Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Chanukah in Berlin

One of the things about being an unemployed artist is that you frequently have to be on the move – and here I am not speaking of the particular challenges of practicing your craft, but rather the more mundane task of finding a new apartment when the lease runs out. For the last few months, I dwelt in a place high above the fray, with central heating and comfortable couches where I could cocoon. It was too good to last, and in its place I have found a suite of very large rooms with a very small coal oven which is supposed to provide enough heat to keep me warm. For a few days I was sort of shocked…you mean, I actually had to do something to make heat? I had to light a fire? Preposterous!


But then I realized that my room had 14 foot ceilings and a piano, and that perhaps it is not so good to be comfortable all the time. Besides, my new roommate – Adam - an Orthodox Jew from New York – is great fun. We both like Amadeus and are sort of obsessive about good coffee. I will never forget the sight of him in his yarmulke showing me how to load the furnace…. “Do you think we’ll get more heat if we use corpses?” I asked. Fortunately he got the joke.


Besides, I knew Adam was a kindred spirit because he invited 4 people for dinner and bought enough food for 20. He asked me if 4 bags of ziti were enough and I told him it would be plenty, but he bought more just in case, because you don’t want people to go hungry…..They say that the memory of famine lasts generations. My grandmother survived the war and thought that if the only thing she fed my father was chocolate pudding, he would surely become strong. He got rickets. My mother was ill in the hospital and I thought if I just made her scrambled eggs with extra butter and cream it would make her better. I did not know she couldn't eat it, and yet she could not tell me. I wonder if there will be a day when we can just eat. Not while there is hunger - nor for the generations that come after, say I. There will have to be a hundred years of plenty before food becomes just food.


Tonight we are having a Chanukah party at our apartment. Adam just came in with 50 pounds of potatoes that he carried with him on his bike from the Turkish market down the road. “Do you think this will make enough latkes for 20?” I said it would, but he is still not so sure.


Bless him for that.


We do not have a menorah so Adam and I went down to the recycling bin to look for empty wine bottles that we could use as candle holders. The candles were too big, so Adam took out his pen knife and started whittling them down so they would fit. It wasn’t exactly kosher, but surely God gives special dispensations for people trying to celebrate Jewish holidays in Berlin. I think there is even a blessing asking God to just let it go because you are trying your very best, under the circumstances. If there isn’t, there should be.


Of course, this was not the first time I found myself without a menorah – when I was young we lived in an Aboriginal community in northern Manitoba, which most people would say is the middle of nowhere but which most certainly is not. We did not have a menorah but we did have a 2x4 and some red candles left over from a dinner party, and in the middle of the wilderness we kindled festive lights that shone in the darkness. And so it does not matter whether or not you have silver candlesticks, nor does it matter where you are. Any place where you light candles becomes for a moment the centre of the world, and a holy place from which the planets will for a brief moment, take their orbit - if they have any sense in them.


I am off to buy some more potatoes…

Blessed is the match consumed in kindling flame.

Blessed is the flame that burns in the secret fastness of the heart.

Blessed is the heart with strength to stop its beating for honour’s sake.

Blessed is the match consumed in kindling fame.

-Hannah Szenes (1921-1944)

Sunday, December 13, 2009

State Visit

When I was young, I remember watching a documentary about the Queen preparing for the state visit of Lech Walesa. I was fascinated by the months of preparation, the attention to detail…the costumes. I never thought that I would be preparing for a state visit myself, but I got word a couple of months ago that my father has decided to come and see me in Berlin, and while the visit of one’s parents cannot really be compared to an official diplomatic exchange between countries (or can it?), you should know that my father is a dialysis patient. What's more, the last time he was in this part of the world he was a 10 year old refugee from Communist Poland who wore steel toed-boots so he could injure the children who called him names. Needless to say I have been trying to find ways to make this visit easier, not only for my father’s comfort, but for the safety of the local populace. I have reserved a car – a Passat. I have secured an apartment on a ground floor with fluffy towels and a muted color palette….I have stocked up on tranquilizers. But it is hard to know what to prepare for and what to leave in the hands of fate. I worry that things will not be to my father’s liking – that he will not have a good time. After all, Berlin is going to be a tough sell, and so anything I can to leaven the lump I will gladly do. Of course, if this really were a state visit, I would have teams of officials at my disposal and the full resources of a nation state to procure the best of the best of everything. As it stands I have a dictionary, lots of free time and willpower. But I have learned that armed with these three things, you can pretty much get anything.


