Landhotel Heidepark
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Travel Blogs from Trebbin
A Cold But Welcoming Berlin
... gave amazing views of the city. After making our way down from the dome we decided to get something to eat; as it was 15:30 and all we had was a muffin served on the plane. We decided to have a well-known German dish - currywerst. I thought it was okay, but this s from someone who does not et red meat or ketchup back home in the States. From there we walked down to Checkpoint Charlie. There is a museum about ...
Berlin
... to guess which bears were from which country. Such as different and more upmarket part of Berlin.
Friday we went to the Eastside gallery where parts of the wall are still standing. Funky and edgy designs everywhere. Then chilled out at the "beach" nearby, a sand area with deck chairs facing onto the river. We then randomly took a boat tour through smaller canals and it was impressively chilled and lots of cool places. Elliot was ...
History Class in Berlin
... our way to the Riechstag and then we also came upon the holocaust memorial. It's basically concrete blocks all the same shape but at different hieghts and there is a whole block covered in them, it was quite daunting walking around and through them. At one side of the block there is also an underground museum about the victims of the holocaust. We decided to go in (again, it was free). Reading all the stories about what happened, the numbers of people ...
Berlín y el peso de la historia
... que los equilibrios mundiales se sitúan hoy en una línea todavía más delgada. La tolerancia, sea esta auténtica o no parece ser el camino más valido.
En materia bélica, un conflicto mundial hoy, dados los avances tecnológicos significaría tirar una bombita que haría explotar el planeta. Pensando positivamente, no es posible.
En materia financiera, el tamaño y la concentración de los déficit fiscales generan la misma vulnerabilidad entre países deudores ...
Berlin! Berlin! Wir fahren nach Berlin!
... to incarcerate and later murder Jews, Roma, regular criminals and in particular Russian POWs. Around 200,000 people went to Sachsenhausen, over half of them never left. The camp had all the hallmarks of the Nazi extermination programs: beatings, hangings, mass shootings and the inevitable gassings and crematoriums.
The camp also had the medical experiments, as well as what can only be termed as ‘extreme field tests’. In one case, prisoners were made to ...