http://www.arabnews.com/?page=9&section=0&article=71922&d=18&m=10&y=2005&pix=community.jpg&category=Features

            Tuesday, 18, October, 2005 (15, Ramadhan, 1426)



                  Time Running Out for East German Communist Palace
                  Alexandra Hudson, Reuters 
                    
                  BERLIN, 18 October 2005 - The end is nigh for Berlin's most 
famous eyesore, a colossus of concrete and steel which once housed East 
Germany's Communist government and now stands derelict on the city's main 
tourist drag. Demolition of the Palace of the Republic is set for December to 
the dismay of eastern Germans nostalgic for its Socialist heyday and a legion 
of artists and beatniks who have used the ruin's vast spaces in recent years to 
provoke and entertain.

                  Now the graffiti-daubed building, whose fate stirs lingering 
divisions between eastern and western Germans, is taking leave of the city with 
one last defiant gesture - an exhibition about death.

                  "It's heartbreaking to see it now," said 72-year-old Gisela 
Plock, whose daughter held her wedding reception in one of the building's 
restaurants.

                  "I can't bring myself to pass it too often," said the Berlin 
pensioner, a frequent patron before the palace was found to be riddled with 
asbestos in 1990 and closed. Three years ago, Parliament voted to tear down the 
palace to enable the reconstruction of the old Prussian "Schloss," the stately 
residence of the last Kaiser, Wilhelm II, that stood on the site until 1951. 
Supporters of the Schloss argue it will restore the city center's historical 
layout and architectural coherence.

                  Opponents point to the massive cost of demolition for the 
cash-strapped city - the palace stands in a concrete basin in the River Spree 
which cannot easily be removed without adversely affecting the water table. 
They also highlight the troubling symbolism of effacing an East German icon, 
when 16 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall many East Germans feel 
reunification failed them.

                  Inside the palace, a visitors' book lies ready for remarks 
about the contemporary art installation on display. Yet few visitors devote 
comments to the artworks. "It is a tragedy this beautiful building should have 
been allowed to become such a ruin. West and East will never be reconciled," 
writes one visitor in huge emphatic script.

                  Plock has vivid memories of the palace which was opened with 
much pomp in 1976 but served just 14 years. "When you came in on every floor 
there were the most beautiful plants and indoor flower beds among the stylish 
leather seats. The scent was incredible. It really hit you." Ripping down the 
palace is an affront to all those who used and enjoyed the building, ensuring 
it was never just the haunt of the Communist elite, Plock argued.

                  "We East Germans paid for it ourselves from our taxes and 
East Germany was not a rich country. All the natural resources were in the 
West." "It is a part of Berlin's history, of East German history, and we cannot 
allow it to be simply swept aside and ignored."

                  Since the eerie shell of exposed girders and copper-colored 
glass reopened in 2003 it has inspired some innovative projects. The current 
show by little-known contemporary artists offers disquieting reminders of human 
mortality. A wall of grainy photos depicts the pained dead faces of men, women 
and children. An airport arrivals and departure board mocks visitors, reminding 
them of the uncertainty of their own departure date.

                  Over the last year, the building's basement was flooded, 
allowing people to tour it in rubber dinghies. Visitors have sat on the former 
entrance staircase huddled in blankets to watch old East German propaganda 
films, or have danced to blistering electronic music, echoing through the void.

                  Organizers have staged operas and glamorous balls, as well as 
ironic tours of the building pretending it is half-way to completion rather 
than reaching the end of its life. During last year's dark winter months, a 
huge light installation on the top of the palace spelled out the word "doubt" - 
visible from a kilometer away. It captured the spirit of a nation beset with 
insecurity about its future, commentators said. "I think when it comes to the 
day of the demolition we'll see people from both camps outside protesting," 
said 30-year-old actress Ulrike Recknagel.

                  "It will be an outrage if it goes. Berlin has a unique edge 
at present, yet city planners are sucking the life out of it with all the new 
hotels and smart buildings for tourists."

                  "Here artists have had a prominent site and have done some 
remarkable things. This is not a wealthy city and precisely when people are 
suffering economically is when they most need accessible art and culture."
                 
           
     


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