I’ve always been drawn to ethnically segregated
neighborhoods, whether by choice or by law, these enclaves are islands unto
themselves. A unique place where a
foreigners transplant their culture can and can continue to feel a sense of
home. It’s a place where the
curious outsider can get a glimpse a peoples’ lives suspended between two
worlds. Often times, these
neighborhoods in the bigger cities are neglected, marginalized, and experience
many of the social ills associated with poverty. Eventually, speculators and developers come in and gentrify
the whole damn place. I first
witnessed this happen firsthand in the Puerto Rican neighborhood of Wynwood in
the city of Miami. I’ve seen this
phenomenon happen in other places like Brooklyn’s neighborhood of Williamsburg
and Manhattan’s Harlem. I’m often
torn by the consequences of gentrification. Suddenly, a place becomes cool and hip, but also drives
rents through the roof and the community is quickly transformed and pushed
out.
Earlier this summer, I decided to return to Berlin for a
short visit since moving back from Germany in 2015. I felt less like a tourist in Berlin than any other city in
Europe. The number of expats, from
all walks of life, is similar to what you’d experience in a city like New York
or Miami. It was nice to just
blend in. The city never
sleeps. It’s the Europe’s NYC
baby!
Berliners don’t conform like the rest of Germany. You can be different. You can experiment in all facades of
life here. You’ll find your
community no matter what. Weirdoes
and foreigners don’t have to apologize for being weird or foreign.
It’s a place rich in history, both painful and
beautiful. A city constantly
morphing like the seasons. Cold
dark winters springing into long sun filled summers, only to fall into itself
all over again.
Berlin feels diametrically opposed to my home of Miami. Both are ethnically diverse, but mostly
from other parts of Europe and the Middle East, rather than the Caribbean and
Latin America. Miami is tropical
and hugs the ocean, whereas Berlin is landlocked, cold, cloudy, and wet most of
the year. Historically, Miami is
considered brand new and the vibe just feels like it’s perpetually on
holiday. Plastic, posh, and well
manicured. Public transport is
limited to the city center, whereas Berlin public transport connects all the
neighborhoods with ease. Berlin’s
most popular neighborhoods maintain an organic edge that makes it accessible
regardless of your wallet. Although,
Miami and Berlin both attract a similar demographic of hipsters, weirdoes, and
techies, Miami can’t touch Berlin when it comes to being socially conscious and
politically engaged. We seem to
attract those obsessed with image over substance. Berlin is full of activists and artists, and as a result, the
texture and conversations that take place Berlin are very different.
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| This is SO Berlin |
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| Second hand stores are popular and bookstores. So many books stores. Miami get some bookstores! |
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| sign over Tex Mex restaurant indicating to resist gentrification |
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| In Berlin is a hotbed for the socially conscious. You'll find former US soldiers speaking out about their experience in Afghanistan. |
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| Refugees Welcome flag hanging from balcony |
Turkish Neighborhood
of Kreuzberg
When I first visited to Berlin, all the craze was the
neighborhood of Kreuzberg… a bustling ethnically Turkish neighborhood in the
heart of the city. Known for it’s
good nightlife, ethnic restaurants and markets, cafes, 2nd hand
boutiques and bookstores. If
you’ve visited Berlin then you have probably passed through. It’s a fascinating place to experience
this city. For me, Kreuzberg is
the playground and artistic hub that fascinates and captivates the mind. I enjoy staying in the eastern part of
the city because in spite being a foreigner, it’s the most similar to living in
a big multicultural city back home like New York or Miami.
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| Veiled Turkish women is a common sight |
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| mosque |
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| Mostly Turkish men at a local rally |
Here, you can be foreign without feeling foreign. It’s a city where English is the lingua
franca. It’s a place where expats
come from all corners of the planet.
The rich and poor share the buses and subway. The car you drive mentality doesn’t exist because everyone
walks or bikes it. It’s a space
where all lifestyles, creeds, and ethnicities feel “normal”.
On this visit to Berlin, I decided to stay in Kreuzberg
because I wanted to experience the living history of the neighborhood and learn
about the gentrification that continues to shape this and other Berlin
neighborhood.
Kreuzberg History 101
1945 - 1949
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| Kreuzberg apartment after the war |
The relentless bombing campaign by the Allied powers,
coupled with the Russian invasion destroyed nearly half the buildings in this
neighborhood. Berlin soon divided into
East and West. Kreuzberg was
literally on the western edge of that dividing line. Millions was spent by West Germany’s government to rebuild
the city.
1961 - 1970
By 1961, the East German government erected what became
known as the Berlin Wall to prevent East Germans from fleeing into West
Berlin. Prior to this, the western
part of the city employed tens of thousands of East Berliners who worked in
West Berlin. As a result of the
wall, sixty-thousand East Berliners where prevented from commuting to
work. A labor shortage followed
and West Germany looked to cheap foreign labor in countries like Italy and
Turkey. West Germany never
intended for these “guest workers” to stay long term. Initially, they arrived with one year contracts and were
housed in dormitories. Most, who
arrived in Germany were overwhelmingly males, but in Berlin, 40% were
female.
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| Turkish guest workers came to replace the loss of labor when the Berlin Wall went up. |
60’s and 70’s
Massive new development projects went into effect in the
heart of Kreuzberg, which most deemed failures. The older sections of the city were designated “sit and
wait” renovation zones. Employment
opportunities are dismal, which result in a mass exodus of the young, leaving
behind elderly. With cheap real
estate, public housing companies bought up entire city blocks.
