I remember hearing someone
say that god never closes a door without opening a window. I don't
really believe in god, but if this quote is the case, 1) god must
have an astronomical energy bill, and 2) god was on my side last
week. Last week my plans to head to Erfurt for Easter totally blew up
in my face. It was clearly through no fault of my own, but who's
interested in placing blame? As fate (or a perpetually window-opening
god) would have it, the day those plans fell through, my friend Caro
invited me to spend the weekend with her and her boyfriend in
Potsdam. Needless to say, I readily accepted.
Before heading to Potsdam,
I knew precisely two things about the city. First, through a fairly
simple mnemonic device I remembered that the last major post-WWII
conference regarding the fate of Germany took place there. And
second, from my several trips to Berlin, I remembered that a
metropass including Berlin and Potsdam costs a full €2.30 more than
a regular Berlin metropass. The €2.30 alone has been enough to
prevent me from seeing Potsdam despite having been in Berlin at least
5 times.
I caught a train on
Thursday afternoon and headed toward Potsdam to see Caro and her
beau, his name is Joe (haha that rhymes!). The train station I got
into was called Park Sanssouci, a name which I consistently
mispronounced as Park Sarkozy, and it's right next
to the Palace grounds in Potsdam. The Palace is great, but also
overrun with tourists. The Palace, which doubles as a university
lecture hall and of course student bar, is currently being renovated
and spruced up because the man who built the castle, Friederich the
Great, is about to celebrate the big 3-0-0. And Potsdam is going ape
shit about this! The festival is called Friederisiko, a combination of his name and the German word for “Risk”.
They're even building a new castle. Apparently the old one wasn't
good enough. There is an art exhibition, and this whole shebang is
slated to last 6 months.
My first night in Potsdam
we went to see a Nirvana tribute show in Lindenpark, which is right
next to where Inglorious Basterds was filmed, btw. The music was
great and the atmosphere was really chill. I have to admit though,
that I expected more of a Nirvana “show”. Those of you who know
me know that I can't stand Courtney Love, and I fully stand behind
the theory that that shell of a human killed Kurt Cobain. I had my fingers crossed that they would have paid some tired
old hooker to impersonate Courtney Love and walk around the concert
shouting obscenities at the crowd, spilling drinks, and that at the
end she would reenact how she killed Kurt. But alas. After this we
stumbled...erm walked classily to a campus bar in Potsdam, where we
met two dudes from Cameroon. In typical German fashion a debate
followed, where the Cameroonians, who by the way both live in Germany
now, described the immigration problem in Germany. Let me repeat
this: Two people from Cameroon, who immigrated to Germany, believe
that immigrants are a threat to Germany....
Whatever.
The next day we set out to
see the Teufelsberg (Devil's Mountain, in German). I didn't quite
understand why were were doing this at first, and I should have asked
for clarification earlier when I heard phrases like “...but the
watchman is really lax” and “just an abandoned military
installation”. Despite how it sounds, the place was baller! It's an
old American radar station and listening post on the outskirts of
Berlin. You have to climb through a chain link fence ringed with
razor wire to get there. Though somehow there are mothers with
children in strollers all over the place. Germans are a tough folk.
You Go Girl, indeed |
This was our posse. The floor would occasionally just open up into 10 foot deep pits. This area was relatively safe. |
The smallest of the four domes. You can climb inside and enjoy a great view of Berlin. |
I'm not gonna share too
many pictures because I'm saving up for a post later about graffiti
and street art in Germany. After Teufelsberg we hit the town, and be
damned if we didn't meet those two Cameroonians again!
Saturday we nursed our
hangovers and checked out Potsdam. We found the villas where Stalin
and Truman lived during that post-WWII conference, and we also found
the Brandenburger Tor...the other one.
The Potsdam Brandenburger Tor, which is the one actually in Brandenburg. |
The Berlin Brandenburger Tor, which is by and far more famous. |
On Sunday, of course, we
painted Easter eggs, like normal college students do on weekends, and
then I hopped on a train back to Rostock, because that evening there
was an exchange student party, but that is a story for another
post...
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