…except a temporary handicapped parking permit in Germany.


I don’t even know how the subject came up. I think I found a special website designed for travelers with disabilities that said that you could simply go to the ministry of transportation (Bundesministerium für Verkehr, Bau und Stadtentwicklung Referat Bürgerservice, Besucherdienst) and make a request. It seemed easy enough to me, and I knew that being able to park in handicapped spots would make things a lot easier, so I got dad to send me his medical information, and off I went.


The ministry of transportation is not open to the public. This is well known. You can, however, leave a written message – on very nice stationary, I might add. I did the best I could with my dictionary and my determination, and came up with something like this: “Dad visits Berlin from Canada. No movement ….. possible parking spaces for broken people? I remain your most faithful servant…” Well, I got the point across, and I knew how to close a letter properly because the first thing I do when learning a new language is to study the correct forms of salutation and address, for I have found that you can say almost anything if you do it politely.


I had expected to get a response in a couple of days, but when I received an email within 24 hours I took it to be a positive sign:


Most distinguished sir. Thank you so much for your petition which you kindly deposited at our ministry yesterday. In reference to your question regarding parking spaces for disabled persons who are temporary visitors to Germany, but who are not members of the European Union I can offer the following answer. It would be unconstitutional to refuse such a permit to anyone, as this would be in contradiction of the German Basic Law of 1949 which prohibits discrimination to anyone on the basis of physical ability. That being said, we do not handle such requests at our ministry, nor am I at liberty to divulge contact information for the appropriate government department, as this is not part of my job description. I would recommend that you go to the city hall in your district for further instruction. With friendly greetings...


Okay – fair enough…. Off to city hall.


Yes – welcome to citizen’s services. Do you wish to make a complaint? Ah – handicapped parking. Well, actually we do not take care of that here, for this you must go to the Strassenverkehrbehörde. But the Ministry of Transport told you to come here? Why would they do that? Everyone knows that the In Deutschland entscheiden über Gewährung von Parkerleichterungen für behinderte Menschen (Ausnahmegenehmigung), die Bürger von Nicht-EU-Staaten sind, die Straßenverkehrsbehörden der deutschen Bundesländer.


Of course they do, how silly of me. In my confusion, I called Arvedt, who finds great solace in the efficiency and logic of German bureaucracy, himself being a German bureaucrat. I mean, if he didn’t believe in the system then who would? And what would that mean for the future of Germany? Can you feel the angst? (Last summer Arvedt was very tense because a train was 3 minutes late – this was the 4th time in the last 2 weeks that he had experienced such ineptitude and he was genuinely concerned that this marked an unacceptable decline in the level of services of the Deutsche Bahn, and that he would most certainly be writing a letter… I told him that I thought that the trains in Germany could stand to be a little less punctual if only to differentiate them from the trains of the past. He failed to comprehend my meaning and asked me to explain myself. I didn’t want to get into it, and this made him even more upset because not only was I failing to make myself clear, I was avoiding a subject – and in Germany these two things are cardinal sins, unless you are talking about the war of course, which I was doing, if only euphemistically, so maybe I was off the hook? Fortunately the train arrived right at that moment so all was forgotten and Arvedt began to look up and down the length the compartment for an official complaint form so he could make his displeasure known. I went to the restaurant car and got a beer.)


Arvedt listened to my tale like a priest hearing confession. He was patient and kind and made some suggestions, but he never for a moment doubted the absolute rightness of the system…..


You know Ben, I am really quite proud of you for going about this in the proper way. I think that you will learn a lot about Germany. I would recommend that you call the Strassenverkehrbehörde between 11 o’clock and not later than quarter after one, and you should have a certified translation of your fathers Besicherungsausweis – this means official certificate of disabled status. And you should make sure that it is stamped, because in Germany everything must have a stamp.


Like the scarlet letter? Like a yellow star? What’s the deal with the stamp? Well, here goes…..


Strassenverkehrbehörde – Schröder speaking. You want a temporary handicapped parking permit for a tourist? This is of course possible but you would need a certificate of handicapped status from your home country that would have to be translated into German…yes….of course it has to be stamped. The stamp is extremely important. Why would we accept anything without a stamp? Now, does your father have a dog assistant…I mean to say, some sort of house animal that helps him with regards to the seeing? Because if he did, then you would need a special permit for this too and it would have to be stamped. The permit would have to be stamped, not the dog. Why would you stamp a dog?


