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The House by the Lake

Page 37

by Thomas Harding


  To my great relief, I was able to make contact with the Munk family early on. From an old letter written in the 1990s, I found the telephone number for Professor Fritz Munk’s son, Klaus, and made the call. A woman answered the phone. It was Klaus’s widow. When I explained who I was, she said that she knew all about the Alexanders and recommended I speak to her daughter, Bettina Munk, who still lived at the lake. A few weeks later I was eating dinner with Bettina and her cousin Cordula, who have separate houses on the parcel next to the lake house. I was struck by how easily we fell into familiarity, that despite an absence of seventy years, and the span of two generations, they both felt like neighbours. It was from Cordula and Bettina that I found out about the history of the Munk family. It was also through the Munks that I met Chris Partsch, a formidable Berlin lawyer, who helped unearth Wolfgang’s Stasi files and set up the Alexander Haus charity for us.

  From the start, my family has been very generous with their mementos and artefacts. My grandmother’s letter, the photographs of the house, the audio recordings with my great-aunts and -uncles, Dr Alfred Alexander’s memoir, Erich’s uncle Max’s memoir, letters between Bella and Harold, Elsie and Erich, as well as items from the house itself, all of these have been invaluable in helping piece together this story. There are too many family members to mention, but I wish to extend my heartfelt thanks to my entire family, for trusting me with this project and for their continuing support.

  Elsie died in 2004, at home in her bed in north London. I was sitting next to her at the time, the only person in the room. Right at the very end I told her, in a whisper, ‘I love you, Granny, I love you.’ She squeezed my hand before letting out her last breath. Elsie left her grandchildren certain items in her will. I was given an envelope containing two olive-green passports, and a scrap of fabric embroidered with the letter ‘J’.

  I would like to thank all those who helped me in the many archives in which I researched, including: Zeitungsabteilung der Staatsbibliothek in Berlin, Stadtarchiv Potsdam, Grundbuchsachen in Potsdam, Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv in Potsdam, Landesarchiv Berlin, Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz in Berlin, Potsdam Planning Department and Monument Authority archives, Bundesarchiv Berlin, National Archives in London. Hauptstaatsarchiv in Dresden, Historisches Archiv des Westdeutschen Rundfunks in Cologne, the Stasi archives held by the Der Bundesbeauftragte für die Unterlagen des Staatssicherheitsdienstes der ehemaligen Deutschen Demokratischen Republik in Berlin, Militär Historisches Museum Flugplatz in Gatow, the Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum für Film und Fernsehen in Berlin, Yad Vashem in Jerusalem and the Imperial War Museum in London. I also made use of the private Alexander family, Edition Meisel and Wollank family archives.

  I would like to thank my hard-working research assistants, Johanna Biedermann, Julia Boehlke, Daniel Bussenius and Maren Richter. Thanks to Dabney Chapman, Catherine Dring, Sheridan Marshall and Kirsten Ackermann-Piëch for their help with translations. I am also grateful to the many others who helped me, including: Joel Agee, John Alexander, Patrick Bade, Peter Benjamin, Birgit Bernard, Captain Jan Behrendt, Bettina Biedermann, Dieter Dargies, Alexandar and Robert Datnow, Heribert Dieter, Albrecht Dümling, Sophie D. Fleisch, Dr Thomas Gayda, Marion Godfrey, Peter and Michael Goldberger, Michael Haas, Martin Luchterhandt, Astred Möser, Mareike Notarp, Julia Riedel, Kate Weinberg, Chris Weitz, Rose Wild and Raymond Wolff.

  Thanks also to the interviewees not already mentioned: Wilhelm Bartels, Hans Dieter Behrendt, Peter Daniel, Peter Kaminski, Sylvia Fiedler, Suzanne and Volker Grunert, Frank Harding, Professor Christoph and Dorothea Kleßmann, Annelies Laude, Vivien Lewis, Peter Munk, Andreas Potthof, Betty Rajak, Dr Bernhard Schmidt, Professor Helga and Rochus Schütz, Malte Spohr, Wilhelm Stintzing, Winfried Sträter, Peter Sussmann, Günther and Heinz Wittich, and Dr Gisela von Wysocki.

