Authors: Roger Moorhouse
A Berlin street scene: Unter den Linden in the
summer of 1940 – normality reigns.
Girls of the BdM spread flowers across
the road to welcome Hitler back to the
capital after the fall of France.
Crowds gather to watch a parade
of victorious troops in July 1940:
‘They yelled and yelled until
they were hoarse.’
The dream:
Speer’s plans for the
Great Hall, which
would have dwarfed
the Brandenburg
Gate (
left
) and the
Reichstag (
centre
).
The reality:
the lawns of the elegant
Gendarmenmarkt in
the heart of Berlin
being ploughed up
for cultivation, 1942.
‘Radio must reach all or it will reach none’: passers-by pause on a Berlin street to listen to the latest announcements broadcast via loudspeaker.
Flag-waving children leave Anhalter Station in the autumn of 1940 en route to the KLV camps.
Not all of their fellows were so enthusiastic.
Berlin Jews wearing the
Judenstern
: at a stroke, their public
humiliation was complete.
The Levetzowstrasse synagogue: used as a transit
camp from October 1941, it was the last stop
for many Berlin Jews en route to their deaths.
Working for the enemy:
French forced labourers
at Siemens in 1943.
A fourteen-year-old Ukrainian
forced labourer in a Berlin factory
in 1945. He would have endured
far harsher conditions than his
Western European counterparts.
A public shelter
in the capital in
1942: ‘Nobody
said a word,
but we could
feel the fear.’
The calm before the
storm: a Berlin cellar
in September 1940,
complete with
reinforcing beams,
placards and
wooden benches.
brutality made stone
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quarry that had supplied much of the stone used to pave the streets
of Vienna, while that at Sachsenhausen, outside Berlin, was host to
the largest brickworks in the world. The camp-quarry at Flossenbürg
in northern Bavaria, meanwhile, was the source of much of the white-
flecked granite that was foreseen for use in Berlin, especially in the
construction of the Soldiers’ Hall.44 Even as the rebuilding of Berlin
was superseded by the demands of the war and in effect suspended
from around 1942, the production of granite and bricks continued
unabated. Thus, the Germania project was not only central to the
Nazi aesthetic; it also played a vital role in the establishment and
maintenance of the concentration camp network. Nazi architectural
planning, it seems, had meshed perfectly with the interests of the SS.
The rebuilding of Berlin also left its mark on the city’s civilian popu-
lation. Most Berliners who were affected were treated decently. Marianne
Meier’s family, for instance, was evicted from their home on
Schellingstrasse, just to the south-west of Potsdamer Platz, on 1 September
1939 – the day war broke out. They were informed that all removal
arrangements and costs were to be covered by the state, and were offered