With this tour we will go back in time, visiting places you never imagined, to understand how what we know as Nazism emerged and the details of Hitler's rise to power. How did he do it? What was your speech? What were your main obsessions?
We will learn about the ability of Nazi propaganda in national and ideological construction. We will be able to see the German Parliament, the former Reichstag, where we will narrate what happened in its arson. We will talk about some of the main people responsible for Nazism, the power structures and urban plans, what the first purges were like, as well as the concentration and extermination camps that were developed. We will end the tour with the fall of the Führer and the place where his life ended.
We will analyze stories about the Nazi apparatus: the Gestapo and the SS. We will explore what Berlin suffered and experienced throughout these 12 years.
The ruined building was protected from the elements and partially renovated in the 1960s, but no attempt at full restoration was made until after German reunification on 3 October 1990, when it underwent a reconstruction led by architect Norman Foster. After its completion in 1999, it once again became the meeting place of the German parliament: the modern Bundestag.
The Monument to the Sinti and Roma Victims of Nazism is a monument in Berlin, Germany. It is dedicated to the memory of the 220,000 - 500,000 people murdered in Porraimos, within the framework of the Nazi genocide of the European Sinti and Roma peoples.
It is one of several war memorials in Berlin, capital of Germany, erected by the Soviet Union to commemorate its war dead, particularly the 80,000 soldiers of the Soviet Armed Forces who died during the Battle of Berlin in April and May of 1945.
You will make your own way to the meeting points