Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Living Like Kings: Potsdam and Cologne

Hello friends and family,

I unfortunately have not been the best blogger this week. School got really busy so I have been trying to focus on that. [Hopefully sometime in the next few weeks, I can write a blog entry about my classes.]

Since I am so behind on weekend trips, I decided to write a quick blog about our days in Potsdam and Cologne.

 We went to Potsdam to see some Kaiser palaces. They were huge and gorgeous. [profound statement, I know.]The kitchen, which was a separate building, was as big as most peoples' houses. I will have the buildings speak for themselves:
Schloss Sanssouci- where Frederick the Great lived.
The New Palace (Also Frederick the Great)



Cecilienhof, where the Potsdam Conference with Stalin, Churchill and Truman was held at the end of World War II.


After Potsdam, we headed over to Koln (Cologne). Right outside the train station is the Kolner Dom, which looks huge and incredibly intimidating at night. 

The next day, we went back to the Kolner Dom and got to see the inside for free because it was a Sunday! (Free is a very exciting thing in Europe, where everything is incredibly expensive.) The inside was beautiful, with many stained glass windows. 





Next, we went to the Lindt chocolate factory and museum. The factory part was really interesting to look at, especially the chocolate truffles (some of my favorite chocolate.) 



The chocolate truffle machine 



With Kinder eggs! I grew up eating those.

Well, that's pretty much it for Potsdam and Cologne. I will hopefully be able to write a few good entries about Paris when I get back from our weekend trip. Tomorrow, we leave for Munich and Salzburg. So excited to see  Neuschwanstein Castle!

Love you all!

Olga 

Sunday, February 13, 2011

A City Divided Cannot Stand: Exploring Berlin

Hello friends and family,

I just got back from Paris [which was a wonderful weekend] and know I am behind on my blog so I decided to write more about Berlin so I can blog about my weekend in Paris.

On Friday, We decided to take a four hour tour around the city. Our tour guide Alex was from Liverpool, a  history major, ex-journalist, entrepreneur/horror house owner who provided a detailed history of the city. We spent a long time discussing World War II and the Cold War and saw SO much. Just to name a few: Brandenburg Gate, Holocaust Memorial, the site of Hitler's bunker (which is now a parking lot), Lufthansa headquarters, the Berlin Wall, Checkpoint Charlie, German and French cathedrals, the site of the Nazi book burning, Humboldt University (where the Grimm brothers studied and Einstein taught), Museum Island, the Berliner Dom, and so much more.
Chris and I at the Brandenburg Gate

Alex also told us random interesting facts such as Fanta was created for the Nazis because they wanted Coca Cola but couldn't ship the right ingredients during the war and Hugo Boss designed the Nazi uniforms.
At the Berlin Wall
Chris in West and East Germany

Berlin is so beautiful, especially for a city that is only 20 years removed from the communist regime. I don't know what it is about communist history, but it really affects me. Maybe because my family had to live through it. I just can't imagine waking up one day to a divided city, where your husband could be on the other side and you can't see him. What a horrible situation to have to live in.
Standing where the Berlin Wall used to be. One foot in East Germany, the other foot in West Germany.

After the tour, we also decided to look at the Holocaust Memorial (Officially called the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe). Every Holocaust memorial has the words "forgive but never forget." What a powerful message to carry when reading testimonies from Holocaust victims and survivors.

Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe


Berlin was depressing, but it was also fascinating, having had to deal with such dark parts of history.

Hanging out with Ampelman! He helps Germans cross the street.


Well, I am exhausted so I will share about Potsdam and Koln (Cologne) tomorrow.



Love,
Olga

Monday, February 7, 2011

Herzogenrath-August-Schmidt-Platz: Our Journey to Berlin.

Well, it was bound to happen. For us, it was sooner rather than later.

We got on the wrong train.

This weekend, 10 of us decided to take a trip to Berlin and Koln (Cologne). Everything went smoothly until the third train change. We had about 45 minutes to wait between trains, and our train was late.

The local train ended up coming a minute before our train so we accidentally got on the wrong train, which took us to...Herzogenrath-August-Schmidt-Platz. Jonathan knew a little German (enough to ask, do you speak English?) so we found a nice lady at the grocery store near the train station who told us the local train we got on makes a loop and would be back at the station in about 30 minutes. So we were stuck waiting for this train to loop back around in this random sketchy city in Germany. We had to call Melissa Bilbro (one of the Baylor assistants) to figure out which connections to make to get to Berlin.

Four hours later, after midnight, we made it to Berlin. We were all incredibly exhausted at this point so we went to the taxi line to get a ride to our hostel. The taxi driver told us the hostel was "200 meters to the right" so he said it would be easier to walk.

So we walked. and walked. and kept on walking. We ended up stopping at another hotel to find out where we were. We found out that the taxi driver was very wrong. The hostel was over a mile and a half away. We finally got to the hostel around one in the morning. Check in took a long time so we all passed out once we got to the room.

Berlin itself was incredibly interesting. I will write a post about everything we did in Berlin tomorrow.

Sic 'Em Berlin!

Love you all,
Olga