Revolutionary Berlin
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Revolutionary Berlin

A Walking Guide

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eBook - ePub

Revolutionary Berlin

A Walking Guide

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About This Book

Few European cities can boast a history as storied and tumultuous as that of Berlin. For more than 150 years it has been at the centre of revolutionary politics; of era-defining struggles between the Left and the Right. It has been bombed, rebuilt and carved in two.

In Revolutionary Berlin, veteran tour guide Nathaniel Flakin invites you to stand in the places where this history was written, and to follow in the footsteps of those who helped write it. Through nine self-guided tours illustrated with maps and photographs, readers enter the heady world of 19th century anti-colonial struggles, the 1918 November Revolution and the 1987 May Day riots — encountering the city's workers, queer community and radical women along the way.

The first English-language guidebook to tell the story of Berlin's radical history, this is a must-have for Berliners and visitors alike.

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Information

Publisher
Pluto Press
Year
2022
ISBN
9780745346434

1

(Anti)Colonialism

1.1. Brandenburg Gate
Brandenburger Tor, Pariser Platz

We are going to start our first tour at Brandenburg Gate — not just because every Berlin tour starts here, but because it is a good place to talk about German history. Berlin is not well-known as a colonial metropolis. Germany entered the “great game” late, but it entered with a vengeance. Starting in the 1880s, the German Empire conquered vast swaths of Africa, as well as territories in Asia and the Pacific
Germany lost its “place in the sun” in World War I and failed to reclaim it in World War II. Nonetheless, in just a few decades of German colonialism, hundreds of thousands of people were massacred. This included the first German genocide.
* * *
Despite all pretensions to the contrary, Deutschland is a young nation-state — the United States of America was almost 100 years old before the first united German state was founded. Therefore, the history of German colonialism is far older than the country itself.
Before there was Germany, Berlin was part of Prussia; and before that, it belonged to the Margraviate of Brandenburg. It was an aristocrat from Brandenburg who led the first “German” expedition to Africa. On January 1, 1683, Friedrich Otto von der Groeben established a fort on the Gold Coast (today Ghana). He christened it Groß Friedrichsburg.
Illustration
Illustration
Over the next 35 years, this German fort was a nexus for the European slave trade. Up to 30,000 Africans were enslaved and imprisoned here, before being sold to sugar plantations in the Caribbean.
In 1717, the new king in Prussia, Friedrich Wilhelm I, gave up on colonialism in order to focus on building a continental army. He sold Groß Friedrichsburg and a few more holdings to the Dutch West India Company for “7,200 ducats and 12 moors.”
Von der Groeben had a street named after him in Berlin in 1895, when German colonial fever was at its peak. 115 years later, Groebenufer was the first colonial street name in the city to be changed. (See Stop 9.9)
* * *
German colonialism died down for almost 200 years. It only reemerged after Prussia’s victory over France and the foundation of the German Empire in 1871. The new German imperialism turned its gaze back to Africa.
The “Iron Chancellor” Otto von Bismarck is best known for uniting 26 Central European mini-states into a single empire. But he actually conquered more territory in Africa. By the time Germany began its colonial endeavors, Africa had largely been carved up. The French had established a colony in Algeria in 1830 and went on to rule most of West Africa. The British were attempting to build a colony stretching from “the Cape to Cairo,” so from the south to the north of the continent. German colonialists had to find niches left over by earlier colonial powers. Within 15 years, they claimed four colonies: Togoland, now Togo; Cameroon; German South West Africa, which is today Namibia; and German East Africa, which now includes parts of Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi.

