BERLIN – a Guide to the Wild Wild East

A complete guide to Berlin ‘s Wild East – namely the part of Germany’s capital that used to be behind the proverbial Iron Curtain, obviously.

Mural at the East Side Gallery in Berlin introduced in a Guide to the city's Wild East
At the East Side Gallery, on this picture by street artist and wall painter Birgit Kinder you can see a Trabant – aka Trabi – one of two types of cars that were manufactured in the former GDR and everyone in the west made fun of. The Trabi is crashing through a wall – guess which one – and its license plate reads Nov 9, 89 – the date the gates to the west were open and the wall – and finally the GDR – came down.

Formerly the capital of the GDR, Berlin’s Eastern neighborhoods actually changed really fast for the better and cooler and are more exciting than the full and settled West today.

Formerly, in a different post, I took you on a smooth ride across Berlin, Germany’s exciting capital, by bus #100. We started at the Alexanderplatz in the east and went westwards all the way to the former main train station Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten.

In today’s post, let’s discover what you get to see and experience when you turn east at the Alexanderplatz – and walk right into the heart of the ex-capital of the former GDR – the German Democratic Republic.

Alexanderplatz – Breathing History

Since I’d been to Berlin for the first time, I’ve felt like literally breathing history there: From the stiff German Empire to the liberal, progressive, and exciting Weimar Republic leading into the hellish years of WWII – and eventually, of course, the division into the sectors that led into the disunion, marked by the Berlin wall from 1961 until the unification in 1989.

Sometimes it’s beyond interesting or fascinating. At times I find it simply overwhelming. Is there a spot in this city that is not of historic relevance?!

Alexanderplatz in BERLIN - a Guide to the Wild Wild East
It was sort of ironic that people in the former GDR were deprived of travelling but could still determine the time of 148 major cities around the world on the Urania World Clock which was erected in 1969.

So again, like on the last tour, we begin our journey at the Alexanderplatz.
This square is one of the largest and most important squares in Berlin, also due to Alfred Döblin’s legendary, impressionist novel Berlin Alexanderplatz from 1929 which describes in a very deep and dense way the fate of the proletarian class in a metropolis between the two World Wars.

The Alexanderplatz was celebrated in a novel by Alfred Döblin:
Alfred Döblin
Alfred Döblin 

(*10 August 1878 | ? 26 June 1957)
A modernistic novelist, essayist, and doctor. Due to his expressionist work and his cultural and political ideas, he had to flee the Nazis first to Switzerland and France and eventually to the USA. Nevertheless, after the war, he and his wife came back to Europe, settled first in Germany and then in France. Only in 1956, Döblin was able to live up to his most famous work Berlin Alexanderplatz by his last novel Tales of a Long Night, published in 1956, one year before his death.
(Photo: unknown photographer, probably from allied military forces, Doeblin alfred 1946, cropped to 5:7, B/W-filter, CC0 1.0)

Today, the Alexanderplatz is a central place when it comes to shopping and dining, and the Weltzeituhr, a large turret-style clock, and the television tower can be visited here, too.

Coming from the tower, let’s cross the Karl-Liebknecht-Straße* in front of the Marienkirche and then keep walking into a small alley at the corner of the bakery Treibmann. This way, you’ll get to Rosenstraße.

The Karl-Liebknecht-Straße is named after Karl Liebknecht:
Karl Liebknecht
Karl Liebknecht

(*13 August 1871 | ? 15 January 1919)
Co-founded with Rosa Luxemburg the German Communist Party and initiated the Spartacist uprising of 1919 which then was crushed by the Social Democrat Government with the help of paramilitary units. Liebknecht and Luxemburg were executed and are regarded as martyrs of the turmoils between the two World Wars.
(Photo: Unknown, KarlLiebknecht1900, cropped to 5:7, B/W-filter, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Rosenstraße

Rosenstraße – the street of roses…beautiful name, right?!

Albeit, it was at Rosenstraße where in 1943 in the middle of all the Nazi terror sort of a miracle happened.

In February of that year, about 8,000 Jewish men were arrested right at their working places, obviously for deportation to the concentration camps. However, some of these men were married to so-called ‘Aryan’, hence, German, non-Jewish women. Therefore, for two months, these wives protested in front of this building against the arrest of their husbands. So for two months, day by day, they proved that they had no intention to accept the abduction of their loved ones.