Good question


I knew full well that my father did not have a handicapped sticker, nor did he possess any sort of official proof that he is disabled. I knew for a fact that my father would rather be dead than yield one inch of freedom to his illness, and it is this tenacity which has kept him with us. But the truth is, he can’t really walk. I wondered if I could send a video of my father buying groceries that could be used in lieu of said certificate. If they could see him in his military parka trying to push a shopping cart through the snow at the Superstore in Winnipeg, they would most certainly issue some kind of documentation, or maybe a purple heart. But what is the correct procedure for stamping a video? I am sure there is some sort of government office for that, too…..


  • Videoabnahmestempelbehörde? (Video stamp office)

  • Filmbezeichnungechtheitsprüfungamt für Schwerbehindertenausweis Ausgabe? (Film-stamp authentication bureau for the purposes of the designation of a handicapped certificate issuance)

  • Sekreteriat – Anwendungsentwicklung des Bilddokumentation Bestimmung Befristetbehindeterzustandparkerleichterungen Deutschlands? (Secretariat for the application management of visual documentation for the determination of temporary disabled status parking spaces in Germany)


I think I will go call Arvedt. I am not giving up on this one.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Nothing Personal

Some countries like France or Italy entice the potential traveler with images of sensual lusciousness – ripe fruit, brimming wine glasses… pretty girls. Some countries like England or Greece inspire with vistas evoking the majestic past…Acropolii and Thermopylae…Stonehenge. For Germany, things are not quite that easy: German food has a middling reputation, and German history, while peppered with interesting events (have you read about the Frankfurt parliament of 1848?) is - well, German history. It is therefore not surprising that the powers have taken a different course of action and have decided to market their fair land as - “Germany: Land of Ideas”.


Pretty sexy, isn’t it. Of course, that is not the point – “Germany: Land of Ideas” is portentous, solid and impressive, and these things are very important to the Germans. One would not want a slogan that minimized the importance of the German geist, or spirit. One would not want the world to think that the Germans were not earnestly struggling with their identity or thinking about the nature of their country, themselves, and their relationship to the world. But in the end, I would much rather go for the glass of wine – even a pretty girl. Wouldn’t you?


Germans have always loved ideas. Ideas are perfect. They do not disappoint, like people tend to do. To be fair, the Germans have had some wonderful ideas –like inventing the printing press, or coating marzipan in chocolate. They have also had some not so wonderful ideas: lederhosen, for example…or using pesticides to massacre children. It is unfortunately the latter which most people recall when they think about Germany. I do not blame them.


But there is something heroic in the German quest for the ideal, something noble that is all too often lost in our world full of intellectual and moral compromises sent from an iphone. And while this adherence and search for the “ideal” is wonderful when it comes to the representation of romantic art, it is a bit of a pain when it comes to buying stamps or paying a parking fine. Living here, I sometimes wish the Germans would just “let one go” and bend a rule, just once in a little while – just to let me know that within them the human heart still beats…maybe just this once my certificate of good conduct wouldn’t be required in order to rent a movie about the Baader-Meinhof gang. Maybe this time I will not be scolded for exiting from the front door of bus. Oh, who am I kidding… it is never going to happen and the sooner I realize that, the happier I will be.


I first came to this realization last summer when I had a day off of rehearsal and decided to treat myself to Kaffee und Kuchen at KaDeWe. In the formerly divided Berlin of yore, KaDeWe, short for Kaufhaus des Westens (Department store of the West) was the preeminent symbol of all that was right, or wrong with capitalism - depending on your point of view, for at KaDeWe you really can buy anything – for a price: fresh crocodile meat? -Done. How about a bag of loose diamonds to go with it? - But of course. And why not a 10 dollar can of imported Campbell’s Soup to stave off the home sickness that strikes us all? Would you like it gift wrapped? A friend of mine who had grown up in East Berlin told me that he had learned all about KaDeWe in school – that store over there where you could buy whatever your heart desired, but only if you had the money. But not everyone had the money – far from it, so wasn’t it better to live in a society where everyone did have money but there was nothing to buy?


As always, my desire for chocolate trumped any questions of a political nature, so I went to the Lenôtre pasty counter on the 6th floor – that place where you can believe that life is just that much better when things are dipped in sugar and put on display. It had been a pretty long week so I decided to treat myself and order a latté in addition to my usual gateau Marly (kirsch-soaked genoise filled with champagne butter cream, coated with pink marzipan and topped with fresh strawberries tantalizingly glazed with red currant jelly - served with vanilla flavored whipped cream on a china plate with a silver cake fork by a woman named Ulrike who had perfectly manicured nails and a charming demeanor until your friend asks in a loud voice for a glass of tap water….)

