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Story Archives of 'Germany'A Senegalese Griot Meets a German Jazz TrumpeterBy John Diliberto on Wednesday, February 17, 2010.
Listen to the piece on Public Radio Exchange Auschwitz Sign RecoveredBy Katrina Ingraham on Monday, December 21, 2009.![]() After a thorough search this weekend, Krakow police have recovered the "Arbeit Macht Frei" sign that disappeared from the Auschwitz Memorial Museum early Friday morning. Honoring the Sacrifice: One Soldier Recounts His WarBy Dan Gorenstein on Tuesday, November 10, 2009.This week, Roger Aldrich received medals for his service in World War II. It’s taken the Army six decades to get the veteran his decorations because a fire wiped out his records years ago. But New Hampshire Public Radio’s Dan Gorenstein reports the 86 year old knows those decorations won’t prove his sacrifice. That proof lies elsewhere. Berlin Walls of the 21st CenturyBy Jen Nathan on Monday, November 9, 2009.![]() The Berlin wall crumbled twenty years ago today, but that doesn’t mean that physical barriers between opposing regions and countries have gone the way of the dodo. Foreign Policy magazine released its list of the Berlin walls of the 21st century. East-West CouplesBy Hardy Graupner on Monday, November 9, 2009.
Artists Take Refuge in BerlinBy Virginia Prescott on Monday, November 9, 2009.Later today, the festival of freedom kicks off at the Brandenberg gate. U.S. secretary of state Hillary Clinton joins French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Mikhail Gorbachev and throngs of revelers celebrating the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall. Daniel Barenboim will conduct the Staatskapelle Berlin and Bon Jovi will perform. The evening culminates when thousands of giant, colored dominos fall along the path where the wall once stood. It symbolizes the chain reaction on that started twenty years ago, the night that East German guards stood stunned as the once mighty border crumbled. It was an event that triggered an influx of artists, collectors and gallerists into Berlin’s Soviet apartments, industrial buildings, even a Nazi bunker. Artists helped turn cheap real estate into places to create and show art and transformed Berlin into a world art capitol. Catherine Hickley is arts correspondent for Bloomberg News in Berlin. She joins us now from Berlin with an update on the city’s art scene. The Bloomberg News: Dark Cold-War Art Marks 20th Anniversary of Fall of Berlin Wall The CBC: The Berlin Wall - Twenty Years After the Fall 'Festival of Freedom' to Celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall (Photo by siyu via Flickr/Creative Commons) The Berlin Wall Comes to L.A.By Jen Nathan on Thursday, November 5, 2009.
The City As Playing FieldBy Martha Poole on Thursday, October 1, 2009.![]() Maybe you’ve heard of parkour, in which practitioners climb, jump and flip over walls, fences and stairs, turning the city into an obstacle course. Such unconventional sports are taking off in Germany, according to Der Spiegel. Garbage Bin RapBy RadiJoJo on Friday, September 4, 2009.RadiJoJo from Berlin, Germany and their unusual contribution to the canon of cause songs. Building the Berlin Wall: 45 Years LaterBy Laura Knoy on Tuesday, August 15, 2006.Forty five years ago this week, a one hundred and three mile long wall was built in Germany, splitting the capitol city of Berlin into East and West and creating an impassable no man's land. Topped with barbwire, surrounded by boobytraps, mines and armed guards, the wall was meant to stop the steady flow of skilled workers leaving East Berlin for West Germany and prevent an economic collapse in not only post World War II Germany, but also the occupying Soviet Union, who was subsidizing their economy. We'll look at what led up to the creation of the wall, the impact it had not only on Germany, but Europe and the United States and how people feel about it today, long after it was torn down. Laura's guest is Dr. Jackson Janes, Executive Director of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies at Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Janes previously taught in Germany and has been engaged in German-American affairs for three decades, including serving as the Director of the German-American Institute in Tübingen, Germany. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
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