I became interested in one house in particular,
a once elegant, now dilapidated nineteenth-century villa in Potsdam
that was the object of a claim by the twelve grandchildren of the house's former owner,
Paul Wallich, the son of a prominent Jewish banker.
As far as Paul Wallich's descendants were concerned,
in the fifty years that the house was inaccessible to them,
first during the Nazi period, then in Communist East Germany,
it had stood in a state of abeyance.
Although Wallich family pictures showed its grandeur frozen in time,
the house had in fact taken a new identity.
The Communists had turned it into a Kinderwochenheim,
or weekly Kindergarten, a uniquely socialist child-care arrangement
that crosses a boarding school or orphanage with a day-care center.
By the time I arrived, the Kindergarten had occupied the house for more than four decades.
p. 13 The House at the Bridge |
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