I need not tell you that the experience was sublime. I was in Berlin, after all, and I was an opera singer. What’s more, I was being paid for the privilege. I had left my comfortable bourgeois life behind me and was really living the dream, as it were. It goes without saying that the cake was exquisite – a symphony of tastes that seemed to validate the choices I had made in life. I sat there for a moment, trying to capture what the moment meant to me – that synthesis of fulfillment and pleasure; yet another sign that I was doing the right thing. With sugar-enhanced bravado, I asked for the receipt in German – a master of fluent nonchalance. I reached for my wallet. It was not there.


I can tell you from experience that losing one’s wallet is an anxiety inducing experience. By extension, losing one’s wallet in a foreign country where one only has a basic grasp of the language could be considered to be the catalyst for a full on panic attack. But I did not panic. I was in Berlin, and I was an opera singer, and if these two things had taught me anything, it was the ability to exhibit grace under pressure. Besides, I was not about to let Ulrike see me sweat. Luckily, at that precise moment I managed to find 5 euro and 90 cents in my coat pocket. Since the bill came to 7 euro (it would have only been 5.50 had I not ordered that verdammte latté), I was only out about a euro, and who would care about that?


With a mixture of sweet relief and the last vestiges of my enhanced self confidence, I calmly informed Ulrike of the situation: Oh silly-but-well-meaning-foreigner-me, forgetting my wallet at home but doing the proper thing by informing the authorities…oh, couldn’t you just please just let this one go, Ulrike? You see, I have almost enough, and I owe only a little more than a euro, and you know I will come back – I really will. How could one go for more than a week without a slice of Gateau Marly? I mean, it is like communion for me! Ulrike? Why are you making the tap water face? Why are you telling me to wait right here while you dial a number into the slim line telephone with your beautifully manicured nails?


In retrospect, I wonder why I didn’t just ask a fellow customer for a euro or two and be on my way. I did think of this, but I was more embarrassed by not being able to formulate the correct German word order needed to do so than I was by being - for all intents and purposes - a shoplifter (but is it shoplifting if you eat what you steal?). I could have also just taken my chances and left as fast as I could, but at the time I thought - “what’s the worst that could happen?”


And so I did just as I was told and sat there while a pride of impatient Charlottenburg matrons cooled their very high heels. I tried to explain to them that I could not actually leave the counter because I was being detained. This was perfectly understood, and they agreed among themselves that being held against one’s will was quite a logical state of affairs. What they could not understand was why I had elected to address them using the informal you and they pointedly told me so, as did Ulrike – brandishing a silver cake fork.


“You are the man who lost his wallet, ja?” I bolted upright and spun around to find a very trim man in a very trim suit – my accuser. He was flanked by two larger men in baggy tracksuits. I guess this was security. I nodded, not really able to speak, not wanting to be corrected again.


“You see,” he began, “I must detain you until the exact amount of the bill has been paid. The fact that you only owe 1 Euro and 20 cents is not the point. If I were to let you go now, then this would set an impossible precedent and eventually people would be able to just steal whatever they liked, and then what would the state of the German economy be?”


To say that I did not care would be a gross understatement. I asked him what I could do – perhaps I could phone my friend and he could provide the store with a credit card number. Perhaps they could just trust me to return later in the day with the outstanding money. Or, perhaps they could stop acting all crazy-ass and spend their time trying to catch the people stealing the designer underwear on the 4th floor instead of interrogating me over a partially paid for piece of cake. Nope.


“You said you have a friend?” He was intrigued. “Well then you must call your friend and inform him that he must come to the store with either your wallet, or with the exact amount owing. At that point, I can let you go, but not before. You must understand, sir, that this is nothing against you personally – I am sure you are a very competent member of society who pays his taxes and directs his complaints about public order to the appropriate ministries, but perhaps as a visitor to our country you need to better understand that in Germany, we have rules.”


No shit


Saying that Germany has rules is like telling someone that Canada has snow while they are waiting for the bus in Winnipeg in January – that is to say that it is so painfully obvious that you begin question the sanity of the speaker. If I had been at a bus stop, I certainly would have written this man off as crazy. I certainly would have ignored him, but sadly I was not at a bus stop, nor was I in Winnipeg for that matter.


I was in Berlin, and this was not personal, only ridiculous. Ulrike handed me the slimline telephone and I called my friend.