1.2. Reich Chancellery
Wilhelmstraße 92 (formerly 77)

Wilhelmstraße is not much of a street today: South of Unter den Linden, it is lined with prefabricated concrete apartment buildings in the style of the German Democratic Republic. When we turn the corner at the Hotel Adlon to enter Wilhelmstraße, we pass through traffic barriers that have permanently closed this section of the street to cars. This is to protect the British Embassy, which is clearly a new building (opened in 2000). But the representatives of the United Kingdom have been residing at this location since 1884.
Wilhelmstraße was once the main axis of Prussian and imperial Berlin. Ministers, ambassadors, aristocrats, and capitalists had their palaces along this street. Historical panels on the sidewalk explain the long history of almost every address. Two blocks south of the British embassy, at Wilhelmstraße 92, we see nothing but more brown apartment blocks. It requires some imagination to picture an imposing palace behind iron gates and a manicured garden.
This was the seat of power in the German Empire: The Reich Chancellery of Otto von Bismarck. Only after he had consolidated his new empire in central Europe did Bismarck turn to colonial competition. His policy for Africa can best be summed up with a German idiom: If two people fight, then a third is happy. So while the British and French were wrangling to be the dominant power in Africa, the Germans presented themselves as mediators. Bismarck invited representatives from 14 colonial powers to his palace in November 1884. (Or to be more precise: powers with colonial pretensions — the United States, for example, had not yet acquired any overseas colonies.)
The 14 diplomats had one main question to solve: While the African coasts had largely been divided up, who would control the massive Congo Basin, an area larger than Western Europe?
This three-month meeting thus became known as the Kongokonferenz (or more commonly in English: the Berlin Conference). Fourteen men sitting around a table in Wilhelmstraße, without a single African present, drew borders across Africa — borders that, with a few modifications, remain to this day. The French wanted to prevent the British from claiming the Congo, just as the British wanted to block the French; both didn’t want to see the rising German Empire seize such vast riches.
The Congo ultimately went to Belgium. But not to the state of Belgium, which would have implied some measure of control for the Belgian parliament — the colony instead became the personal property of King Leopold II. The new Belgian colonial administration exploited the peoples of the Congo ruthlessly. In two decades, up to 10 million Africans were massacred — among the largest genocides in history. Thankfully, today statues of Leopold II are finally being torn down.
At the end of the Congo Conference, just a handful of African states remained independent. Ethiopia, then known as Abyssinia, was the only African state that was never subjugated. Liberia was founded by former slaves from the United States and stood under Washington’s tutelage. Morocco held out at this time, but was later divided between France and Spain. Kingdoms in what is today Libya and also on the Horn of Africa remained independent as well, but were conquered by Italian imperialism in the early twentieth century.
In 2004, a historical plaque was installed on the sidewalk to mark the 120th anniversary of the Berlin Conference.

1.3. Imperial Colonial Office
roughly Wilhelmstraße 51 (formerly 62)

Opposite the old Reich Chancellery, and a bit to the north, we see a primary school made of bricks and concrete. Visualizing what used to be here again requires some imagination. A four-story government building once housed the Imperial Colonial Office, founded in 1907 under the second Kaiser Wilhelm as a central administration for the Empire’s far-flung possessions. This included the military command of the so-called Schutztruppen, the cynically named “protective troops.”
The office became superfluous after Germany lost its colonies with the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, and it was dissolved in 1920. Yet the government of the Weimar Republic never fully accepted the loss — the slogan “we demand a place in the sun” (first spoken by Reich Chancellor Bernhard von Bülow in 1897) remained popular throughout the 1920s. A special section of the Foreign Office for colonial affairs was created in 1925.
When power was handed over to the Nazis in 1933, they had ambitious plans for conquests in the East, but also in Africa. They created a Colonial-Political Office where hundreds of state officials worked out regulations for native peoples in the future Nazi-ruled Africa. Of course, while the Nazis’ Afrika Korps made some initial conquests in North Africa, they were never able to establish a colony. As a result, one historian has called this office “the world’s most sophisticated colonial administration without any actual colonies.” A very German way to do things!
Since 2019, the Berlin government has commemorated this location with a plaque next to the Ikarus youth center. It is dedicated to Martin Dibobe, a famous Black Berliner from before World War I. He had come to Berlin to serve as an artifact at the German Colonial Exposition of 1896 (See Stop 1.8) and later became a U-Bahn driver. In 1919, Dibobe sent a petition to the National Assembly in Weimar, signed by 17 African men living in Germany. They expressed loyalty to Germany — but also included 32 grievances and demands for “equality and autonomy.” The German government published the passages in support of German colonial rule and censored the rest. Dibobe tried to return to Cameroon in 1922 and all traces of him disappeared.