In order to avoid bloodshed in the very center of the capital of the ‘Reich’, the regime backed down and released these men.

Memorial Block der Frauen, created by Ingeborg Hunzinger and introduced in a Guide to the Wild East of Berlin
Memorial Block der Frauen, created by Ingeborg Hunzinger.

Since 1995, there is a sculpture by Ingeborg Hunzinger called Block der Frauen (Block of Women) honoring these more than brave women who stood up against the Nazi terror here at Rosenstraße.

There is the book Resistance of the Heart by Nathan Stoltzfus as well as the movie Rosenstraße by Margarethe von Trotta on this story.

*Note 

In this article, I’m writing out some of the German names and places, obviously. You will also notice that there are letters that might not exist in other languages.
Firstly, there is the letter ß that exists only in the German alphabet and it’s by no means a B – it’s a ‘sharp’, double S as in kiss. When writing, you can actually replace it by a double S.
Then there are three more vowels, ä being the easiest one since it’s pronounced like an open e as in head.
Ö and ü are tougher, ö being pronounced more or less like the e in her and ü as the u in huge.

As you turn left at the next cross street, you’ll get to the Litfaßplatz, honoring the Litfaßsäule, named after Ernst Litfaß.

Litfaß column
Here you see a Litfaß column, topped with a sculpture by Christoph Pöggeler. This column is actually standing in Düsseldorf – and here is a post on this fun city, the capital of the federal state North Rhine-Westphalia.

You might know the Litfaßsäule rather by the name advertising column – because that’s what it is. However, since they were invented by clever Mr. Litfaß in 1854 and the first 100 columns were actually installed in Berlin, here, they are called Litfaßsäule.

Hackescher Markt

After this little fun fact, keep walking towards the Hackescher Markt, you cannot miss it since it’s right behind the S-Bahn station and there is one café or restaurant next to the other and in the center are stalls selling produce and snacks and nick nacks and it’s a very vivid, nice square.

Hackesche Höfe in BERLIN - a Guide to the Wild Wild East
The beautiful commuter train station, built in 1882, is surrounded by a vast variety of restaurants and bars.

A good place to enjoy some good fast food is the restaurant BBQ Kitchen. They serve excellent burgers, ribs, and German Currywurst every day from 11 a. m. until midnight.

Currywurst, a staple of Berlin,  introduced in a Guide to the Wild East of Berlin
Currywurst, fries, and a local beer – how can it get more classic?

Hackesche Höfe

Just a stone’s throw from the Hackescher Markt is the Hackesche Höfe, a gorgeous courtyard complex that consists of eight interconnected courtyards.

Hackesche Höfe in BERLIN - a Guide to the Wild Wild East
The beautiful Art Nouveau facades of the Hackesche Höfe….

While these courtyards, built and decorated in an Art Nouveau style, are housing costly boutiques and chains and big labels, the adjacent Schwarzenberg house withstands posh tenants and stands like a fortress, dedicated to besieging the globalized, capitalist conquerer.

Schwarzenberg Courtyard,  introduced in a Guide to the Wild East of Berlin
A courtyard for the backstreet boys….and girls, obviously.

Hence, the Schwarzenberg house is richly decorated with graffiti and quirky sculptures and the bars here are rather rustic. There are independent galleries, an arthouse cinema, and also two memorial sites:

Street Art Berlin - Jimmy C.: Anne Frank -  introduced in a Guide to the Wild East of Berlin
I assume everybody knows this face: Graffiti of Anne Frank right next to the entrance to the center.

Firstly, the Anne Frank Zentrum – I refrain from explaining who Anne Frank was. Although Anne Frank was born in Frankfurt and lived most of her far too short life in Amsterdam, there is this exhibition here in Berlin on her life, the significance of her diary, and the epoch she lived in.
This center is mainly designed for encouraging young people to take political responsibility and stand up for freedom, tolerance, and democracy.

Anne Frank Zentrum
Rosenthaler Straße 39
10178 Berlin
Phone: + 49 – 30 – 28 886 56-00
Email: zentrum@annefrank.de

The center can be visited Tuesday to Sunday from 10 a. m. to 6 p. m.

