SHARE
COPY LINK
EXBERLINER MAGAZINE

EXBERLINER

Exberliner Magazine picks the best of bilingual Berlin

This October, Exberliner, the German capital's leading English-language magazine, picks the best places to buy tickets online in English, take yoga if you're voluptuous, and send your kids to bilingual kindergarten.

Exberliner Magazine picks the best of bilingual Berlin
Yoga feet in front of Berlin's Siegesaeule. Om! Photo: DPA

Ticket machine

‘One day I’ll learn German …’ Till then, navigating German web shops is frustrating, to say the least, if you’re not up to speed in the natives’ tongue. Booking your tickets, for example, for the next Klezmatics (Nov 9) Jamie Lidell (Nov 25), or MIA (Feb 21, 2009) show can be a real hassle (what exactly does Lieferanschrift mean again?). That’s why EXBERLINER and Berlin ticketing experts Hekticket have joined forces to bring you the city’s first full-service English online ticket shop. Search all dates months in advance and have your tickets delivered to you door.

Yoga for BBW

Yoga is not just for the YFT (young, fit and thin). And Gabi proves it, with her 90-minute weekly session tailored for BBW (big and beautiful women), all the Rubenesque shaped – from queen to king-sized – among us.

In this class you will not be asked to do a humiliating shoulder stand. It doesn’t mean it’s easier; it’s just different. The traditional poses are adjusted to zaftig curves and heavier masses. For example, to ease pressure on joints the teacher encourages women to use a chair for support or will have you move to a wall to do poses meant for a mat.

Few of the students in the class have done yoga before. For them, this class is exercise they can actually stick with, and which they attend religiously every Saturday. They come from all over the city to tone up, to learn how to feel and listen to their bodies, or simply to have fun. Whether you boast a dozen or a hundred kilos too many, this is a class for you.

Saturdays 10:15-11:45, €12, Yogazentrum Akazienhof, Akazienstr. 27, Schöneberg, Tel 8639 1313, 0151 5601 3749, [email protected]

Denglish at school

Today’s playgrounds offer a glimpse into tomorrow’s adult world and the busy ones in Prenzlauer Berg certainly point to a … multilingual future. But if multilingualism starts at home it needs to be supported in the classroom.

Founded over a year ago by a group of dedicated expat parents, Berlin Kids International School is the only state-subsidized English-German primary school in eastern Berlin. And it does offer ‘real bilingualism’ says co-founder Ruth Wishart, which means that not only must all children be able to speak English to enter the school but also that each class has two teachers – one native English speaker and one native German. They work together to develop a curriculum that fulfils the requirements of both Berlin’s guidelines and the English National Curriculum. Apart from promoting bilingualism, the school aims to expose children to multiple cultures.

‘This year we have 20 nationalities,’ says Marcel Eusepi, one of the happy founding parents. Want little Thomas or cute Emma to be able to spell in both Daddy’s AND Mutti’s mother tongues while growing up in an international environment, and all that for the price of piano lessons in Britain? Hurry to the open house!

Open house, Saturday, Oct 11, 10:00, English-language presentation at 10:30; German-language at 11:30. Berlin Kids International School, Weinstr. 1, Friedrichshain, U-Bhf Schillingstr.

Click here for more from Berlin’s leading monthly magazine in English.

ARTS

The Best of Berlin in September

Exberliner, Berlin’s leading English-language magazine, in September samples exquisite American coffee, tries out a new social network for artists, nibbles on Swedish candy and tours the city in style with a re-designed Rickshaw.