  My gratitude also to the city of Potsdam and the state of Brandenburg, for their belief in our efforts to save the Alexander Haus, to transform it into a place of remembrance and reconciliation. In particular, my thanks to Jann Jakobs, Matthias Klipp, Frank Scheffler, Saskia Hueneke, Birgit Morgenroth, Klara Geywitz and Pete Heuer. Also to Andreas Kalesse, and his team at the city of Potsdam’s historic monument department, Jörg Limberg, Sabine Ambrosius and Matthias Kartz.

  To my readers, thanks as ever: Lucy and Zam Baring, Rupert Levy, Angela and Michael Harding, Amanda Harding, James Harding, Jane Hill, Dominic Valentine and Amelia Wooldridge.

  Having been published, I realise that it is truly a team effort. So first, a shout out to those who are rarely acknowledged: the booksellers, sales execs, designers, accountants, administrators, and all the others who have helped get this book into the hands of the readers. Next, a truly enormous ‘thank you’ to my editor, the always good-humoured and tirelessly working Tom Avery (William Heinemann), who was nobly helped by Anna-Sophia Watts. To Anna DeVries (Picador USA), who offered sound advice on the manuscript, and Andrea Woerle (DTV Germany), for all her enthusiastic assistance. To Glenn O’Neill for his superb cover, Emma Finnigan for her publicity brilliance, Darren Bennett for the maps, Neil Cunning for the illustrations, and for their much-appreciated support, Tom Weldon and Gail Rebuck. Thanks especially to my incredible agent, Patrick Walsh, and his superb team of international agents. I really did see a badger running along the border patrol footpath.

  Finally, to my daughter Sam, it was a joy to see how much you loved spending time in Berlin, and my wife Debora, for her continued support, brilliant editorial contributions and, most importantly, for her love.

  INDEX

  The page references in this index correspond to the printed edition from which this ebook was created. To find a specific word or phrase from the index, please use the search feature of your ebook reader.

  Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations.

  A

  Abba 277

  Aberbach, Jean 116

  Abraham, Anna 135

  AC/DC 277

  Achenbachstrasse, Berlin 40, 61, 101

  Adam, Marcel 322–6, 323, 338, 347

  Adlon Hotel, Berlin 82

  agriculture 15, 17, 18, 31, 32, 68, 166

  air-raid shelters 151, 152, 155–6

  air-raid sirens 132, 137, 151, 152, 155

  Aktuelle Kamera 256

  alcohol 88, 265, 270–1, 277, 289–90, 324, 325

  Alexander family 3–5, 33–50, 51–9, 67, 69, 70–86, 92–104, 121, 123, 124, 126, 129, 133, 168–9, 204–5, 208, 234, 247, 302, 304, 312–13

  Alexander Haus 350–1, 357–8

  Alexander, Alfred John 33–50, 53–7, 54, 59, 61, 62, 67, 71, 72, 78, 85–6, 85, 92–4, 95, 100, 108, 110, 112, 129, 153, 180, 247, 302 1880 birth 35; 1885 death of sister and father 35; 1903 becomes qualified doctor 36; 1905 refuses position at Freiberg University Hospital 36–7; 1906 death of mother 37; 1909 marries Henny Picard 38; 1911 birth of Bella 38; 1912 birth of Elsie 38; 1914 conscripted into the medical corps of German Army 39; 1917 birth of Hanns and Paul 39; 1922 builds clinic on Achenbachstrasse, Berlin 40; 1927 leases land in Groß Glienicke 33–5, 40–1; arranges construction of lake house 41–2; enters lake house for first time; tacks mezuzah onto entrance 46; 1928 appointed head of Berlin Chamber of Physicians 56; 1929 death of Otto von Wollank 61, 62; 1933 anti-Semitic mob forms outside apartment 78; wedding of Bella and Harold 81–2; 1934 advised by Fritz Munk to leave Germany 85–6; celebrates Lucien Picard’s 79th birthday 92–3; medical business threatened by anti-Semitic policies 93–4; family members express desire to leave Germany 94; Bella gives birth to Peter 96; 1936 visits Bella in London; warned not to return to Germany 100; 1937 Wilhelm Meisel leases Groß Glienicke land 112–13; 1938 rejects Wilhelm Meisel’s offer to buy lake house 126; 1939 name appears in Ausbürgerungslisten; Groß Glienicke property seized 129–30