Otto Weidt’s Workshop

Another important memorial is the Museum Blindenwerkstatt Otto Weidt, Museum Otto Weidt’s Workshop for the Blind, housed actually in the former workshop. By employing Jews, Otto Weidt managed to save them from deportation to the concentration camps – or at least, he deferred it.

Mural depicting Otto Weidt and  introduced in a Guide to the Wild East of Berlin
Before I read the name next to this mural, I wondered why there is a not very good portrait of Barack Obama next to the museum’s entrance….

Yes, he was a smaller version of Oskar Schindler and also he saved fewer lives. But most importantly, Steven Spielberg did not make a film about his heroic deeds.
Still, his story is fascinating and encouraging just the same and everybody should know about him.

Museum Otto Weidt’s Workshop for the Blind
Rosenthaler Straße 39
10178 Berlin

The Museum Otto Weidt’s Workshop for the Blind is open every day from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

The Workshop for the Blind where many people found shelter was run by:
Otto Weidt
Otto Weidt

(* 2 May 1883 | ? 22 December 1947)
Suffering from decreasing eyesight, he opened a workshop for brushes and brooms, employing mainly blind people. During WWII, he fought to protect his Jewish workers against deportation. Consequently, in 1971, he has been recognized as one of the Righteous Men of the World’s Nations by Yad Vashem.
(Photo: Hanayאוטו ויידט תמונה במוזיאון (cropped), cropped to 5:7, B/W-filter, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Although Spielberg didn’t make a movie on Otto Weidt, there is a TV movie. It deals with Otto Weidt’s heroic concept and also his love for Alice Licht, one of his Jewish employees who – with his help – even managed to escape a concentration camp.

By the way, it’s mainly because of people like Otto Weidt that I don’t feel comfortable when people speak about ‘the Germans’ having done all the atrocities.

Righteous Men And Women

This being said, I by no means intend to whitewash anyone. But not every German citizen was a staunch Nazi. As a matter of fact, there even was a number of Germans who were victims themselves: German Communists, Clerics, Homosexuals, and others were prosecuted, too.

On the other hand, sadly, the Nazis found support in searching and rounding up Jewish people in every European country. As a matter of fact, as far as I know, only Denmark managed to save almost the entire Jewish population by sending them in boats to Sweden.
Refugees coming by boats – doesn’t that sound familiar?!
Also, it’s sad to say that in every other country, the Nazis had allies or collaborators.

So, however, life would be so easy if one could blame exclusively one entire nation for being the devil. We could declare the Germans the planet’s only villains so that the rest of the world’s population would frolic and pick daisies on a lush lawn. Unfortunately – or probably thank God – it’s obviously not that simple.

Walking along the Hackesche Höfe on Rosenthaler Straße, you then turn left into Sophienstraße at the next corner. It’s a very cute street with many small shops and lovely cafés and bakeries where you can just sit in front of the window, enjoying a cup of coffee and a piece of homemade cake.

Jewish Heritage

The next cross street is the Große Hamburger Straße. This used to be Berlin’s Jewish neighborhood, hence, on the street’s southern end is the Jewish Cemetery. Across the street, Berlin’s first Jewish retirement home was opened with the Jewish School for Boys next to it. As a matter of fact, these buildings were used by the Nazis to round up Jews for their deportation.

Sculpture Jewish Victims of Fascism by Will Lammert. These 13 figures are located on the grounds of the destroyed retirement home.
Sculpture Jewish Victims of Fascism by Will Lammert. These 13 figures are located on the grounds of the destroyed retirement home.

In 1943, the Jewish cemetery was destroyed and turned into an air-raid shelter. The gravestones were used to reinforce the walls. Later, the grounds became a mass grave for soldiers and civilians killed during Allied air raids. Today, one symbolic tombstone and a sarcophagus filled with remains of gravestones are all that’s left. About 3,000 war victims, as well as approximately 3,000 Jewish dead, are now buried together.

Treats

As at the end of the Große Hamburger Straße you turn right into the Oranienburger Straße, you will also find many nice places where you can have a snack or a coffee.