…Nothing personal

Sunday, December 06, 2009

In the know

Last night I went to a concert in an abandoned ball house...very divine decadence – crumbling plaster and faded gold leaf - sputtering candles expiring with a fizz onto chipped gilt mirrors. In a word, fabulous. I went with a friend to see a very earnest Finnish pianist play Brahms. It was lovely. My friend told me that he would be accompanied by a man who owned a very exclusive boutique, so I of course dressed for the occasion, which meant my very best cravat and the Kelly green loafers I only bring out for the most special of occasions. I thought I looked pretty good, truth be told.


When I arrived, my friend greeted me warmly and introduced me to a painfully thin couple who were dressed entirely in what seemed to be black rags. I thought they looked like hobos dipped in India ink, but my friend assured me that their clothes were very expensive. The woman extended a limp wrist and smiled, except that it looked like she was wincing in pain. The man looked me up and down and gave me a withering glance, the kind a society matron gives when confronted with a wet dog. They did not comment on the shoes…..everybody comments on the shoes! I think it is because the shoes were not black. My friend told me that this man and his girlfriend had not been seen in anything other than black for almost 20 years. Perhaps they are mourning their sense of humour.


After the concert (which was appropriately dark, being late Brahms and all), we went to a little café for a bite to eat. Over lentil soup I learned all about the man in black – his business philosophy (be aggressive), his “concept” (be aggressive but try to hide it), his tips on how to succeed in life (there are winners and losers- you choose). I think I was supposed to be impressed, and I was: I was especially impressed that a man who sold clothes for a living thought so much of himself…It showed lot of chutzpah, I thought. I mean, if he were a master tailor who knew how to sew an exquisite button hole - that would be something. If he made shoes and knew how to cloak a customer’s foot in buttery calfskin, I would show my reverence. But the shmatta business? Are you serious? Am I to be pontificated to by someone in trade?


I must admit, however, that this man’s confidence piqued my interest, so I decided to check out the website for his store the moment I got home. I was immediately confronted by a solitary image of barbed wire. Did this mean he was selling striped pajamas? Was there even still a market for that in Berlin? Actually, the barbed wire was meant to suggest a barrier which signaled the exclusivity of the venture – a velvet rope for the most masochistic of fashion victims. Of course..... Question: Why is it so cool to be forbidding? Who invented that? Moving on…..

I learned that the store is so exclusive it doesn’t have a sign to let you know it is there. You are just supposed to know. Oh, and the location of the store changes every few months and this is not advertised. You are supposed to know this, too. You are also supposed to know that the store is not really a store but actually an “avant garde guerilla sartorial experiment” which is open for 4 hours a day, by appointment only. What’s next, land mines?


It goes without saying that everything on display was black. Most of the items were artfully torn, ripped or discolored. I believe the term that they used was “distressed”. There was one piece - a scarf, I believe (it was hard to tell) - from a very exclusive underground designer that consisted of frayed clumps of wool in various shades of “muted charcoal, midnight and pitch”….it looked like my grade 8 sewing project and cost 400 Euros… 400 Euros? For a scarf that doesn’t even keep you warm? What are they, mishuggah? I can only imagine bringing something like that home, only to discover that my father had mended it by morning with a piece of denim scrounged from his workbench in the garage. “Why can’t you buy yourself a decent scarf?” He would say. “Let’s go to Canadian Tire – they have scarves on sale for 4.99. Nice ones…warm! So what if they have reindeer on them? Are you going to fucking care what the fucking scarf looks like when its 50 below?”


Good point.


It gets better. I scrolled down to find a one-of-a-kind fiberglass coat by a Japanese designer for 5000 Euros. I immediately called my friend…“could it be true?”, I asked. Indeed it was – my friend told me that he had actually seen the coat in the store before it was snapped up last month, and that he noticed that the label said “not to be worn – fiberglass cuts skin”. An $8000 coat that you can’t even wear. Who would sell such a thing? Maybe it comes with a special undergarment? Maybe there is a danger element I don’t know about? Maybe we’re all going to hell in a hand basket?


Am I just supposed to know?


I told my friend that with 5000 euros you could pay the rent in Berlin for an entire year. He laughed, and we agreed to meet tomorrow for coffee – not lunch, mind you. My friend always brings a sandwich with him wherever he goes. He is trying to save money while he finds a job here in Berlin. In the meantime he studies German 5 hours a day and goes swimming in the evenings because it is less expensive. He wears bright red pants that he bought at H&M.


They look great.