Exhibition showing Nazi-era Berlin reopened
August 24th, 2010 - 8:06 pm ICT by IANSBerlin, Aug 24 (DPA) Germany’s main exhibition of ruins of Nazi-era Berlin reopened to visitors Tuesday in the excavated, inner-city basement where the Gestapo headquarters used to stand.
The whole site - half a city block - is popular with tourists and is located just across the street from Hermann Goering’s old air ministry, the monumental, Nazi-style Luftwaffe headquarters, which survived the Second World War intact.
All that is left of the offices of the Gestapo and two other Nazi secret services is the foundations and some paving. An indoor documentation centre opened in May and has now been complemented by 77 plaques which guide visitors through the Topography of Terror park.
Museum executives said two million people have visited the site since it opened to visitors in 1987.
Wooden placards put up 23 years ago in the excavated basement of a building once known as the Prinz Albrecht Palais had become tacky and needed replacing.
The new exhibition is a wider-ranging depiction of Nazi-era Berlin from 1933 to 1945, which many visitors asked for.
The site was formerly used by three organisations notorious for torture and callous killings: the Gestapo, or secret national police agency; the SS, the Nazi Party’s own paramilitary organisation; and a national security agency set up in 1939.
Visitors learn how the Nazis ran a Europe-wide campaign of terror from the site, and even tortured or killed some people there.
The interpretation building and park, now landscaped with gravel and paths and fringed by trees, are within walking distance of the Holocaust Monument and the Checkpoint Charlie crossing in the now razed Berlin Wall, which most tourists also want to see.
The new outdoor exhibition, based on detailed research in German records, depicts Berlin’s evolution from a left-leaning city in 1933 to a showcase for the Third Reich.
“We’ve never actually had a comprehensive display in Berlin before about the city under the Nazis,” said Andreas Nachama, the head of the museum, who is a historian.
Several government agencies lined one city street, Wilhelm Strasse. The exhibition quotes Joseph Goebbels, soon to be Nazi propaganda chief, writing in his diary Jan 30, 1933: “It’s a dream come true. We’ve taken over Wilhelm Strasse.”
- Entrance to tunnel used for 'The Great Escape' revealed - Jan 19, 2011
- Hitler's exhibition in Berlin extended due to throngs of visitors - Jan 07, 2011
- Louvre museum looks for cooperation with India - Dec 03, 2011
- Sculptures dubbed 'degenerate art' by Hitler's regime to go on display - Nov 10, 2010
- Germany rejects Egypt's request to return Queen Nefertiti bust - Jan 25, 2011
- Government paves heritage trail for Games visitors - Mar 18, 2010
- Germany's first Hitler exhibition seeks to break age-old taboos - Oct 13, 2010
- Gupta empire era sites restored in Madhya Pradesh - Jul 19, 2011
- Was Hitler's secret flying saucer going to attack London & New York? - Nov 18, 2010
- Hitler stole Beetle idea from Jewish engineer: Book - Jan 16, 2012
- Nazi camp atrocities on display in Shanghai - Apr 19, 2012
- Reclining Eiffel Tower - a symbol of German industrial history (With Images) - Jul 06, 2011
- Foreign tourists turned away from Victoria Memorial - May 06, 2012
- Nazi bomb under Britain's Olympic stadium? - Oct 10, 2010
- British spy sang for Hitler with secret documents in her underwear - Sep 10, 2010
Tags: air ministry, berlin wall, checkpoint charlie, detailed research, documentation centre, german records, gestapo headquarters, hermann goering, holocaust monument, luftwaffe, national police agency, national security agency, nazi party, nazi style, outdoor exhibition, paramilitary organisation, prinz albrecht, second world war, third reich, topography of terror