucci. Pretty cool doesn’t even begin to describe it. We spent about four hours there that afternoon, and didn’t even go inside any of the three gorgeous palaces on the grounds. In my opinion, the gardens themselves are the best part about it. We literally spent all four hours exploring the grounds, and never got bored or ran out of things to explore. It truly was beautiful and amazing (and I took so so so many pictures–you can see them on my Picasa account). In fact, before we left the last day we decided to spend another few hours there.

The next day (Monday) we decided we should actually go inside a few of the sights and museums in the old Eastern part of Berlin, where most of the history is. So we headed to the Berliner Dom (Cathedral), and it was incredibly beautiful. And when we climbed countless steps to reach the top balcony on the outside, we were able to see a lot of the city and overlooked the courtyard where the famous Nazi demonstrations/gatherings were held. Once we finished there, we found some of Berlin’s specialty food, currywurst, which is spicy sausage with sauce served with a roll. It definitely lived up to its expectation. After nourishment, we were on a roll (pun not intended), so we headed to the Reichstag to see if we could get in. Of course they need a reservation 3 days in advance, so we couldn’t.. But we chilled on the vast lawn in front of it for a while. And got a brochure that told us everything we’d need to know about Germany’s Parliament. And on our way back to the hotel we passed by the Prussian Victory Pillar and decided to have a look. Once we finally made it to the top, the view over the big park that surrounded it was amazing. And on our way up we got to see the histories of many important buildings worldwide.

Inside the Berliner Dom

The square that the famous pictures of Nazis always are in. Hitler spoke from the steps on the right.

Our last full day there we visited Checkpoint Charlie as part of our “official” program. It’s really touristy, and not actually as important in the grand scheme of things as America makes it out to be (after all it is the famous American checkpoint, and we’ve got to keep our American pride!) But parts of it still were interesting, and we learned a lot of the history of the wall. I was then going to explore the German History Museum, which is supposedly one of the best museums to visit, but decided a nap was more necessary.. So instead we hit up the Hard Rock Cafe in Berlin after a few hours relaxation. And guess what?? They actually serve free tap water if you want it! Nowhere else in Germany does! It was a little taste of home in a huge foreign city.

Checkpoint Charlie!

Since it was our last night there, a few of us grabbed some drinks and went to sit in a market square to listen to street musicians playing and watch fire twirlers twirling. And nothing made it better than seeing the beautiful architecture lit up at night on the side of the Spree river, along with the culture all around us. Despite us not taking part in Berlin’s great nightlife like we did almost every other night, it was a great relaxing way to have one last hoo-rah in the cultural center and mix of Germanic outdoor eating and relaxation with deep history and with a big city, the great mix that makes Berlin the coolest city in the world.

Like I mentioned earlier, after seeing Potsdam again, we headed away from Berlin the next day (much to everyone’s sadness. The theme of our lives right now is that we still want to be in Berlin). But to hear about our next two days of adventure before making it back to Reutlingen you will have to wait til the next post! Bis dann!

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