We went there for a long weekend staying in (where else?) the Elephant Hotel three weeks ago.
I felt happy showing the Weimar that I know so well to my wife. Before we went, it happened that in a small bookshop at Kirchzarten near Freiburg a week earlier, Annette Seemann, who had published a Weimar travel guide previously, gave a presentation of her latest book: Weimar, eine Kulturgeschichte. Her reading was overbooked, and I was lucky to find a seat.
I felt happy showing the Weimar that I know so well to my wife. Before we went, it happened that in a small bookshop at Kirchzarten near Freiburg a week earlier, Annette Seemann, who had published a Weimar travel guide previously, gave a presentation of her latest book: Weimar, eine Kulturgeschichte. Her reading was overbooked, and I was lucky to find a seat.
In a panel discussion, the editor of the cultural part of the Badische Zeitung tried to have the author cover the content of the whole book. That was a problem of the amount of information in the already thick book resulting from laborious work presented many detailed facts.
Still, the text occasionally lacks a deeper going analysis. Nevertheless, I learned quite a lot, e.g., about the Reformation and that Luther was in Weimar several times. Anette Seemann's tome will complete my collection of books on Weimar that I shall present in a future blog.
Red Baron, then a young scientific hopeful in Munich, still remembers his first visit to Weimar in 1959. In November 1958, Nikita Khrushchev issued the Berlin ultimatum that caused Hamburg's press baron Axel Springer in January 1959 to start a campaign in the Federal Republic with the slogan Macht das Tor auf (Open the Gate) selling* pins with the Brandenburg Gate. Later in 1987, President Reagan visited the Berlin wall and, looking at the Gate, modulated Springer's slogan imploring the right person: Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!
* for 20 Pfennig a piece
In the fall of 1959, a left-wing Gesellschaft für fortschrittliche Politik (Society for progressive politics) in Munich posted an answer to Axel Springer: Wir machen das Tor auf (We open the Gate) offering a bus trip at a moderate price to Gera, a small industrial town in Thuringia, and as a lure a detour to Weimar. Together with a friend and a couple of other students, we took this unique opportunity to visit Weimar, the working place of Germany's quadruple stars Goethe, Herder, Schiller, and Wieland. However, before that, our delegation had to suffer heated political discussions in Gera.
The following day we were shipped to Weimar. It was in November. A pale sun illuminated the square in front of the Goethe-Haus closed on a Sunday morning. When we walked to the Goethe-Schiller monument, the sun disappeared. The two geniuses of German literature stood gray against the gray front of the Nationaltheater that had been a symbol of hope in 1919 with the adoption of the democratic Weimar Constitution.
We soon had to leave the magical places to visit Weimar's other heritage, the concentration camp Buchenwald. Here during the introduction, the East German propaganda machine went into high gear, asserting: In West Germany, new concentration camps are under construction.
Red Baron, then a young scientific hopeful in Munich, still remembers his first visit to Weimar in 1959. In November 1958, Nikita Khrushchev issued the Berlin ultimatum that caused Hamburg's press baron Axel Springer in January 1959 to start a campaign in the Federal Republic with the slogan Macht das Tor auf (Open the Gate) selling* pins with the Brandenburg Gate. Later in 1987, President Reagan visited the Berlin wall and, looking at the Gate, modulated Springer's slogan imploring the right person: Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!
* for 20 Pfennig a piece
In the fall of 1959, a left-wing Gesellschaft für fortschrittliche Politik (Society for progressive politics) in Munich posted an answer to Axel Springer: Wir machen das Tor auf (We open the Gate) offering a bus trip at a moderate price to Gera, a small industrial town in Thuringia, and as a lure a detour to Weimar. Together with a friend and a couple of other students, we took this unique opportunity to visit Weimar, the working place of Germany's quadruple stars Goethe, Herder, Schiller, and Wieland. However, before that, our delegation had to suffer heated political discussions in Gera.
The following day we were shipped to Weimar. It was in November. A pale sun illuminated the square in front of the Goethe-Haus closed on a Sunday morning. When we walked to the Goethe-Schiller monument, the sun disappeared. The two geniuses of German literature stood gray against the gray front of the Nationaltheater that had been a symbol of hope in 1919 with the adoption of the democratic Weimar Constitution.
We soon had to leave the magical places to visit Weimar's other heritage, the concentration camp Buchenwald. Here during the introduction, the East German propaganda machine went into high gear, asserting: In West Germany, new concentration camps are under construction.
Luckily we had some law students in our group mastering their words much better than physicists. They branded the lies and the cheap propaganda resulting in icy silence. Full of shame, our group eventually visited the horror place in silence, unmolested.
My second trip to Weimar took place 30 years later, in April 1990, but this is another story, as well as Elisabeth's and my most recent trip. Stuff for future blogs.
The classical suum cuique here perverted at the entrance to the concentration camp. |
Inside the camp. Note the GDR flag and the Russian soldiers in the back on the left. |
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Thanks for the post! My most recent trip to Thuringen was to Erfurt and South to Gehren and Langenwiesen, so I missed Weimar now and also in 2010. I have never visited Buchenwald and may never visit there, so I'm glad that you write about it, I look forward to your future entries on Weimar!
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