There is a branch of the excellent ice cream parlor chain Amorino – yes, for once in my life I’m promoting a ‘global player’:

Amorino Eis Boutique
Oranienburger Straße 1-3
10178 Berlin

Open from noon till 9 p. m.

Mural at a snack joint in Berlin
You probably know these two from a slightly different portrait?! This mural, however, decorates the wall of the Curry 61 snack joint.

Also, some of the best Currywurst – the typical sausage with tomato sauce and curry powder – is sold here:

Curry 61
Oranienburger Straße 6
10178 Berlin

Open from 11 a. m. till midnight.

With your stomach full, let’s keep walking down the Oranienburger Straße to Number 28.

New Synagogue

Here in 1866, the Neue Synagoge, hence, the New Synagogue, was inaugurated. 3,200 seats made it Germany’s largest Jewish house of worship.

 Neue Synagoge in Berlin
Looking up the New Synagogue.

Unlike other Synagogues, it was not destroyed during the ‘Kristallnacht’, the Pogrom Night in 1938. Nevertheless, eventually, it was severely damaged during air raids. Finally, in 1958, the main hall was dynamited so that only the facade remained. After restoration, the Synagogue was re-opened in 1995. Now the building houses the Centrum Judaicum as well as its museum. There is also a small prayer room for about 100 people on the 3rd floor.

Note: The prayer room and the museum are operating independently.

Synagogue:
Synagoge Oranienburger Straße

Museum:
Stiftung Neue Synagoge Berlin – Centrum Judaicum 

Oranienburger Straße 28 – 30
10117 Berlin

Opening hours April to September Monday to Friday 10 a. m. to 6 p. m. and Sunday till 7 p. m.; the cupola is open.

Opening hours October to March Sunday to Thursday 10 a. m. to 6 p. m., Friday till 3 p. m.; the cupola is closed.

At the next corner, turn left into the Tucholskystraße and eventually right into Ziegelstraße to get to the Friedrichstraße.

The Tucholskystraße is named after Kurt Tucholsky:
Kurt Tucholsky
Kurt Tucholsky

 (* 9 January 9 1890  | ? 21 December 21 1935)
Undoubtedly one of the most important German journalists and novelists of the Weimar Republic, famous for his wit and outstanding ability to use the German language. Being Jewish, after the Nazis came to power, obviously, his books were burnt and his citizenship revoked. Tucholsky migrated to Sweden were he overdosed sleeping pills. However, it is not evident if this happened on purpose or accidentally.
(Photo: Unknown, Ktktkt, cropped to 5:7, B/W-filter, CC0 1.0)

Center of the GDR Era

On Friedrichstraße, to your right is the Friedrichstadt-Palast, a revue theatre from the GDR era.

Friedrichstadtpalast in Berlin
Built in the mid 19th century, this large building used to house even a circus. Honestly, I’m not fond of either circus or revues, but I find it interesting that at that time they already had this pretty plain architecture.
(Photo: User:Dabbelju, Berlin Friedrichstadtpalast 2006, cropped to 7:5, CC BY-SA 3.0)

As you cross into Reinhardtstraße, you’ll get the chance to visit one of the remaining air raid shelters that today houses a private art gallery, the Boros Foundation.

Boros Bunker in Berlin
The former Reichsbahnbunker was built in 1943 and has since then served various different purposes. In 2003, Christian Boros purchased the building for this private collection of contemporary art.

Businessman and collector Christian Boros and his wife Karen do not only own the bunker and are living in a spacious penthouse on the upper floor. They also call an impressive collection of contemporary art their own. The gallery can be visited, but only on a pre-booked guided tour (available in German and English).

Sammlung Boros Bunker
Reinhardtstr. 20
10117 Berlin
Phone: + 49 – 30 – 27 59 40 65
Email: info@sammlung-boros.de

Now walk back to the Friedrichstraße and turn right to cross the Weidendammer Brücke.

Past Full Of Tears

On the right-hand side towards the river Spree is a glass building called Tränenpalast, the palace of tears. This used to be basically the only place where the Berlin wall was a tiny bit permeable – visitors from the west were allowed to enter the GDR after having been grilled; and some people from East Berlin – namely retirees – were allowed to go west…for a short visit.