  Alexander, Bella (1855–1906) 35, 37

  Alexander, Bella (1911–2000) see Jakobi, Bella

  Alexander, Elsie see Harding, Elsie

  Alexander, Hanns 33, 39, 47
, 53, 54, 56, 93, 99, 100–1, 104, 129, 168, 316

  1917 birth 39; 1927 enters lake house for first time 47; 1928 11th birthday at lake house 56; 1934 celebrates Lucien Picard’s 79th birthday 93; 1935 called a ‘dirty Jew’ in streets of Berlin 99; 1936 moves to London 100–1, 104; 1939 name appears in Ausbürgerungslisten 129; 1940 joins British Army 168; 1946 visits lake house 168–9

  Alexander, Henny 33, 38–9, 54–5, 54, 71, 83–5, 85, 94, 100, 101, 123, 108–9, 110, 112, 204

  1909 marries Alfred Alexander 38; 1917 birth of Hanns and Paul 39; 1934 expresses desire to leave Germany 94; 1936 warns Alfred not to return to Germany 100; decides to leave Germany; puts clinic on market to pay flight tax 101; finds buyer for clinic; closes up lake house 103; travels to London 103–4; 1937 Wilhelm Meisel leases Groß Glienicke land 112–13; 1939 name appears in Ausbürgerungslisten; Groß Glienicke property seized 129–30; 1952 petitions German government for compensation for loss of property 108–9; 1960 attends court hearing on lost property 109

  Alexander, Hermann 35

  Alexander, Paul 33, 39, 47, 53, 54, 56, 93, 99, 100, 104, 129, 168

  1917 birth 39; 1927 enters lake house for first time 47; 1928 11th birthday at lake house 56; 1934 celebrates Lucien Picard’s 79th birthday 93; 1935 called a ‘dirty Jew’ in streets of Berlin 99; 1936 moves to London 100, 104; 1939 name appears in Ausbürgerungslisten 129; 1940 joins British Army 168

  Alexander, Paula 35

  Alexanderstraße, Berlin 62

  algae 228, 342

  Alsace-Lorraine 29, 39

  Alter Weinberg 2

  Am Gutstor, Groß Glienicke 318

  Am Laufenden Band 256

  AmorSäle (Love Salons), Berlin 114

  Ampelmännchen 317

  Amsterdam, Netherlands 103–4, 135

  Anhalter Bahnhof, Berlin 71

  Anti-Fascist Protection Barrier 234, 254, 255

  anti-Semitism 64–9, 77–86, 93–4, 96, 98–104, 108–10, 117, 120, 121, 127–33, 134–5, 146, 148–51, 153, 172–3, 178–83, 204–5, 233, 333, 349, 355–6

