Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Berlin Connection






If your friends are your family, what happens when they are scattered around the world? Well, then you realize your heart will never be in one place. Its pieces, parts of you, will be everywhere. When you  find people who make up if only one part of you, you're forever connected. 


Once there were the two of us, the girls who studied, worked and traveled together. I'm sure you know the feeling and this sounds familiar to you-the kind of friendship everyone needs to experience. 


The adventures that our trips took us to always put a smile on my face when I think of it. 


Such as the feeling you get when you wake up in the middle of the night in a camp in France trying to hear if it's pouring it outisde and then quickly touching the roof of the tent to check if it already got soaked in rain. We survived a few storms in that old tent that my grandparents bought somewhere in Poland and later referred to it as our dog house.

Or the feeling you get when you're walking in who-knows-where  in Amsterdam late on New Year's Eve. Struggling to walk, I should say, as we were fighting the wind and rain. But you do all that because your friend wants to see the narrowest building in Amsterdam that „will be nearby“. 

Or sleeping with dozens of candles in a hostel in Lisbon that we bought to keep ourselves warm during the night in which your friend was also trying to finish her Master's thesis confining herself with the laptop to a closet  to be more concentrated. 


That's her, my Berlin connection. She is sitting today with me in my room, just like we used to do so many times back in the day. We are talking about Berlin, her address now.


C: What's the first thing that comes to mind about Berlin?

K: Self-inventing. Multiculti. Positive energy.

A constantly changing environment in every sense. Many new places appear and then get replaced with yet other ones. Things such as pop up events which include a temporary shop, or a warm up party, for instance. However, what's special is the location of those events – they're temporary and usually with an interesting background or atmosphere – so not just any rented space.


C: You 've taken up some interesting hobbies there...

K: I've been doing ballet for a few years now. It's organised via alumni association of Humboldt University. We've been doing some basics as it's for amateurs, of course.

I also auditioned for extras and got invited to be one of the French civilians in G. Clooney's movie „The Monuments Men“. However, I couldn't get 5 days off from work so I missed that one. But then I got invited to be an extra in a German movie, where I appeared as a patient in hospital. The shooting started at 5 a.m. and went on for the entire day. My next appearance as extra would be as stuntwoman who drives a car instead of the main actress.


C: What would you say your neighbourhood in Berlin is like?

K:  I live in Friedrichshain- it is a very relaxed part of town popular among young people and families so there are a lot of students and WGs. („Wohngemeinschaft“ is a term for a flat-sharing community in Germany). There are a lot of places to go out to. Every neighbourhood in Berlin is a town for itself. We have our weekly market held at Boxhagener Platz or „Boxi“. It is a small center of Friedrichshain where people sell groceries, coffee, cakes, some exotic spices and food, but there are also stands with handicrafts. On Sundays Boxi becomes even livelier with music and a flea market.


C: What about West Berlin?

K: West Berlin is being slowly rehabilitated in terms of a „place to be“. There are places such as Bikini Haus, for instance, once a landmarked industrial building and today a new shopping mall with cool bars where a lot of people are coming at the moment.

If you're into everything hipster, you can check this link for places to go to in Berlin: http://travelsofadam.com/city-guides/berlin/ .


C: Tell me some popular Umgangssprache or Berlin slang.

K: „Späti“ – that's very typical of Berlin – „Späti“ is a small shop which has a constant large supply of all kinds of drinks, cigarettes, snacks and some basic groceries such as milk, flour, oil, sometimes eggs – depending on what a Späti owner thinks might sell well after other shops have closed during the week or on Sundays. Späti always works all night and all weekend and some of them are always open. There are loads of them and it seems that every 200m there is one. When you go out, you first go to Späti saying "erst was vom späti holen" (let's get something from Späti first). Then you buy yourself a beer or whatever you like drinking on your way out or on S-Bahn as it sometimes takes you as much as 40 minutes to reach your destination so why not enjoy the ride.

„Kiez"  is something like a neighbourhood, a smaller part of town. For something to be called Kiez it must have a character, its own infrastructure, like a small island within town. People feel comfortable and well in their Kiez.

For more Berlin slang check this link:


http://www.cafebabel.co.uk/lifestyle/article/voll-nice-how-to-get-the-hang-of-berlin-slang.html


C: When do you enjoy Berlin most?

K: Summer, of course. The sun finally appears, everything is livelier than ever with lots of cafés by the river and lots of lakes around Berlin where you can go to. There are also lakes in Berlin, such as Wannsee and Schlachtensee.

That is also another of my hobbies. I took up wakeboarding in Brandenburg, right next to Berlin. However, there is a small lake only and cannot be compared to wakeboarding on the island of Krk where I usually do it in Croatia.

Another fun and popular thing to do during summer are Freiluft Kinos or outdoor cinemas. Berlin abounds in them. They are usually in parks and you will be provided with a seat if you come on time. People take their blankets, some snacks and whatever makes them feel comfortable whilst watching films.


C: What are some things that you were surprised to have found in Berlin, that you have never had in Croatia?

K: Have a brunch at weekends. Go out at night and be surrounded with truly different kinds of people. Nobody cares how you look like.

Public transport which functions impeccably, all night long and at weekends. You can take one person with you on your pass for free after 8 p.m.

International food.

Original interiors.

Flea markets.


C: Maybe a few tips for people coming to Berlin?

K: Everyone finds something for themselves. From partying to cultural offer.

It's not easy to find a job in Berlin as competition is fierce, but one has to be persistent, make contacts and network with people.

Berlin is a safe city. Nothing bad has ever happened either to me or my friends there.

Considering it's a metropolis, Berlin is not expensive at all.


I myself have visited Berlin and my friend there twice. Once in the winter and once in the summer. Maybe because of that or because of the time that passed between my two visits (which was more than 5 years) I had so many different impressions of that city. It is a place that works on so many different levels. When I came there first, I was under the impression of everything I learnt and read at the uni, mostly Döblins book „Berlin Alexanderplatz“. I sort of looked for and imagined all the scenes and places from that novel. Then Berlin's history struck me as something almost palpable. I had a feeling that old buildings I was passing by were telling me their history and sometimes in an almost creepy way that gave me goosebumps.

But then there is the vibrant Berlin. The Berlin of hipsters, artists, melting pot of different cultures, future home in dreams of so many newcomers.

You cannot but love such Berlin. It will capture you with all its attractions and it will be hard to get out. 


Check some of my photos of Berlin here:



















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