Within a decade, a few hundred squatters begin to occupy
abandoned buildings to resist gentrification by developers. Many of these squatters are student
activists, leftists, and artists.
Kreuzberg became a unique place for experimentation and alternative
lifestyles.
Turkish guest workers started putting down roots, having
children born in Germany, but still not considered German. Eventually, the government placed a ban
on foreign workers from moving to Kreuzberg. Simultaneously, the concept of cooperative flats shares,
progressive preschools, leftist bars, and self-help community centers
evolved. This was the height of
the Cold War, and the US Army used areas of the neighborhood to conduct close
combat training exercises because of the ruined urban landscape.
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| Turkish businessman in his shop in Kreuzberg |
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| US soldier during military exercises in the Kreuzberg neighborhood as two residents look on. |
Activists pressured the city to offer squatters affordable
leases. More squatters followed
and occupied more abandoned buildings, which led to confrontations with
police. Looting, violence, and
arrests ensued.
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| Police clash with squaters |
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| protesters demand the release of arrested squaters |
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| protest against the Lummer Decree |
By 1984, most squatters received legal status. Guest workers streamed in, organized,
and established Islamic centers.
The multicultural identity of the neighborhood grew. The German government responded with the
Lummer Decree, which required immigrant youth to leave Germany if they had not
lived on West German soil for at least five years and do not have a proper job
or are considered unemployed. The
environment creates a “Kreuzberg” identity that is multicultural, immigrant,
and leftist.
1989
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| Fall of the Berlin Wall |
The fall of communism and the collapse of the Berlin Wall make
Kreuzberg the new “center of Berlin, where it was once on the periphery of West
Berlin. Now, that East Germans can legally work in West Berlin, thousands of
ethnic Germans arrived in West Berlin for employment opportunities. “Non-Germans” are seen as competition
with East Germans looking for work.
Unemployment rises to 20%.
Rightwing violence increases and led to the formation of the Turkish
German street gang 36 Boys… which offers protection from the German nationalists. Tensions force “Turkish Germans” to
launch their own businesses in food and retail. An openly hard drug scene gains momentum in the 90’s and
cements Kreuzberg as a “no go area”.
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| Turkish street gang 36 Boys formed to protect themselves from the rise in right wing violence after the wall collapsed. |
2000's
In 2002, the first MyFest is launched, which is an attempt
to market Kreuzberg as a place with an alternative charm: cosmo, tolerant,
creative, slick, and hip.
Tourists, investors, and speculators flocked.
2007
The housing market crash in the US hits and the global
financial crisis ripples across Europe.
Public housing becomes privatized and renters find themselves under
pressure while investors looked to get rich. Community centers and factories are replaced with tech
startups, design shops, restaurants, and cafes.
Powerful and wealthy Turkish German families, such as Aygun
and Hasir respond in buying up whole city blocks in the heart of Kreuzberg. A 500% increase in buyers looking to
buy from 2007 to 2012. As a result
a dense landscape of commercial and food establishments crop up throughout the
neighborhood. The local population
“needs” become subordinate to the local community. International travel guides promote Kreuzberg as a party
animal destination. Gorlitzer Park
becomes a local hotbed for the drug trade. Berlin police treat this park as a “legal” scene to obtain
drugs to avoid it spilling over into other parts of the city. It’s crazy to walk to through Gorlizter
and see drug dealers, hipsters having a picnic, and moms pushing their baby
strollers without anyone flinching.
There is even a petting zoo in the middle of it all.
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| Gorlitzer Park |
2012 – 2017
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| Berlin Hates You is an anti tourist protest |
Locals begin to campaign to push back and reclaim the city
from the negative images. Creative
protest like “Berlin Doesn’t Love You” and “Screw Tourists” pops up as graffiti
and corner shops around the neighborhood.
The street art and the edginess of the neighborhood
attracted more than tourists, but corporations like BMW and others who want to
create a presence in the neighborhood.
Squatters moved in and occupied their construction sites. Street artists asked activists to paint
over their murals in protests, which is one of the draws for these companies to
invest in the neighborhood. Popup
protests and noise demonstrations followed.
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| Squatters occupy a lot protesting BMW |
Asylum seekers from mostly Africa flock to Kreuzberg and occupied a park along with local residents to demand the right to work and choose their place of residence. I visited this encampment back in 2013 and was amazed to learn that many of these people are prevented from working or living in a city of their choice. They were often in isolated communities with nothing to do. Eventually, they were forced to vacate the park. Since the arrival of Syrian refugees, Germany is doing more to integrate refugees.
Today, the neighborhood of Kreuzerg overlaps with pockets of
poverty and capitalists. The space
is in constant flux. The social
contrast only multiplies each day, with the battle for this community and for
its resources. Those with money
and power going toe to toe with those foreigners who have help create the
Kreuzberg neighborhood everyone has come to love.
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| those with capital |
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| those without capital |
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| RESIST! |
















































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Berlin one of my favourite city for visiting in leisure. Actually I am fond of historical artifacts and it is full of 13th century historical judgement. Also it is know as natural beauty queen for it amazing natural sense. Bur before visiting you should know about the layouts and about the pass of the city. I hope you will read it from http://www.tripindicator.com/city-pass-berlin/compare-berlin-pass-vs-museum-pass-vs-welcome-card-vs-get2card.html. Thanks.
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