Tränenpalast in Berlin
There are still the old signs at the former interrogation booths.

Today there is an exhibition on this whole pretty rigid and sometimes cruel border traffic.

Tränenpalast
Reichstagufer 17
10117 Berlin Visitor

Opening hours are Tuesday to Friday 9 a. m. to 7 p. m. and weekends from 10 a. m. to 6 p. m.

 Crossing of  Oranienburger Straße and Friedrichstraße in Berlin Wild East
Crossing of  Oranienburger Straße and Friedrichstraße.

To get to the next stop of our tour, you can either walk up the Friedrichstraße which further north leads into Chausseestraße.

Here you can check out what’s on at the Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (n.b.k), New Berlin Art Association. They usually have rather unusual, quirky artists – exhibitions and performances alike.

Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (n.b.k.)
Chausseestrasse 128/129
10115 Berlin Deutschland

Bertold Brecht

A few steps further, at number 126, is the entrance to the Dorotheenstädtischer Friedhof is to be found.

 Dorotheenstädtischer Friedhof
Cemeteries always have a calm atmosphere – which, of course, is not that surprising.

Here, some great Germans are laid to rest: The philosopher Friedrich Hegel 1770 – 1831), the artists and architects Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1781 – 1841) and Johann Gottfried Schadow (1764 – 1850), novelists such as Heinrich Mann (1871 – 1950), Anna Seghers (1900 – 1983), and Christa Wolf (1929 – 2011). And the theater power couple Bertolt Brecht and Helene Weigel.

Dorotheenstädtischer Friedhof
Chausseestraße 126
10115 Berlin

The cemetery can be visited from March to October from 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. and from November to February till 5 p. m.

Funny enough, Bertolt Brecht and Helene Weigel didn’t have to move far after they passed away: Their last home has been right next to the cemetery and today there is a museum honoring their work. The memorial center can be visited on guided tours (German and English – no advance booking required). Please check their website since there are too many hours to be listed here.

If you’re not sure whether you’ve heard about Bertolt Brecht before: His most famous musical theater piece is the Threepenny Opera, adapted from John Gay’s The Beggar’s Opera. While Brecht wrote the lyrics, the music is by Kurt Weill – and you certainly know the song Mack The Knife?! Well, here you go then. Another internationally known song would be the Moon of Alabama, written for his play Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. So, show me the way to the next whiskey bar – and don’t ask why, no, don’t ask why….

Brecht-Weigel-Gedenkstätte
Chausseestraße 125
10115 Berlin

Remembering one of Germany’s most important writers:
Bertolt Brecht
Bertolt Brecht

(* 10 February 1898  | ? 14 August 1956)
Clearly one of the most important and famous German dramatists and poets. He was a dedicated communist and pacifist and consequently, most of his theater plays deal with the hardship of and the injustice and inequality between men. His poems, however, tend to be surprisingly tender and romantic. Being a communist and pacifist, obviously, Brecht hat to migrate from Nazi Germany – first to Sweden and eventually to the USA; where, by the way, he was again prosecuted during the McCarthy era. In 1949, however, he moved back to Germany and settled in the Russian sector, the GDR’s predecessor.
(Photo: Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-W0409-300 / Kolbe, Jörg / CC-BY-SA 3.0, Bertolt-Brecht, Formatted to 5:7, CC BY-SA 3.0 DE)

…and his wife:
Helene Weigel
Helene Weigel

(* 12 May 1900  | ? 6 May 1971)
German character actress and artistic director. Being Bert Brecht’s second wife, she played many roles of his famous plays, Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder / Mother Courage and Her Children being the most celebrated one. Being of Jewish descent and a member of the communist party since 1930, she migrated from Nazi Germany to Los Angeles where, for obvious reason, she could not pursue her career. After moving back to East Germany in 1949, she founded, together with her husband Bertolt Brecht, the theater Berliner Ensemble.
(Photo: Deutsche Fotothek‎, Fotothek df Pk 89, Formatted to 5:7, CC BY-SA 3.0 DE)

While Brecht and Weigel, along with other artists, writers, journalist etc. saw a Socialist State as a valid alternative especially to the Fascism they just had suffered through, for many people the way this political system was installed by the leaders meant hardship and pain.

