blank image Home blank image Site Map blank image Contact Us blank image Search blank image blank image   blank image
Garnet to Cream Gradient Graphic
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image

Jüdisches Museum Berlin — by Caliandra Lanza-Weil '06

Throughout the semester, our class work focused on architecture as a way of learning about Berlin; architect Daniel Libeskind, who designed the plans for a new World Trade Center in New York, created the Jüdisches Museum Berlin (Jewish Museum Berlin) to teach us about the Holocaust.

The building disorients and confuses the visitor, especially on the ground floor where the Holocaust is presented. Without meaning to sound weird, this is my favorite part of the museum. The floors are slanted, so you always feel as if you are about to trip. The displays are set into the walls so you have to peer into them. At one end you enter the Holocaust Tower, an empty concrete tower where you can hear the outside world but you’re sure the outside world cannot hear you, a very small idea of what it must have been like to experience the Holocaust.

The other exit takes you into the Garden of Exile where this picture was taken.  The ground is uneven, the rocks are slippery, and the 49 pillars obstruct your view. The garden is meant to communicate that exile is a difficult experience, regardless of the fate that is being escaped.

 

blank image


Uncovering Berlin: Bates students learn the modern history of Germany on the streets of Berlin
Talk To Me: A Sesquicentennial project captures Bates history and lore — as told by the people who were there.
After The Fire: Four Batesies, including burn victim Phil Barr '05, recall the night their lives intersected at Rhode Island Hospital in the aftermath of the horrific Station nightclub fire.
Never Too Late: The remains of Navy airman Harry Mossman '65, killed in Vietnam in 1972, finally come home.
Why Bates?: A simple question, says Dean of Admissions Wylie Mitchell, but it's key to how he and his staff review 4,500-plus applicants each year.



Bates Matters: Affording Access
Open Forum: Readers react to the Bush twins brouhaha.
PreAmble: A century of Bates dining.
Quad Angles: New construction plans focus on student life outside the classroom.
Scene Again: We All Shine On
Ms. Butterfly: From town to graduation gown, swimmer Vanessa Williamson '05 keeps pushing the limits.
Class Notes: Find out what fellow Bates alums are doing.
Vital Statistics
Your Page: Safe from Sorrow?
blank image