  anti-Slavism 68

  Apfelkorn 270–1

  ARD channel 256

  aristocracy 17, 22–3, 27, 28

  Arnold, Erich 144

  Arnold, Henry 162

  aryanisation 111–13, 129, 179–80, 181–3, 188, 302, 345

  Aryans 98

  asthma 37

  atomic bombs 164, 191–2, 220

  Ausbürgerungslisten 129

  Auschwitz concentration camp 110, 179

  Australia 131

  Austria 128, 146, 164, 166, 174, 181

  Austria–Hungary 24

  Austrian Military Cross of Merit 31

  Avro Lancaster bombers 144–5, 187

  Avus motor-racing circuit, Berlin 102

  B

  B1000 Wartburg 227

  ‘Bach School’ 141

  Bad Gastein, Austria 146

  Badenweiler 302

  Badewiese bar, Groß Glienicke 127, 138, 238–9, 276–7, 283, 291, 308

  Ball, Rudi 126

  ballet 113

  ballroom dancing 113

  Baltic Sea 91, 186, 288

  Balz, Bruno 188

  Bamberg 35, 56

  banking 16, 38, 67–8, 71, 79, 92, 100

  Bartel, Sieglinde see Fuhrmann, Sieglinde

  Bartels, Wilhelm 151, 159–60

  Basel, Switzerland 98, 100

  Basic Law (1949) 191

  Basic Treaty (1972) 269

  Bauer, Leopold 196–8

  Bauhaus movement 58

  Bavaria 30, 35, 98

  Bayerstraße, Groß Glienicke 281

  Beatles, The 277, 303

  Bebauungsplan 345

  beehives 88, 266, 271, 286

  van Beethoven, Ludwig 72, 115

  Behrendt, Hans Dieter 297

  Behrenshagen 288

  Behrenstraße, Berlin 143

  Beick, Operation Group Leader 221

  ‘Being Merry and Singing’ 267

  Belgium 55, 315

  Belling, Maria 144

  Belsen Trial (1945) 172

  Bennett, Alan 259

  Berchtesgaden 91

  Bergmann Hospital, Potsdam 275, 320

  Berlin: Achenbachstrasse 40, 61, 101; Adlon Hotel 82; air raids 136, 137, 141, 144–5; Alexanderstraße 62; AmorSäle (Love Salons) 114; Anhalter Bahnhof 71; Avus motor-racing circuit 102; Behrenstraße 143; border patrol regiments 208, 209, 217, 219, 221, 236, 239, 253–4, 257, 265–6, 288, 290, 291, 294–7, 341; Brandenburg Gate 212, 250, 294; British Consulate 100, 103; Bundesallee 38; cabaret clubs 114; Charlottenburg 58, 60, 164, 167; City Palace 16, 163; Colosseum 171; Damschkestraße 60; Deutsche Oper 58

  Deutsches Theater 40, 57; division of 164–5, 174, 183, 184–7, 190, 198–9; see also Berlin Wall; Droysenstraße 60, 61; Eulenspiegel (Owl Mirror) 114; expansion 58; Fasanenstraße 52; Freybrücke 33, 167; Friedenstempel synagogue 81; Friedrich Wilhelm University 16, 36, 70; Friedrichstraße 163; Gatow airfield 90–1, 130, 132, 151, 155, 156, 161–2, 165, 184–7, 185, 190, 249, 259–61, 280, 297, 316–17, 329; Geisterbahnhöfe (ghost stations) 214; Gestapo headquarters 162; Giesebrechtstraße 167; Halensee 60; Heerstraße 33; Jäger Casino 114; Jagowstraße 109; Kaiser Friedrich Museum 16; Kaiserallee 38, 40, 77, 97, 98; Karlsbader Straße 109; Kladow 31, 165, 211, 298, 338; Köthener Straße 203; Kroll Opera House 77; Kurfürstendamm 38, 49, 60, 98, 112, 163, 177; Küstrinerstraße 60, 61; Luisenstraße 133; Martin Luther Hospital 41, 85; Meisel School of Dance 113; Meistersaal 203; Metropol Theater 140, 143–4, 145, 171, 173; migration 198–9, 232–4, 250, 257–8, 288–90, 293–300; Ministry of Aviation 90; Mitte district 143; Moabit 133; Nedlitz fire station 238; Neukölln 58, 113; Olympic Village 101–2, 159, 195, 343; Palais 114; Pankow 17, 23; Paprika 114; Passauer Straße 144; People’s Court 162; Perleberger Straße 109; pollution 52; population 16, 17, 58; Potsdamer Chaussee 20, 33, 62, 66, 102, 107, 236, 252, 264, 277, 291; Potsdamer Platz 58, 203, 212, 250; Potsdamer Tor 1, 18, 20, 33, 34, 53, 62, 62, 66, 102, 138, 152, 165, 167, 185–6, 210, 236, 239, 252, 263, Potsdamer Tor 265, 270, 274, 277, 305, 308, 340; Putlitzstraße station 110; Quitzowstraße 109; radio stations 116, 171, 251, 256, 324; Reich Chamber of Culture 117, 128, 144, 149–50, 177, 180; Reich Chancellery 162; Reichstag 15, 69, 75, 79, 159, 162; Royal Court 114; Sachsenhausen concentration camp 128; Schlüterstraße 177; Spandau 1, 18, 23, 58, 164, 169, 214, 308, 342; Staaken 165, 214, 233, 288, 294, 297; Stadtschloss 163; tax office 126, 129–30, 302; Tegel airport 190; Tempelhof airport 90, 117, 190; trains 213–14, 233, 308; Unter den Linden 82, 84, 114, 163, 212, 250; Wannsee 40, 41, 99, 99, 102, 134; Wilmersdorf 120, 164, 175; Wittelsbacherstraße 170, 175, 176; Wochenende exhibition 42; Yorkstraße 43

