Monday, July 16, 2012

Weilburg Town and Castle



One last gem ... I just happened onto this small town with a 1700s castle, in which I spent my last night in Deutschland!



They love their bicycles!  At a train station.
The enormous Volkswagen factory in Wolfsburg.

An amazing little old town--where I got to spend my last night in Germany.




The castle courtyard.

My castle room!

Views down to the river from my room.


The other rooms.

The castle from the river below.




Castle gardens.


They didn't bother me too much during the night!

More of Berlin

Just a few more pics of Berlin.  I am still just so amazed at how different life is under freedom/capitalism than it was here under communism!
Kiosk in the U Bahn (subway).

Memorial to the Soviet soldiers of World War II.  Used to be in East Berlin.  Still there.

Eating well!  And this was just at a meat market!

Checkpoint Charlie.  Surrounded by shopping now.

Checkpoint Charlie "then."

Where the Wall used to be.

Alexander Platz, the show place of what used to be East Berlin.

The East German-made Trabant cars on a for-fun sightseeing tour.  They sounded just like I remember them--like sewing machines.

A "Trabi" in a store/museum.

Brandenburg Gate from the East.
Same place back then.

A memorial of one of the many killed trying to cross from East Berlin.


Gotta take home a few souvenirs!


Saturday, June 30, 2012

Berlin

I got up at 5 am to catch the Berlin-Warsaw Express, which left just after 6 am.  Another nice long train trip, but this was was only a mangeable 5 hours!

Here is what makes Berlin so cool to me: I spent one winter and spring living there while I was a college student. Back then it was WEST Berlin and EAST Berlin. Sooooooooo different now! Most of you probably won't understand this post or why I put the pictures places I do here. But it carries a lot of meaning to me ... In fact, I was almost overcome, emotionally, while standing where the wall used to be, looking at the Brandenburg Gate. It used to on the other side of the wall, guarded by a brutal Communist dictatorship. It meant certain death to try to walk up to it and touch it. I was almost overcome again while I stood looking at the difference in Potsdamer Platz, a bustling intersection now, a bull-dozed over no-man's land just beyond the wall back then. Anyway, here are some of my pictures.


Arriving at the new Berlin Hauptbahnhof.

The handy map!
The KuDamm, the major shopping street, I lived a block from.
Believe it or not, the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, enshrouded while they clean and renovate it.

Here's how it used to look, the bombed-out shell of a church left that way as a memorial after World War II.

Crazy for soccer!

My old street!

Entrance to my Pension.

The outside ... it still looks the same!

The train station down the street.


The great Berlin curry wurst, with pommes frites!

The ever-present fruit store.

The train station where we used to enter East Berlin.  The rail line ended here back then and the East Berlin border guards spent about an hour with your passport before being OKed to enter the east.

And this used to be the exit from the border crossing onto the streets of East Berlin, which then had a mostly bombed-out appearance, very grey and drab, still from WWII.  Now it opens up to new buildings, just a few steps from a lively shopping area.

The Russian embassy, still in the prime location in Berlin.

THE main street in old Berlin, used to be in the east, now regaining its once-prominent position.  Several of the best museums in the world are just down the street.

The Brandenburg Gate, from the east.  This area used to be no-man's land.

Where The Wall used to be.

My pic, standing where the wall used to be.

One comment:  after all these years, I STILL could not go up to it and touch it!  Back then it was a communist dictatorship that kept you away.  Now it was Cocal Cola and Hyundai, who were sponsoring a "fan mile" for the soccer games.  Thousands of fans were assembling in the other direction to watch the game on this big-screen TV, behind me in this picture.  I'm sorry, but but it is just wrong to keep people away from such a symbol of freedom and democracy.  It shouldn't make anyone compare it with the old Communist East Germany!
  (By the way, shouldn't it be a "fan kilometer" in Europe?  Just wonderin').
Same spot, back then, with the communist East German flag flying on the top.

Potsdamer Platz.

Same place back then.  You can still see a couple of the buildings in the background.  This is a photo of a picture that was on display there.

A section of The Wall on display in Potsdamer Platz.