13 August 2011 – 50 years ago, the Berlin Wall arose to divide

1934 Reverend Michael King visits Berlin for teh 5th Baptist World Conference. He later changes his name to Martin Luther King sr. and that of his son to Martin Luther King jr.
1964 Marting Luther King jr. travels to West Berlin to speak at a ceremony commemorating the assassinated US president John F. Kennedy who had visited West Germany in 1963.

 

Martin Luther King, Jr. (left) and Ralph Abernathy (right) at the Berlin Wall on September 13, 1964. King had been invited to the German capital by Berlin mayor Willy Brandt. King also visited East Berlin during this trip. (Details below.)
PHOTO: Landesarchiv Berlin

 

 


 

13 August 2011:

A very sad and solemn day for me. Fifty years ago, one year before my birth and 16 years after WWII, on 13 August 1961 the Berlin Wall became the physical separator between West and East Germans. Many people never saw their friends and family again before the fall of the wall in 1989. Growing up in West Germany in the 60s and 70s the division of the two Germanys was a constant reminder of the futility of war and the terrible suffering and devastation that had been caused by the German nation.
The wall fell over 20 years ago, without violence and war, but the division of East and West Germany can still be felt now. Today, I cannot but feel despair about the incongruity of human actions which lead to so much useless suffering and so many deaths, all completely non sensical and useless.

Plane pictures

The first two weeks of July were school holidays. IĀ also took off the first week but I had a head-cold so we decided to mostly hang around at home. The weather was clear but cool and very windy. We are fairly close to Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport, about 7kms as the crow flies, so we sometimes have planes taking off over us. They aren’t unpleasantly loud and the take-off paths are spread over all the compass directions so we don’t mind at all. But during that week at home I noticed that many planes were taking off directly above us. It seemed that the wind was blowing very strongly from the south west so most planes were taking off straight into it and over us. The rear of our house faces north east, directly towards the airport so I decided to spend time on our timber deck and photograph some planes.

A few years ago we bought a camera to take photos of the boys playing cricket, a Konica Minolta DiMAGE Z3. It is not a great camera for all situations, in low light it is pretty poor, but it has a 12x optical zoom and in good light is a decent sport camera. I soon realised I could photograph the underside of each plane then google its registation number to find out all about it. The web is full of sites devoted to plane-spotting, plane photography, aeronautics, national airlines and so on.

I’ve selected some pics and put them in our album.