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Tacheles means to speak directly and honestly in Yiddish, (as if there was any other way for Germans to speak), and it is so named as the building’s in the former Jewish quarter of Berlin, and in defiance of the East German propensity to repress freedom of expression (and everything else for that matter).
The building opened in 1909 as the Friedrichstraßenpassage, a giant shopping complex, one of the first of its kind, so named because it linked Oranienburgerstraße with Friedrichstraße behind it. It promptly went bankrupt, and was later reopened as department store. That too didn’t last, and it was taken over by the AEG electric company to showcase their new contraptions and fancy technology.
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The Nazis later took over as they were prone to doing at the time, and the building became the central office of the SS. They horded French prisoners of war in the attic during the war when the building was badly damaged what with bombs falling on it and the like. Most of it was totally destroyed.
What was left didn’t fare much better after the war either I’m afraid. Russian soldiers used statues in the entrance for target practice, and they didn’t exactly wear slippers when they were stomping about.
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Inside the walls are smothered from top to bottom in colourful street art which very much reclaims the notion of freedom of expression. Some of the imagery is just mad, better than the shit you’ll find in museums and better than some of the exhibitions which are always on show here. Bring a can of spray paint, have a go yourself – there’s enough space for all and always room for improvement.
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Tacheles’ future is still uncertin, sitting as it does on real estate worth some €250 million beside Berlin’s tourist and financial centres. Legal battles pitting squatters and artists against developers and the city are part and parcel of its existence.
Guests are invited to sign a petition to help preserve its future as a creative space. (Anything to stop it from being turned into yet more apartments.)
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Great post, I love this building and area. I also have my "How Long is Now" photos. I fell in love with Berlin here.
ReplyDeleteMe too! I never knew the name of this place until I googled 'how long is now'. I want to go back...
DeleteHey, I went to Tacheles yesterday and yes it's already locked up. only a metal statue exhibitions are left open. I have a question though, maybe you could check if there's a way in ? even at night it would still be great experience.
ReplyDeleteI work in a hostel around that area and one night a guest said that they managed to get in over the wall. They said they ran around the place for a few hours, one room is apparently just full of keys. All over the floor, on the desk, everywhere.
ReplyDeleteOnly thing I'd worry about is how populated that area is, someone must be watching from somewhere surely?
That's always the worry everywhere - someone must be watching from somewhere. That's why it's fun!
ReplyDelete