  ‘Berlin bleibt doch Berlin’ 188

  Berlin Blockade (1948–1949) 183, 184–7, 190

  Berlin Chamber of Physicians 56, 78

  Berlin Children and Young People’s Sports Academy 273

  Berlin Labour Court 111

  Berlin State Archive 108

  Berlin Transport Company 58

  Berlin Wall 3, 5, 203, 231–7, 235, 242, 246, 249–60, 262, 265–6, 268, 270, 279, 280, 284, 287–90, 288, 293–300, 298, 299, 301, 306–10, 312, 343–4, 349

  1961 construction begins 231–4; 1962 US and Soviets swap intelligence agents at border crossing 258; 1964 UK and Soviets swap intelligence agents at border crossing 258–9; 1980 murder of Ulrich Steinhauer 288–9; 1988 men drive truck through barrier at Glienicke Bridge border crossing 289; 1989 Bernd Kühne crosses from east to west for a night 290; Günter Schabowski announces easing of DDR travel restrictions 293–4; mass border crossing; demolition begins 294–7; new border crossing opens at Groß Glienicke 297–300, 298; demolition of Berlin Wall section at Groß Glienicke 306–7

  Berliner Abend 195

  Berliner Morgenpost 228

  Berliner Presse 117

  Berliner Rundfunk 171

  Berliner Straße, Potsdam 275

  Berliner Tageblatt 23

 
; Berliner Zeitung 194

  Bible 210

  Binder, Sybille 56

  bison 343

  black alder trees 12, 34, 234

  Black Forest 98

  Blaue Engel, Der 115

  Böhse Onkelz 324

  Bolshevism 157

  Bomber Command 136

  Boney M 303

  book burning 80

  border patrol regiments 208, 209, 217–21, 236, 239, 253–4, 257, 265–6, 288, 290–1, 294–7, 341

  border security zone 236, 252, 255, 265, 270, 272, 276, 277, 279, 284

  Bosnia 24

  Bowie, David 203, 303

  Brahms, Johannes 115

  Brandenburg xix, 12, 23, 102, 187, 195, 273, 330, 353

  Brandenburg Criminal Police 196

  Brandenburg Gate, Berlin 212, 250, 294

  Brandt, Willy 250, 251, 269

  Brazil 303

  Brecht, Bertholt 58

  brickworks 18

  bridge (game) 95

  ‘Bridge of Spies’ 258–9

  Brighton Rock 116

  Bristol Blenheim bombers 137

  Bristol Hercules 186

  Britain see United Kingdom

  British Army 168, 260; Dragoon Guards, 1st 17

  British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) 136, 154, 181

  British Cultural Relations Branch 188

  British Information Services Control 177

  British Licensing Control Section 188

  Brownshirts see Sturmabteilung (SA)

  Budapest, Hungary 135, 259

  Bullenwinkel 192

  Bundesallee, Berlin 38

  Bundesrepublik Deutschland (BRD) see West Germany

  Bunge, Egon 288–9

 

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