A week ago, I scribbled my name on the Berlin wall (or at least what remains of it).
For two days, my friend Breanna and I explored Berlin, a trip we had planned ourselves
(with help of the National Geographic travel guide) as a closure to our year in Europe.
I truly loved the ambience of the city: we didn't feel the rushed, New York hustle and bustle like I had expected, but rather a relaxed, laid-back atmosphere that was also young and energized. To me, it felt like a college town rather than one of the world's most historic cities (nonetheless it is home to Humboldt University, a school that Karl Marx, Albert Einstein, and Otto von Bismark had attended among many other remarkable men).
Holocaust Memorial: 2,711 concrete blocks which aim to represent an ordered system that has lost touch with reason, such as was witnessed during the Holocaust. |
The Reichstag |
The Brandenburg Gate |
Checkpoint Charlie: One of the best known crossing points between East and West Berlin |
Humboldt University of Berlin |
I only have more 9 more days, and then I have to wake up.
Happy 4th of July.
PS: Today I went to the Lion of Waterloo and toured around the battlefield where Napolean was defeated (practically where I've been living my entire exchange) to display my patriotism.
Yes, I know, there's absolutely no correlation whatsoever.. It was the English who defeated Napolean, not the Americans. But hey, at least I kind of celebrated an important battle. That has to count for something.
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