20 May 2007
The Last Month
April 28 - May 1: I met my friend Tori, who was in her semester abroad in Budapest, in Vienna. We spent two days in Vienna, a day in Salzburg, and a day in Freiburg. Highlight from Vienna: I saw an opera performed entirely by marionettes! It was really professionally done. We also heard the Vienna Boys' Choir. Highlight from Salzburg: I saw an old lady in the street selling marionette creatures made from wooden beads that were exactly the same as the ones my parents bought for my sister and I ten years ago! I wanted to stop and ask her how long she had been selling them, but I thought of it too late and I didn't see her again.
May 4-6: SAFT (Semester Anfangs FreizeiT - Begin of semester retreat) with Campus for Christus. Basically we went to a cabin in the woods and did a little bit of worship and learning and a lot of hanging out. Highlight: The Stupid Ninja Fighting Game . If you don't know what that is, its basically just the type of completely awesome and silly game you can only play with a bunch of college students who have been shut in a cabin all day because of the rain.
May 11-12: Visit to CERN in Geneva. Highlight: Getting to know other physics students, and hearing about how graduate students can be involved in particle physics.
May 16-19: ICF Congress, a meeting of church communities from all over Europe in the movement started by people in Zurich. Highlight: Hanging out with people from ICF Freiburg, having a pretty deep talk with one of the speakers, and spending time in solid worship to my God.
May 20: Bike ride to a Strauß in Endingen (20 km away) with Nelly (see photos from Berlin). A Strauß is a restaurant or inn located on a vineyard. The ride up passed through the beautiful terraced landscapes of Kaiserstuhl.
21 April 2007
Life in Freiburg
Last week was the first week of classes. Because you don't sign up for classes in advance here, but rather begin attending them and register later, I visited more classes than I planned to take and picked out the ones that are interesting and understandable for me. As it turns out, I plan to attend three Physics lectures, on solid state physics, nuclear physics, and multiscale materials modeling, and one language seminar entitled The Comparative Typology of English and German, which is taught in English primarily for people whose native language is German. In the first lecture we went over some examples of bad English from German students, and we discussed the reasons and generalized it to all language learners.
That's enough of daily details for now. I thought I'd give you a kind of virtual tour through some aspects of my life in Freiburg - at least as it is when I have time to enjoy it.
The building in blue is the one I live in. (Thanks to Google Earth for the image.) As you can see it's nicely situated in the center of a block, so it's away from traffic and noise. I get the impression there are a lot of families in the surrounding buildings, and there is even a playground in the block. Altogether it's a nice place to live.
Here are a few pictures of my room. I didn't clean up especially when I took them, so you get to see how I really live ;-) .
This is where I keep my clothes. The shelves and the bin came with the room; the long blue thing I bought at IKEA to supplement storage space.
My room has a couch!
My room has a bed!
My room has a GRAND PIANO! Unfortunately I don't play piano, so right now this is serving as something to store things on and under.
That's pretty much where I live - in later posts I'll try to describe what I do here.
11 April 2007
Train ride with Clemens
Clemens turned out to be a very active and talkative kid. We talked about lots of things, ranging from figuring out the train schedule to Star Wars movies. He could understand everything I said, and he himself spoke very clear Hochdeutsch. I wonder if that has anything to do with his father being a Ph.D. I even learned a few words from him, like Ohrläppchen (earlobe). There were a few awkward moments, such as the time I had to convince him not to stab at the upholstery with his collection of plastic cocktail swords, but mostly it was fun. I must admit I came away from the experience a little proud that my German is good enough to hold a conversation with a kid.
* This word doesn’t really translate well. It refers to an opportunity to drive or ride along with someone else that is set up on the web.
06 April 2007
Last Days in Berlin
The next day and a half were test days for me. I took the Goethe-Institut's Zentrale Oberstufeprüfung (central upper-level exam), which consisted of writing an essay (250 words in 90 minutes), listening to an interview and answering questions, reading and responding to an article, grammar exercises, and an oral report and conversation. Out of possible scores of very good, good, and satisfactory, I scored "good" overall with "very good" in the grammar and the speaking. So now at least I have an official record of my German skills, in case I ever need it.
After the oral part of the exam on Friday, Nelly, Erik, Fabrice, and I went to Wannsee, a lake near Berlin popular for getaways, and picnicked. We had bread rolls, baguettes, cold cuts, broccoli, and of course a bottle of Bordeaux wine. It was a really great and sunny day, and the scenery was beautiful. Fabrice kept feeding the ducks from the lake, who then kept following us, so we even ended up making friends with some of the locals. Unfortunately I lost all my pictures of this day for some reason. Also unfortunate is the fact that this beautiful lake was the setting for the infamous "Wannsee Conference", where the Nazis distributed their plans for the "Final Solution to the Jewish Problem". On our way out we stopped by the house where this happened, which is now a museum.
26 March 2007
Quick Post
Now for the future: I'll be taking the ZOP on Thursday and Friday, the hardest German test the institute offers. I don't have an apartment in Freiburg yet but I do have arrangements for the trip there and accommodations for my arrival. Life is hectic but good.
21 March 2007
Another Week’s events
Other than that, the only big event I’ve had since then was my visit to
Yeah, so that’s the update. I’m still looking for a place to live in Freiburg, but from talking to people here it sounds like the norm in searching for apartments is to visit them before making a contract, so I may not really have a choice but to wait and find something when I’m in
13 March 2007
First week in Berlin
I've been keeping quite busy with the cultural program that the Goethe-Institut runs alongside the classes. I have been on several walking tours - the first a more general walk through central Berlin, then one focused on the Alexanderplatz, and today an excellent tour with the theme of "August '89", which focused on the events leading up to the opening of the GDR's borders on November 9, 1989. The tour guide himself lived in East Berlin at the time and took part in some of the demonstrations and protests. Interesting tidbit: I never before knew this, but churches played a huge role in the revolution in East Germany. In addition to simply being a place where dissidents could meet, they hosted prayer and fasting services in the tumultuous month before the fall of the wall and they sheltered people from being mistreated by the police.
There is of course a lot that I could write about the various things that I have done. I visited a city museum that had models of Berlin circa 1400, 1600, and 1800. I ate a meal with Eisbein (leg of pork). I went to a church service in the St. Marienkirche - the oldest church in Berlin that still functions as a church. I visited the ITB, a global tourism expo. Rather than ending with insignificant details about these things, however, I thought I might finish by describing Berlin itself.
Berlin is a fairly large city, with about 3.5 million inhabitants, but is spread over such a large area that I have never seen any part of it more crowded than Pittsburgh. It is a poor city, with high unemployment and an astonishing lack of investors, but there is excellent public transportation and little crime. Berlin is a disfigured city, with almost none of the middle-ages old city visible and with plenty of damage around from the last world war, and yet it harbors a thriving artistic and cultural community.
The things I named above are of course mostly things that I have heard from guides and such. My experience thus far has if anything confirmed these things, but I can't claim to have found them out myself. My biggest impression is that Berlin is the center of a wound. One sees here some of the freshest new growth and ideas in Germany growing over, under, and around the scabs left over from a long war against fascism and an even longer division due to communism. This is especially evident when I see an art gallery set up in a bombed-out factory, or slogans of peace and freedom painted on a remaining section of the Wall. I am really enjoying myself here, not because it's a beautiful city (at first glance, it most certainly isn't), but because every little detail that I see or hear is meaningful.