Saturday, August 2, 2014

Day 1 - London, UK

Hello from London!!!!

For my free day in London before meeting up with my tour, I decided to go to Harry Potter Studios.  It was so much fun!!!  I had to take the "Hogwarts Express" bus - which is a double decker bus decorated to look like its from Harry Potter.  They even announced on the train I had to take to get to the shuttle stop to "Alight here for the Hogwarts Express".

 
Once I got there, I picked up my audio guide - which was awesome because the whole thing is narrated by Tom Felton.  First we watched a video about how the movies came to be and then we watched a video from Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, and Emma Watson who introduced the whole exhibit.  From there we entered the Great Hall.  After that, the exhibit was divided into three areas.  The first had set pieces, costumes, props, etc.  There was the Gryffindor Common Room, the Gryffindor Boys Dormitory, Dumbledore's Office, the Potions Dungeon, the Burrow, the Ministry Atrium, Umbridge's Office and more.  There was also the Quidditch section - where I got to ride a broomstick in front of a greenscreen.



Great Hall

Yule Ball

Gryffindor Boys' Dormitory

Fat Lady

Gryffindor Common Room


Door to Dumbledore's Office

Triwizard Cup and Golden Egg

Dumbledore's Office

Potions Dungeon

4 Potions from first Potions class in Half Blood Prince

Hagrid's Hut

Door to the Chamber of Secrets

The Burrow

Umbridge

Umbride's Office

Broomstick Making Booth

Draco Malfoy's broom and one of the men who helped to design the brooms and the rest of the props for 10 years during the movies.  This particular broom took 2 and a half weeks to make and weighs over 50 pounds.


Harry's Hogwarts Letters

Black Family Tapestry
 

Then I went outside where the large pieces are - Number 4 Privet Drive, the Hogwarts Bridge, the Knight Bus, the Potter cottage in Godric's Hollow, and the Weasley's flying car.  They sold Butterbeer out here which was awesome :)

Knight Bus

Knight Bus

Number 4 Privet Drive

Driving the Weasley's Flying Car

Butterbeer in front of 4 Privet Drive
 

The last section started out with the creature shop - where I saw Buckbeak, Fawkes, the Hungarian Horntail, and the basilisk.  Then we could enter Diagon Alley where there was Ollivanders, Weasley's Wizard Wheezes, Flourish and Blotts, Gringotts, etc.  Then there was the scale model of Hogwarts.  It was amazing.  The details are perfect - every door has a miniature doorknob, there are lights inside and everything.  The last room looked like Ollivander's Wand Shop.  Every actor (and I think crew person) had a wand box with their name on it.  Then there was the gift shop - which had everything imaginable.  I definitely recommend going here :)

Dobby

Dementor

Buckbeak - he actually moves!

Diagon Alley

Weasley Wizards' Wheezes

Hogwarts

Hogwarts

Hogwarts

Hogwarts

Hogwarts

Hogwarts

"Ollivanders"

Playing Quidditch :)

Ron's Howler from Chamber of Secrets

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Days 29-30 - Krakow, Poland and Berlin, Germany


Day 29 – Debrief and Free Time
          
For our last day in Poland, we first had a few hour discussion of Auschwitz.  It was really useful to be able to listen to what other people thought.  It helped to be able to process what we saw.

Afterwards, we had free time to explore the city, shop for souvenirs, and repack – in preparation for the train back to Berlin.

 
Market


Day 30 – Last Day of the Trip

Today is the last day of our Dialogue to Germany and Poland.  We are spending it on a 10+ hour train ride from Krakow back to Berlin.  Joy.  But anyway, this trip has definitely been an experience.  I have never got more out of a class than I did this one – and I doubt I ever will.  I have learned so much.  Not only about the history of the Holocaust during World War II, but about how the people in Germany and Poland today deal with the trauma of their pasts.  The experience of this trip was amazing, and I am so grateful that I had to chance to do it.

Tomorrow, I start the non-tragic part of my trip to Europe.  I will be spending the next 13 days in London, Paris, and Barcelona with a tour group.  I really enjoyed the trip to the Holocaust centric sites (well as much as you can enjoy such sites) but I am looking forward to visiting some less depressing sites, as a tourist, instead of as a student!  Good-bye from Germany and Poland!

Monday, July 28, 2014

Day 28 - Warsaw, Poland


Day 28 – Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II-Birkenau

 

**Contains pictures and descriptions of the concentration and extermination camps**

 

This was probably the most stressful day of the entire trip.  We spent the day at the concentration and extermination camps of Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II-Birkenau.  Auschwitz I is the camp most people think of when they think of Auschwitz – or at least the gate is.  It has the wide gate with the words “Arbeit Macht Frei” emblazoned over the top.  It is surrounded by barbed wire on either side.  The buildings inside were not what I had expected at all.  The buildings were large and made of brick.  I have always thought of Auschwitz and thought of wooden barracks.  This could have passed for an apartment complex – at least on the outside. 

 
Arbeit Macht Frei
 

 


Auschwitz is divided into 24 “blocks” where each block is one building.  We only entered a few.  In one, they had exhibits of the belongings of the people who came to the camp.  All prisoners had to have their heads shaved upon entering the camp.  When the camp was liberated, on January 27, 1945, the liberators found 7 tons of hair.  2 tons were on display.  I have never seen so much hair in one place in my life and I hope I never have to again.  50,000 people had to be shaved for the quantity of hair on display.  The room must have been 40 feet long and there were just piles of hair on both sides.  Then there was the display of eyeglasses.  And the room full of prosthetics.  Then there were the suitcases.  The suitcases were just stacked, lining both sides of the room.  The Nazis made the prisoners write their names, birth dates, and place of deportation on the outside.  The hardest part was seeing the suitcases with birthdates in 1943 and 1944.  Those babies would have been one year old when they were sent to the camp.  There was also a display of shoes.  First there was the “small” display – the window about 6 feet long, holding a few hundred shoes.  Then you turn the corner.  Both sides of the room are piled with shoes.  40 feet long. On both sides of the hall.  The piles were higher than my head.  Thousands upon thousands of shoes.