Phoenix From the Ashes

During the first years after the war, the frontier between East and West Berlin was pretty much open and the Berliners were able to travel back and forth as they pleased.

Only when more and more people decided to leave the eastern part and make a living rather in the west, the grip got slowly tighter and finally, in 1961, the GDR government built the infamous wall.

Street Art Berlin - Socialist Fraternal Kiss: Honecker - Brezhnev by Dmitri Vrubel
East Side Gallery: One way of using the remnants of the Berlin wall is making it into a street art gallery. In this picture, you witness Berlin’s most iconic kiss.

There are memorials and remnants of the wall all over the place, but at the Bernauer Straße, the situation was particularly bizarre. The wall went right through the houses – and even through a church wall.

Bernauer Straße 48 where Ida Siekmann jumped off the fourth floor
Bernauer Straße 48 where Ida Siekmann jumped off the fourth floor – and sadly didn’t make it.
(Photo: Willy Pragher, Berlin Bernauer Straße 48 Mahnmal Ida Siekmann 078927, Formatted to 7:5, CC BY 3.0)

So before the GDR soldiers were able to brick up the windows, people just entered the houses on the east side and jumped off the windows to the west; from any storey available. Needless to say that there were casualties since people literally jumped even from the fourth floor.

Versöhnungskirche in Berlin
Also, the main gate of the Versöhnungskirche was bricked up
(Photo: Olga Bandelowa, Versöhnungskirche Bernauer Straße, cropped to 7:5, CC BY-SA 2.0 DE)

Today, there is a Memorial Park at Bernauer Straße 111 and a very informative visitor center at Bernauer Straße 119. You get there from the Brecht-Weigel-House walking up Chausseestraße and turning right into Zinnowitzer Straße which leads first into Julie-Wolfthorn-Straße and then Bernauer Straße.

And Now

So what do you think so far? A city bursting with history from different epochs – terrible and full of hope, very dark, but with a tiny spark of light.

And today? Today, this part of Berlin is one of the hippest neighborhoods.

As you walk on Ackerstraße back south from the Memorial Park, you’ll get to Torstraße, Linienstraße, and Auguststraße. Each of these cross streets is lined with art galleries, snack bars, coffee shops so that you just have to take your pick where to hang out with the in-crowd.

Auguststraße in East Berlin
Going west on Auguststraße, a street packed with galleries, hip shops, and restaurants.

Linienstraße and Auguststraße end at Oranienburger Straße in the west, and this is the Land of Cockaigne when it comes to food from all over the world: Asian, Arabic, European – everybody finds its favorite here.

Graffiti at the Auguststraße in Berlin
Art on the street on Auguststraße….
KW Institute Auguststraße in Berlin
….and at galleries like KW Institute for Contemporary Art.

Walking down Linienstraße eastwards, you’ll get to our final stop, the Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, the Rosa Luxemburg Square.

Karl Liebknecht House at the Rosa Luxemburg Platz in Berlin
The Karl Liebknecht House, housing the headquarters of the left-wing party Die Linke, on the Rosa Luxemburg Platz. The pavilion to the left is a….Pavillon, an annex of the Volksbühne where e. g. exhibitions are taking place.

No wonder that this place, named after one of the world’s greatest communist icons, is also home to Germany’s extreme left-wing party Die Linke with a huge portrait of Che Guevara decorating their building.

Giving Theater to the People

But the most impressive structure here is the Volksbühne, the People’s Theater, built in 1913 / 1914. The idea was to have a theater literally for the people instead of a bourgeois elite. They tried to promote naturalist plays people could relate to and also offered them at prices that the common workers could afford. Obviously, the theater could not keep these ideals up after the Nazis came into power.

After the war, the heavily damaged building was rebuilt from 1950 to 1954.

Volksbühne
The Volksbühne: Modern plays on a traditional stage.

Since their repertoire – apart from interesting, new plays – includes also modern dance performances and different concerts, it’s worth checking it out for a pleasant evening out – like a real Berliner.

Volksbühne
Linienstraße 227
10178 Berlin

Walking down the Rosa-Luxemburg-Straße, you’ll get back to the Alexanderplatz where our tour started.

