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Link: Worth visiting in Berlin
Berlin - Jüdischer Friedhof Weißensee
Jüdischer Friedhof Weissensee - October 2018
The nearly 400,000 square meter cemetery must be one of Europe's most beautiful and largest Jewish cemeteries. The cemetery houses 115,000 Berlin citizens. It is approx. 1 km. long and 500 m. wide. It is the final resting place of many famous Jewish Berliners, including the painter Lesser Ury, the composer Louis Lewandowski and the Tietz department store founder, Oscar Tietz. When the Nazis came to power, the department stores that Tietz founded were aryanized and forcibly transferred to non-Jewish owners and thus became part of Hertie, KaDeWe.
Friedhof Weissensee - October 2018
The Jewish cemetery is definitely worth a trip and you enjoy the silence and the bird life, but when you see the many tombstones for the Jews who committed suicide because they would not be forcibly interned in the Nazi death camps, the mood undeniably drops a bit.
Joseph Schwarz (1880 - 1926)
The picture above shows the mausoleum of one of the famous German chamber singers of the time, but what few people know, during Nazism it was also the haunt of several Jews on the run. They crawled up through the glass ceiling of the mausoleum, where they hid under the roof. There has not been much space, but it has been a hiding place for a while - but then no more. Unfortunately, the Nazis managed to track them down.
The ceiling under the roof of the mausoleum - Joseph Schwarz - October 2018
Unfortunately, the mausoleum is collapsing (2018) and for the same reason, it has been shut down - one must hope, however, that it will be restored in the near future, as it contains an important story (I have just heard - March 2024 - that money has now been found to restore the mausoleum).
If you want to find the mausoleum, you can use the map below to your advantage.
Map of Friedhof Weissensee with a marker of where to find Joseph Schwartz's mausoleum
Address:
Markus-Reich-Platz 1, 13088 Berlin
Transport:
S-Bahn: Greifswalder Str.
Links:
Wanted
Berlin is always worth a visit - summer or winter - but where to go? Here are some slightly unusual and very different suggestions for places I like to go.
D E F
G H I J K
L M N O P Q R S
S T U V X Y Z
Recreational areas:
Food and drinks:
Postcard Berlin, Sebastianstraße, Berliner Mauer Shortcut to postcards of the Berlin Wall
A recommendation
Berlin's landmark is a bear
I have visited Berlin for many years. The first time was in the late 70s with a school
class where the stay made such a big impression on me that I have been coming there
very often ever since.
The first times I visited the city, it was brutally divided into East and West and
separated by the famous and infamous Berlin Wall, which from one day to the next
separated families and friends.
The history of the construction of the Berlin Wall is long and begins in the division of Germany
after World War II, where the four victors and allies - the Soviet Union, the United States, England and France divided the country
between them. The capital, Berlin, from which the Allies were to jointly rule Germany, was also divided into four occupation zones,
which each Allied ruled, however, in accordance with the overall agreements the four Allies had jointly
But the marriage was not a happy one and, in short, the differences between the United States, England and France, on the one hand, and
the Soviet Union, on the other, became so big that cooperation was almost impossible.
The lack of cooperation led the Soviet Union to voluntarily decide to form the state of the GDR
in their part of Germany, where West Berlin were located - now as a desert island in the east.
In the GDR, however, they had the problem that many of its inhabitants would rather live in the somewhat richer "West", where the Americans, unlike the Russians,
provided financial assistance for the reconstruction after the "total war". In the Soviet-occupied German territories, the Russians instead
dismantled most of the production equipment and moved it to the Soviet Union, and to make matters worse, the Germans were also ordered to
pay war damages.
As the flow of refugees from the GDR increased, often by several thousand people a day, the
then government of the GDR felt compelled, with the consent of the Soviet Union, to confine its population, otherwise within a few years there would be so few people
left in the state no longer really would work. The flight to the West among young people, skilled and highly educated was so that the situation was unsustainable
and something had to be done.
The iconic photo of the soldier who escaped from the
GDR to the west
Well arrived in West Berlin, you had to sign up in e.g. the Marienfelde refugee camp to apply for a residence permit.
Here one was interrogated and later typically assigned to a job according to qualifications and an apartment. Many former GDR citizens have passed through
Marienfelde, where there now also is a museum. It is estimated that approx. 1.35 million people passed through the camp in Marienfelde until the fall of
the wall in 1989.
West Berlin was a thorn in the side of the so-called communist regimes, which on several
occasions tried to get the West Allies to leave Berlin and thus let it become part of the GDR, but when that failed, the Berlin Wall or "Antifaschistischer Schutzwall"
as it was officially called in the GDR was built in 1961.
"Notaufnahmelager"
Marienfelde (refugee camp)
The "Schandmauer" - or wall of shame as it was called in most of the western world - came to surround the whole of West Berlin.
The day of shame - 13 August 1961 - was the day when a 41 km long wall was started and further developed the following years right up to the fall of the wall in 1989. Memorial
It is estimated that approx. 14,000 border soldiers guarded the wall
- which by the way consisted of several walls - even though 860,000 mines had been laid, more than 300
watchtowers erected, trenches built and more than 600 well-trained watchdogs exposed.
Throughout the period from 1961 - 1989, it is estimated that there were more than 5,000 escape attempts and that
a little more than 3,000 people were apprehended. Some of these escape attempts took place through the 57 escape
tunnels dug under the Berlin Wall. In all, it is believed that 190 died during escape attempts.
World War II and the Berlin Wall - even after its dismantling - have of course left their mark
on the city of Berlin and there is no doubt that these events have had a colossal historical significance, but one
must not forget that Berlin is also an extremely interesting and modern city, where life is lived and where the
cultural offerings are enormous.
Wanted
The GDR had otherwise promised its population that after some hard years
of toil and toil, the reward would come, but when you could see, not
least via western TV, how the nation actually fell further and further
behind in relation to the west, many began to doubt truth value of the
statement. For the same reason, large parts of the population began to
seep to the west and this could most easily happen via Berlin, where the
borders between the various sectors were still open.
When a GDR citizen had decided to become a "republican
refugee", he or she typically dressed like people from the West
and then subsequently bought a train ticket to Berlin , if one did not already live there. In Berlin, the trip typically continued by "U-bahn" to West Berlin.
During such an escape, no significant luggage could be included, as one would easily be recognized as what one was - a refugee - and then taken to the police
station for questioning and imprisonment. Although there was free passage to West Berlin, many East German border guards were posted at the border and were
largely solely responsible for keeping an eye on any refugees.