 
Eyeglasses

Prosthetics

Dishes

Suitcases

Suitcase - Peter Eisler was born in 1942 according to his suitcase - he was only 1 when he was brought to the camp

Shoes - This is the small pile.  There were 50 times as many in the next room.


That wasn’t even the worst building.  That was in block 27, which is entirely dedicated to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust.  The very first room is dark.  Then as you stand in the middle, pictures and videos are projected onto all four walls of the room.  Two girls in blue dresses were playing in the driveway, laughing, holding hands, and spinning in circles.  They faded away.  A girl with brown ringlets in a pink dress giggling as she picked flowers and put them in a basket.  She two faded to black.  Their laughter played through the room.  The oldest girl was maybe 7.  The youngest probably 4.  There were families at the beach, kids splashing in the ocean and digging in the sand.  Kids learning to ride a bike.  A large group of children singing at school – what I later learned was the Israel national anthem.  Kids dancing in circles holding hands.  The last images to show up were the family photos.  And watching the videos, you could tell they would all be gone within a few years.  The next room was a stark difference.  The walls were white and the room brightly lit.  And over the speakers this time was Hitler, and the other leaders of the Nazi party, giving speeches about their Final Solution.  The next room was all children’s drawings, copied exactly from both ghettos and concentration camps.  Some were of children playing – those were from the ghettos.  Then there were the other ones.  The gates of Auschwitz.  Mass executions.  People being hung.  People being shot.  Death.  It was really hard to see the events of the Holocaust through the eyes of a child – because you could tell that they were only drawing what they saw – no editorializing.  Then there was the room with the stories of the survivors – and those that didn’t survive.  A woman who volunteered to go to the camp with her sister because she didn’t want to leave her.  Her sister was sick and died just after liberation.  The healthy sister had left the camp when it was freed and brought back food to her sister – but she couldn’t eat it.  The sick sister called out all night for her sister – who didn’t hear because she too was being treated at the hospital and was asleep.  She died that morning.  Then there was the girl who kept a diary while in the ghetto – Poland’s version of Anne Frank.  When she was deported, she hid her diary under the stairs, as she had planned with a Polish friend.  She died in a concentration camp.  The last room was the Book of Names.  4 million names of the people who died in the Holocaust are inside.  There are still 2 million mission.  The book is about 16,000 pages.

 
Child's drawing of gallows

Child's drawing of Auschwitz-Birkenau and the selection off the train
 
Book of names


One of the other blocks (Block 11) was the punishment block.  Inside the basement were different punishment chambers.  Number 18 was for starvation.  In 1943, someone managed to escape the camp.  In punishment, the Nazis picked 10 people at random to execute.  One was crying that he didn’t want to die.  Maksymillan Kolbe, a priest, volunteered to take his place and was put in the starvation chamber.  He spent two weeks in there before being killed by a poison injection to the heart.  He was canonized by the pope.  The man he saved survived until 1995.  Number 22 was the small standing cells.  People were put in there every night for between 3 and 12 nights.  There was not enough room to do anything except stand.  The only door was a small opening on the bottom – otherwise the walls were bricked the whole way up.  There was an air hole the size of a postage stamp.

 

We also went to the gas chamber in Auschwitz I.  It is the only standing chamber left of the 3 Auschwitz camps.  The ones at Auschwitz II-Birkenau were all destroyed, mostly by the Nazis when they left the camp to try and hide their crimes.  One was destroyed in an uprising of the prisoners who were forced to work inside the chamber.  In chamber 3, which was one of the biggest, 2000 people could be killed in 20 minutes.

 

Auschwitz II-Birkenau was more what I expected.  The buildings were wooden huts.  The bunks were 3 levels tall and multiple people had to sleep on each one.  There were no exhibits here – just the camp.  There is a memorial at the end of the railroad tracks – 900 meters from the gate.  It has the same inscription in twenty different languages – to represent every language of the people imprisoned in the camp.  Only some of the barracks are still standing.  Amidst the foundations of the rest is a glass case.  It holds items that have been found in the camp – spoons, bowls, and combs.  Towards the back of the camp is the building where the new arrivals were sent.  In the first room they had to strip.  Then they went to the next room to be shaved.  The next room was the examination room – where if they didn’t pass, they were sent to the gas chambers.  After that was the room in which to dry off and then where they got their clothes.

 
Gate of Auschwitz-Birkenau



This is the memorial inscription in English.  There are 19 other plaques in other languanges

Remains of gas chamber 3

End of the tracks

The prisoners who worked sorting through all the belongings of other prisoners put all the photographs into a suitcase.  At the end of the war, a suitcase containing 5000 pictures was found by the Allies.


There were of course some who managed to escape.  800 tried but only 144 made it.  In June 1942, four prisoners managed to escape the camp.  They stole German uniforms.  Because they had the uniforms, they were able to steal the car of the commander of the camp – and they just drove away.  They were never caught.  One of them is still alive.  He’s 95 and visits every year.

 

One of the things that shocked me those most was that the camp was insured – the buildings and property were protected against fire.  The company who insured them is still in business – Allianz.  One other shocking thing was that Coca-Cola invented the drink Fanta for the German soldiers.  They were selling Fanta in the gift shop.  (Also shocking – why would you put a gift shop in a concentration camp?!)