Atlantica - 01.01.2006, Blaðsíða 30

Atlantica - 01.01.2006, Blaðsíða 30
The snow has started to fall. I’m hungry, wander- ing a maze of back streets in East Berlin, trying on instinct to retrace the route I took 15 months ago that led me by chance to Pan Asia, a spectacular Thai restaurant in the funky Mitte district. My last visit to Berlin came during an unseasonable warm spell in September, the sticky night air persuading Berliners, dressed casually in shorts and tank tops, out of their homes in large numbers. I prefer Berlin by winter. The city seems to make more sense in the cold. Like tonight. The winter weather has chased most inside, and the streets are conspicuously empty, the grun- gy buildings unusually dark. I’m suddenly transported to a 1970s Cold War spy thriller. The mood of espionage is palpable. I’m on the wrong side of the wall, I think to myself as three men, sheltered from the elements by their beige trench coats, approach me from down the vacant sidewalk. Of course there is no epic chase scene down back alleys, into basement pubs. No secret codes to crack. The strangers pass without incident. A few moments later I stumble upon Vina Blanca, a Spanish Tapas restaurant in Prenzlauer Berg. Forget Thai. I head inside Vina Blanca to shake off the cold. The cozy restaurant is modern, chic – various wine bottles from across Spain line the walls. Songs from Björk’s album Debut set the atmosphere. So much for my Cold War spy thriller. This is a swanky bistro straight out of Paris. To warm up, I drink wine so delicious you could eat it: Casteller Barrica from the Penedès region. Mid-meal, I’m told the restaurant doesn’t take Visa, and the closest bank machine is a twenty-minute walk. But I’m not going to wind up in the kitchen washing dishes because Raul, a 27-year old waiter who moved from Barcelona to Berlin 17 months ago, kindly offers to drive me. “I don’t like the weather,” Raul says, the snow sprin- While some Germans might be experiencing the doldrums of economic stagnation, Berliners are upbeat as their once-divided city continues to modernize and reinvent itself, writes Edward Weinman. Photos by Páll Stefánsson. Istanbul & You Reconstructing Berlin kling lightly as we motor down the empty street. I ask Raul what he does like about the city. “Berlin is not as beautiful as Paris or Rome, but Berlin is more bohemian. I like the people.” Back at Vina Blanca, Raul introduces me to Dang Nowak, a filmmaker who is a regular at the restaurant. An hour later, her friends Hanna Hahn and Jana Heinz show up. A few glasses of wine later, we agree to meet up the following night, and then Jana, who once spent a miserable nine months in Casper, Wyoming, asks me how long I’ve known Dang. “About two hours,” I tell her. “That’s Berlin,” Jana says. “The people are so friendly.” BERLIN IS NO LONGER YOUR PARENTS’ cold war city. The Berlin Wall, which cut the city into the demo- cratic West and the communist East, was open for unre- stricted travel on 9 November, 1989. For the majority of today’s 20-somethings, the wall casts no shadow; it’s nothing more than the cobbled bricks you find twisting and winding along the streets of Berlin, marking the wall’s former path. “I was six when the wall came down, so I don’t remem- ber it,” the car rental agent told me while giving me direc- tions to my hotel. “But the old, like my grandmother, she has a wall in her head. She remembers the war. You never forget the bombs.” Berlin is probably unrecognizable to the older Germans, those who suddenly found themselves east of the wall back in 1961, literally on the wrong side of the tracks. Take Potsdamer Platz, located down from the Brandenburg Gate, which borders East and West Berlin. One of the busiest squares in Europe in pre-war days, the central area was pummeled by Allied bombs, creat- ing a vast wasteland of nothingness. This emptiness then became no-man’s land once the wall was fully con- structed. When the wall came crumbling down, there 28 AT L A N T I CA 034-41ATL106 Berlin.indd 28 16.12.2005 12:01:59
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Atlantica

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