As Germany celebrates the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, I can’t help remembering my spooky 1971 visit during the Cold War. When we crossed back to the West, tour buses were emptied at the border so mirrors could be rolled under the bus. They wanted to see if anyone was trying to escape with us.
Back then, life in the East was bleak, gray and demoralizing because of political repression and their unresponsive Soviet-style command economy.
Today, Berlin feels like the nuclear fuel rod of a great nation. It’s so vibrant with youth, energy and an anything-goes-and-anything’s-possible buzz that Munich feels spent in comparison.
A sleek Radisson Blu Hotel now stands where the old leading hotel of East Berlin once stood.
I remember staying there during the Cold War, when a West German five-mark coin changed on the black market would get me drinks all night. Now five euros is lucky to get me a beer, and the lobby of the Radisson hosts an eight-story-tall exotic fish tank the size of a grain silo with an elevator zipping right up the middle.
As a booming tourist attraction, Berlin welcomed more visitors than Rome in 2009. The crush of tourists makes parts of the new Berlin tacky, even some sights associated with the Wall.
Checkpoint Charlie is a capitalist freak show. Lowlife characters sell fake bits of the wall, World War II-vintage gas masks and East German medals.
The nearby Museum of the Wall at Checkpoint Charlie (www.mauermuseum.de) is worthwhile, however, telling a gripping tale and recounting many ingenious escape attempts.
It includes plenty of video coverage of those heady days when people power broke down the barriers. Dusty, disorganized and slightly overpriced, all of that just adds to its charm. It’s the best place in Berlin to get a handle on the cold old days.
In the new Berlin, it’s actually getting hard to find traces of the Wall. Look for a double row of cobbles in the streets marking the former path of the 100-mile “Anti-Fascist Protective Rampart,” as the communists called it.
These innocuous cobbles run throughout the city, even through some modern buildings.
The Wall’s most iconic sight, of course, is the Brandenburg Gate. Built in 1791, it is the last survivor of 14 gates in Berlin’s old city wall. The gate was the symbol of Prussian Berlin, and later the symbol of a divided Berlin. It sat unused, part of a sad circle dance of concrete and barbed wire, for more than 28 years.
Postcards all over town still show the ecstatic day — Nov. 9, 1989 — when the world enjoyed the sight of happy Berliners jamming the gate.
The shiny white Brandenburg Gate was completely restored in 2002, but you can still see faint patches marking war damage.
The last complete “Wall system” (with both sides of its Wall and its no-man’s-land, or “death strip,” all still intact) is now part of a sober little memorial, the Berlin Wall Documentation Center.
Though it’s directed at German-speakers and far from other sights, it’s handy enough to the Nordbahnhof station of the S-Bahn (Berlin’s elevated train system) that any Wall aficionado will find it worth a quick visit.
No tour of Germany is complete without a visit to the reunited, revitalized Berlin. Over the last two decades, we’ve witnessed the rebirth of a great European capital.
As we walk over what was the Wall and through the well-patched Brandenburg Gate, it’s clear that history is not contained in some book, but is an exciting story happening today.
Rick Steves: rick@ricksteves.com, or c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, WA 98020.
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