Monday, June 15, 2009
Thursday, June 11, 2009
on one foot....
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
and while we're talking monuments....
Some notes about NY's 9/11 monument which bring up the same issues of memorializing the unthinkable.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
at Schloss Charlottenburg
After a fascinating day of three excellent intellectual encounters (with Prof. Dr. Peter von der Osten-Sacken, then at the Foreign Ministry, then with Dr. Atina Grossman) we headed waaayyy west for a concert of baroque music (with musicians and singers dressed up in (18th century) period costumes).
I think we're all in a bit of shock knowing tomorrow is our last full day here.
I think we're all in a bit of shock knowing tomorrow is our last full day here.
Monday, June 1, 2009
The Hamburg-lers
Here's the group (minus the Leahs, though a tiny bit of one can be seen third from the right) with our guide Georg (who sounded much like Cary Grant) as we made our way through the port of Hamburg. It was an absolutely gorgeous day, which half the folks used to take a Schifffahrt (boat ride) through the harbor. The city's reconstruction plan is ambitious (to say the least) but also a wonder in urban development.
Hamburg's broken mural
On our tour of "Jewish" Hamburg, where it became clear that the city is less interested in preserving remnants of its past than in constructing a beautiful new (and extremely well-planned city), we were struck by the erasure of buildings or sites that marked the long, vibrant life of Hamburg's Jews. At the corner of the old Jewish section of the city, however, we happened upon a magnificent mural:
The broken fragments are populated by sites and people and signs of the real life that Jews in Hamburg lived (especially in the post-Emancipation period). The large section on the bottom is filled with a poem by Nobel Laureate Nelly Sachs.
A recent article in The Jewish Exponent does our experience some justice.
The broken fragments are populated by sites and people and signs of the real life that Jews in Hamburg lived (especially in the post-Emancipation period). The large section on the bottom is filled with a poem by Nobel Laureate Nelly Sachs.
A recent article in The Jewish Exponent does our experience some justice.
At the Jewish Museum
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