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17.08.2008 - Rescuing Berlin's Most Famous World War II Ruin

When the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church was destroyed by a British
bombing raid in World War II, all that remained was its gaping,
ruined tower.

The news are represented by www.info-turkey.ru

Still, Berliners protested plans to demolish the
blackened, badly shattered belfry, which rises almost 70 meters
(230 feet) over the western part of the city.
  


The spire of the church, which was built in 1895 by Kaiser Wilhelm
II to honor his grandfather, Kaiser Wilhelm I, is now nicknamed
"Hollow Tooth" by locals and was preserved for posterity. It has
remained a famous and poignant reminder of the horrors of war, as
well as being a symbol of West Berlin's determination and
extraordinary post-war recovery, during the time when it was
surrounded by communist East Germany.


  

Soaring costs
 


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The area around the church is still Berlin's major shopping
district

But now the gaunt and jagged church tower, which every year
attracts thousands of tourists, is making news of another kind.
Located at the downtown end of the Kurfuerstendamm shopping
boulevard, the tower is in a dire state of decay. Traffic vibration
along the famous strip, say city officials, has caused its walls to
crumble, with chunks threatening to fall off onto pedestrians
below.


 


Earlier the church authorities put the cost of repairing its
neo-Gothic facade at 3.5 million euros ($5.1 million), but now due
to continuing disintegration the cost has soared to 4.1 million
euros.


 


The Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church Foundation has in recent years
raised 500,000 euros in a "rescue the tower" campaign. The Berlin
city government a year ago pledged 1.5 million euros to


the repair fund, with the city's development senator, Ingeborg
Junge-Reyer, stressing the "great symbolic significance of the old
church tower for the city."


 

Soccer support
 


Hertha BSC, the top Berlin football club, has also got involved.
The club and the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church have something in
common: the church was built from 1891 to 1895, and the soccer club
was founded in 1892.


 


Hertha manager Dieter Hoeness has confidently predicted the club
will be able to raise a five-figure sum for the fund, but Hertha's
own finances are shaky at present, with the club deeply in the red.


 

A pilot's plea
 


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Even Google Earth has a 3-D model of the church

Charles Jeffrey Gray, 85, a former British pilot who carried out
bombing raids over Germany, was one of the first to call last year
for the rescue of Berlin's most famous wartime ruin, contributing
500 British pounds (634 euros, $930) to help spur the campaign.


  


"The tower must remain as a reminder for future generations of the
horror of war," Gray said. He fired off a letter to Wolfgang Kuhla,
chairman of the memorial church management board, urging that
everything possible be done to save the tower.


  


Gray's last bombing raid over Berlin was in February 1944. Around
that time 500 to 700 planes were involved in raids over Germany, a
reprisal for earlier nightly operations over London by German
bombers.


   


Last November the ex-pilot and his wife Joan, 87, accompanied by
their son Stephen and his 56-year-old German-born wife Gerlinde,
flew to Berlin to participate in a fund-raising concert attended by
Chancellor Angela Merkel.


  


It was held at the stained-glass modern chapel built in 1961
flanking the ruined tower on the Breitscheid Platz, and was, said
Gray, a "very moving occasion."


  

Symbol of defiance
 


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The Brandenburg Gate is Berlin's most famous landmark

During the 1960s, the unusual octagonal concrete and glass
construction became a symbol of defiance against communist
oppression.


  


Marko Rosteck, the Berlin urban development office spokesman,
concedes "the tower is badly damaged," and says the authorities are
very much interested in seeing that "one of Berlin's most important
symbols is preserved."


  


The church authorities, buffeted by financial setbacks in the past
decade due to a major slump in church tax income, have been alarmed
recently by a surveyor's report on the fragile state of the
building, which also houses a small museum.


  


Kuhla, who has appealed to German Culture Minister Bernd Neumann
for financial assistance, talks of the ruin being the most
"significant memorial for reconciliation in Berlin and possibly in


Germany."


 


"When we check our finances early next spring we hope enough money
will be there, so that a start can at last be made on the repairs,"
he said.



(Deutsche Welle)


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