Our first stop on the trip around lackluster sites in former
East Germany was Wittenberge. It’s not to be confused with Wittenberg, home of
Martin Luther. Wittenberge, located just barely east of the former East/West
German border, may have instead been the home of Marvin Lüther, canola oil magnate.
Wittenberge is most
remarkable for its lack of people. Located on the Elbe
River, it survived on shipping, the oil mill and the Singer sewing machine
factory. But since reunification, these industries are gone and so are the people . In 1990, there were 30,000 residents in Wittenberge. Now there are just 18,000 people and the
number continues to drop.
“If anyone asked why we came here,” Brian advised me, “just
say it’s because we wanted to see the real
Germany.”
That meant I shouldn’t say, “we were searching for dying
cities and yours showed up on a top
ten list,” which is actually the truth.
Entrance to the Oberstufenzentrum, with some socialist workers on the gate |
The old Singer factory |
What are East Germans like? There’s a stereotype that they
are backward, less cultured than other Germans, a little bit redneck. All I can tell you from the
first night in Wittenberge is that they wear a lot of sandals with socks. If
you thought Minnesotans were frequent offenders on the sandals with socks
front, you are wrong. Wittenbergers take the cake. And they prefer black socks with outdoorsy velcro sandals.
I think it's because Marvin Lüther wore them too.
Along the Elbe |
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