1.4. New Reich Chancellery
roughly Wilhelmstraße 94

One block south of the old Reich Chancellery, opposite an entrance to the decadent Mall of Berlin and in front of a Chinese restaurant, we can stand at the spot of perhaps the most infamous building in world history: This long, narrow block was filled with Hitler’s megalomaniacal New Reich Chancellery, designed by Albert Speer and opened in 1939. The bunker where Hitler shot himself in 1945 was located underneath.
Hitler could go onto a balcony to speak to crowds gathered on Wilhelmplatz opposite. Looking for this Wilhelm Square in Berlin’s modern geography is quite a challenge. Google Maps points us to the traffic island where stairs lead down to the subway. Could many Hitler fans have gathered there? A very old sign informs us this is not Wilhelmplatz but rather Ziethenplatz.
The solution to this mystery is that Wilhelmplatz, which once spanned two city blocks, was eaten up by post-war urban development. The north side was filled with East German apartments in the 1980s. The south side made way for the embassy of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, which was completed in 1978. (And while this doesn’t have anything to do with this tour, let me say that this ultramodernist spaceship is quite an amazing building! Behind it, the massive grey embassy of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea remains in service but stands largely empty. For many years, the North Koreans rented out their embassy to a hostel, but that had to close due to sanctions.)
At the end of the war, Hitler’s chancellery was destroyed but the square remained. At first, all four Allied Powers agreed to rid German city maps of references to Nazis and to the former ruling house, the Hohenzollern dynasty. But the cooperation was short-lived: While all the Hitler Streets were renamed, soon the Western powers decided they did not mind the Prussian kings after all. Thus, only East Berlin got rid of countless street names referring to Wilhelm, Friedrich, Friedrich Wilhelm, and all the other repetitively christened German monarchs.
Wilhelmplatz was renamed Ernst-ThälmannPlatz in 1949, after the leader of the Communist Party of Germany from 1925 until his arrest by the Nazis in 1933. Wilhelmstraße became Otto-Grotewohl-Straße in 1964. That largely forgotten social democratic bureaucrat became, for arcane reasons of Stalinist diplomacy, the first prime minister of the German Democratic Republic.
Today, when activists demand that colonial street names be changed, politicians often claim that this is simply impossible. Older residents have business cards and stationery — you can’t just ask them to get such things reprinted! But it turns out, no, it is actually very easy to change street names — they just need to be named after communists. Wilhelmplatz and Wilhelmstraße got their old names back in 1992 and 1993.

1.5. M-Straße
Anton-Wilhelm-Amo-Straße — former Mohrenstraße

For decades, this was the most offensive street name in Berlin. I am going to write it down once, for reference: Mohrenstraße (Moor Street). But many people prefer to say M-Straße, and that is what I will use here.
The street name is old enough that it’s hard to say where it originated. The most common theory goes back to the sale of Groß Friedrichsburg at the beginning of the eighteenth century — the payment to the king in Prussia included “12 moors.” (See Stop 1.1) And while the Prussian state had plenty of forms of oppression, it did not enslave Black people.
The aristocratic fashion was to keep “court Moors” like animals in a menagerie. These 12 Africans were drafted into the Prussian army to serve as musicians. Some of them married into noble houses and got titles. Their barracks were probably around here somewhere — leading to the name “Moor Street.” (This is just one of several possible explanations.)
Is the German word “Mohr” offensive? The short answer is: yes. It is not a common racist epithet in German today. Similar to “moor” in English, it mostly comes up in historical contexts. But this antiquated use is accompanied by repulsive caricatures of Black people. Just imagine the logo of the “Three Moors” hotel (which was only changed in 2020!). German society has been slow to drop such terms. Even in the 2000s, it was not uncommon to hear chocolate-covered marshmallows referred to with the n-word.
People have been demanding that the street be renamed for decades. In early 2009, for example, a giant pink rabbit added two dots to all the street signs. In German, two dots are enough to change a racist term (Mohren) to “carrots” (Möhren). Carrots Street — probably not a serious suggestion, but a practical display of how imminently easy a change would be. People who work at a Humboldt University building on this street already write their address as Möhrenstraße and still receive mail.
Conservatives say: You can’t change such an old, traditional name! But while the street name is in fact ancient, what about the U-Bahn station? It opened in 1908, but it was originally called U-Bhf Kaiserhof — named after Berlin’s swankiest hotel on the north side of Wilhelmplatz. In the 1950s, it was rechristened U-Bhf Ernst-Thälmann-Platz. It kept this name for 35 years, until East Berlin opened an Ernst-Thälmann-Park with an accompanying S-Bahn station in 1986. They decided having two stations...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. Abbreviations and German Words
  7. Introduction
  8. 1. (Anti)Colonialism
  9. 2. November Revolution
  10. 3. Rosa Luxemburg’s Berlin
  11. 4. Neukölln Will Stay Red!
  12. 5. 1968 in West Berlin
  13. 6. Riots in Kreuzberg
  14. 7. The East Is Red
  15. 8. Queer Berlin
  16. 9. Berlinerinnen
  17. 10. Afterword: Where This Book Was Written
  18. About the Author
  19. Index