The Best of Berlin in September
Photo:www.fiveelephant.com

American roast

The phrase “American-style coffee” doesn’t usually get Europeans excited, but Massachusetts-native Kris Schackman has boldly set out to change this. On a romantic vacation to New York 18 months ago, Kris brought Sophie Weingensamer to his favourite Brooklyn coffee roaster. Originally from coffee- centric Vienna, Sophie was blown away. Less than a year later on a chilly December day in 2010, Five Elephant was born just south of Görlitzer Park. In keeping with the new American style pioneered by his mentor Steve Rao (author of the barista’s bible “Everything but Espresso”), Kris keeps his roasts light to emphasize the quality of the beans. He sources coffee directly from the African farmers who grow it – a policy he says gives him increased control over bean quality and at the same time puts more money in the hands of the farmers themselves. The shop’s most popular brews remain the Euro- typical espresso drinks (from €1.20), but if you’re ready to give your taste buds a superior kick, you should definitely try their filter coffee (€2.80-3.80), which uses the best brewing method to bring out the specific flavours of each bean from Kris’ house selection of roasts. From her bustling kitchen in the back of the café, Sophie churns out tray after tray of delicious baked goodies – from the succulent cheesecake (Kris’ grandma’s recipe) to delicious apple or chocolate delights – which Five Elephant currently sells to a dozen cafés around Berlin. Convincing Europeans that Americans can do something right can be difficult, but Kris and Sophie make a persuasive argument.

FIVE ELEPHANT| Reichenberger Str. 101, Kreuzberg, U-Bhf Görlitzer Bahnhof

Social net artwork

When you want to find someone to fix your sink, you know to call a plumber. Even in Germany, land of overcomplication, this undertaking is fairly straightforward. But what if you need someone to design the set for your post-BDSM modernist performance exhibit? Unless you already have contacts here, it can be hard to know where to start. Enter Júlia Marí Bernaus and her three business partners (another Catalonian and two Scots). Over the past year, they raised Artconnect Berlin from just a little baby blog to a full-grown app, and on August 1 released it into the wild. Artconnect Berlin is an English-language social networking website designed to bring Berlin artists of all nationalities together in a place where they can share ideas, plan projects and make new connections. It’s a mix of the new and the familiar – a user’s main page doubles as a live-updated portfolio of his projects and collaborations. At the time of writing, the site remains a little rough around the edges, but new features are added weekly, and the member base is quickly growing in all directions. Need a pornographic portrait painted? Artconnect’s got someone for that. Need a 16th-Century painting restored? They’ve got someone for that too. Berliner artists like Reynold Reynolds and Matthias Planitzer are already active members. The notorious Peaches hasn’t gone quite that far, but she graciously distinguished the launch party with her televised presence. Do Júlia’s ambitions reach beyond the German capital? “It’s about Berlin right now. Maybe – maybe after we’ve conquered Berlin, we’ll think about other cities.”

ARTCONNECT BERLIN|www.artconnectberlin.com

Scandi candy

You’ll get a sugar high by just stepping into this colourful pick-and-mix candy shop on Wühlischstraße – the 111 Nordic specialities on offer include marshmallow mushrooms, butter beans and salty liquorice skulls that would go great with a black metal soundtrack.

HERR NILSSONS GODIS| Wühlischstr. 58, Friedrichshain, S-Bhf Ostkreuz, €1.60/100g, Mon-Fri 12-20, Sat 13-18

Rickshaw reloaded

The three-wheeled auto-rickshaw, or tuk-tuk, has long been delighting westerners in Asian countries like India and Thailand. Now Berlin’s Öko-hippy visitors (and residents) can get a taste of the Far East without mucking up their carbon footprint by taking a sightseeing ride on one of the world’s first fully electric, marvellously sustainable tuk-tuks. Started in March by American-German duo Adam Rice and Wolfgang Knörr, Etuktuk currently offers 75-minute tours for up to five people per vehicle along an attraction-rich route through the city. Operating until the end of October, the company offers heated blankets and glasses of Glühwein to warm up sightseers on colder days. Though the original motorised rickshaw is infamous for being dirty, loud, smelly and environmentally lethal, its electric counterpart is quiet, comfortable and eco-friendly. But don’t take our word for it: as long as you’re a driver’s license holder and willing to partake in a 15 minute “driving clinic,” you can get behind the wheel yourself… just beware of taxis who can’t hear you coming!

ETUKTUK| Zimmerstr. in Mitte near Checkpoint Charlie, 4-5 passengers, €25/pp; 2-3 passengers, €30/pp; 1 passenger, €60; Kids 12 & under, €10; Wed-Sun, www.etuktuk.de

SHOW COMMENTS