The Rosa-Luxemburg-Straße is named after:
Rose Luxemburg
Rosa Luxemburg

(* 5 March 1871 – 15 January 1919)
Polish-born philosopher, economist, and anti-war activist. However, she got German citizenship in 1899. Also, she was the co-founder of the communist newspaper Die Rote Fahne/The Red Flag. Together with Karl Liebknecht, she founded the German Communist Party and initiated the Spartacist uprising of 1919. After it was crushed by the Social Democrat Government with the help of paramilitary units, Rosa Luxemburg’s dead body was thrown into the canal Landwehrkanal.

So, guys, I hope I managed to show you some interesting and inspiring things – and I hope you’ve enjoyed your walk through the Wild Wild East.

I’d be more than pleased to learn what you think, so just let me have it in the comment section below.

Vielen Dank!

Where to Stay

If you are planning on exploring mainly Berlin’s Wild Wild East, staying close to the Alexanderplatz is highly recommended. From there, you can follow my above itinerary walking.

Room at the Premier Inn in Berlin
A well-spent day brings happy sleep, says the sign on the wall, quoting no less than Leonardo da Vinci. However, they skipped the second part, which reads: so life well used brings happy death. Oops.

The Premier Inn is just a few steps from the Alexanderplatz and offers modern, comfortable rooms at a reasonable price.

Premier Inn
Theanolte-Bähnisch-Straße 2
10178 Berlin

Final Note

Since I’ve published and updated a couple of posts on Berlin over the past weeks, I’m refraining from posting general travel info on how to get there and around, the money, the WelcomeCard etc. Please be so kind to check my post BERLIN guide: get the most for less on bus 100.

To explore Berlin’s amazing Street Art, rush over to my post Best Street Art in BERLIN

Before coming to Germany, you might want to check out my post All you need to know before going to GERMANY. This information will make your trip smoother and more enjoyable.

Map

Here you can trace the tour on a responsive street map. Clicking on the slider symbol at the top left or the full-screen icon at the top right will display the whole map including the legend.

Pinnable Pictures

If you choose to pin this post for later, please use one of these pictures:

Note: I am completing, editing, and updating this post regularly – last in January 2023.

Did You Enjoy This Post? Then You Might Like Also These:

Disclaimer:
* All links in this post are a service to my readers and not affiliated. However, the Premier Inn invited me to stay with them. 
Yet, all opinions on their service are mine and weren’t by any means influenced by my cooperation partner.

51 Replies to “BERLIN – a Guide to the Wild Wild East”

  1. Great post about Berlin. I have always wanted to visit and there seems like there is so much to do!!

  2. I was in Berlin twice, but I still have a lot to see there. Next time I’m going to visit it with your great tips. I don’t want to miss those architectural and historically significant places. It’s so a detailed guide!

  3. Great post with a fascinating history of Berlin and some of the personalities from World War II Era. The sculptures and art work on Berlin wall is amazing!

  4. On our Baltic cruise, we had the chance to go to Berlin for a day trip and passed on that because we want to spend a much longer time in the city one day. Your post sure shows that we made the right decision to plan more time for Berlin. How interesting to see a different view of Berlin when you head east of the Alexanderplatz. Certainly moving to visit the Anne Frank house. And to see the Jewish memorials. I never knew there was a small opening in the Berlin Wall that let people through for a short visit. So much history!

  5. It’s going to be the end of my day, except before ending I am reading this wonderful piece of writing to increase my experience.

  6. Super detailed and informative post about my home town Berlin. I will recommend it to English speaking friends! If you come back sometimes, I think you would enjoy the James Turrell light installation on the Dorotheenstädischer Friedhof. And a few weeks ago I went on a VR tour with Timr Ride through East Berlin – it was a bit tacky- but fun too.

  7. I have never been to Berlin. But I can see there are lot of nice places to visit there. Will definitely love to visit there sometimes

  8. My boyfriend was an expat in Berlin and has told me a lot about the city. He also said that he goes to Hackesche frequently and that we should absolutely go once it’s safe to fly again. Thank you for your handy tips and guide!

