This isn’t merely a tour—it’s an immersive journey through Berlin’s WWII past, narrated from the perspective of those who defied oppression. You'll be guided to the city's hidden corners where courage silently resided, and history continues to resonate.
The adventure begins in the heart of old Jewish Berlin, where even a modest plaque or silent cobblestone carries a potent tale. At each stop, you’ll discover real lives—individuals who hid, who fought, who took a stand when the world turned a blind eye. You'll also explore: The site of the Women’s Protest, where German wives successfully demanded their Jewish husbands’ release. The Workshop for the Blind, where Otto Weidt risked all to safeguard his deaf and blind Jewish employees. Nicholas Winton’s Kindertransport legacy—rescuing hundreds of Jewish children from deportation. And Bebelplatz, where thousands of books were incinerated in 1933, marking the onset of a cultural purge.
Throughout, photographs, maps, and narratives will be provided to help you envisage what Berlin looked like under the Third Reich—and how resistance coexisted with oppression. This experience is potent, personal, and far from anything you’d find in a guidebook. It’s an opportunity to engage with history in a way that’s intimate, emotional, and indelible.