  9. I loved Berlin. Amazing city break. When I first arrived I wasn’t so exciting but then it gets under your skin and the incredible and unique history that can’t be experienced anywhere else. You’ve got some great highlights. I really enjoyed the DDR Museum.

  10. Berlin really does seem like a fascinating country filled with so much history. It seems to have something to offer all types of travellers so I don't know why I still haven't been. What were your highlights?

  11. I am passionate about history so Berlin is a city that I love. I really enjoyed reading more about the east.

  12. I absolutely love all of the art and history in your post! I have good very good things about Berlin and your post has just confirmed all of them. 🙂

  13. I just live Berlin it is a city that you can keep go8ng back over and over again.l love you took a local bus to explore.last time i was there l remember being at the old train station at one if the restaurants what a lovely area. I like the graffiti to of Anne Frank.

  14. Wow, what a comprehensive post about Berlin. The city is so massive, that it's impossible to fit it all in! I wish that we had discovered the Alexanderplatz when we visited a few years ago. I guess that's a good reason to go back for another visit!

  15. What an amazing journey you take us on! I love seeing some of the buildings rebuilt but with the same flavor as before the war. I didn't realize there was a museum dedicated to Anne Frank here, I did see her home in Amsterday so would love to see this one too. Also, I like how you offset some of the interesting people that populate the history & culture of what you shared, it was a gret touch!

  16. I remember visiting Berlin when I was 18, but I don't think I had nearly half of this information when I went. It would be great to go back and see some of these places and experience more of the history. Very informative post, and the currywurst looks very tasty!

  17. I've been to Berlin probably 40 times over the years, but I've never been a tourist in Berlin, always just driving through or flying in/out of. I definitely need to really visit this City, thank you for all of the info.

  18. Nicely done on the walking tour Renata. Berlin is one of our favorite cities and one we know very, very well. You hit all the top spots. Will be very helpful to anyone who has yet to visit.

  19. What a great itinerary to one of my favourite cities! I remember visiting Alexanderplatz as I stayed in the Mitte area. I don't remember seeing the Anne Frank mural but it's beautiful. Currywurst and frites are delicious!

  20. I love Berlin, especially the eastern block, because yes, because it looks so wild and every corner has a bit of history. Overall, it is one of my favorite cities.

  21. You're right, every corner of Berlin full with history. A complete guide to explore Berlin City. I'm glad I read this as I plan a trip to Berlin. Bookmark the post right away.

  22. There is so much fascinating history to take in here. Berlin in particular, and Germany in general is a history-lover's paradise. I would love to do a tour and see the castles, especially.

  23. I have always been intrigued by Berlin (maybe because of my German ancestry), so this detailed post of where to go was really fascinating! The Berlin Wall remnants and facts are stunning.

  24. Such a wonderful & detailed guide on Berlin. you have given alot of details which would be quite useful for the first timers. Thanks for sharing.

  25. I would love to visit Berlin! There's just so much history and some of these sites I didn't even know about!

  26. Have seen in movies or read in books about Berlin and have been wanting to travel there for a while now. The pictures in your post are fantastic and the place looks like creativity paradise! Hope to get there soon.

  27. Berlin has always been on my list of places to travel to! I have a few friends from college that travel here regularly and they love it. It's such an artsy, cool place, with a lot of history. Hopefully I can get there someday! Thank you for such a thorough post. It made me feel like I was there 🙂

  28. I have always to visit Berlin. Heard a lot about the city. Visited Düsseldorf some years ago and always wanted to see the rest of Germany.

  29. Wow! Berlin is definitely wild and so beautiful; I've always loved places that are full of history just as Berlin. Anyway, Rosenstraße is no doubt a place of roses…the sculptures look so amazing!

  30. Wow so much information, I feel really well informed on the area thank you! I love some of the tips and tricks you've included. If I ever visit I think I will be well prepared!

    Jackie – Organised Mum Life

  31. Wow what an awesome read. I have never been to Germany before & I felt like I was there also with the amount of detail given. Thanks for such a fantastic read 🙂

  32. Great post on the wonder that is East Berlin. I've been a few times and have also thought to myself – wowsers, think about the history here. I think its fascinating that some of the city hasn't even been rebuilt and still looks as it did before the reunification. Happy travels.

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