10 night/11 day trip to Germany to see many of its great cultural and historical sights, and especially their LGBTQ+ side, from Mad King Ludwig to Cabaret, Marlene Dietrich, the (gay) White Rose, and Beyond.
Berlin and Munich are Germany’s two great cultural capitals. Although they are very different, they are two of Europe’s greatest cities of art and history, with fabulous museums, palaces, and parks. And of course, they have an amazing and palpable history, with Nazis, Soviets, the Berlin wall, its fall, and so on. But they also have an incredible LGBTQ+ history!
It is in Germany that the gay rights movement started, that scientific study of sexuality started, there were the first sex reassignment surgeries, and that there was the first city with a wild LGBTQ+ night life. Then of course there was the horrifying backlash, the oppression and mass murder of the Nazi years. But even then, there were incredible ant-Nazi gay heroes—including the founder of the most famous resistance group, Munich University’s White Rose. And since the war there has been plenty of LGBTQ+ history—and nightlife—too, starting in the 1970s, when Freddie Mercury’s favorite hangout was in Munich, and leading to today, when Berlin and Munich are both among the openest, most LGBTQ+ friendly of the world’s major cities.
And this is the tour that will show you it all, the history (including its horrifying sides), the culture, and as always with Oscar Wilde Tours, the LGBTQ+ sides of the story that are generally ignored—does anyone else remember that Hans Scholl was gay, for instance? See it all while staying in excellent hotels, eating in charming restaurants, hearing from Professor Lear and his top-notch guides, and getting to know a group of like-minded LGBTQ+ people!
On our first afternoon, we meet our fabulous gay Berlin guide and take a walking tour through the center of the city (which is right out our hotel door) to get our bearings, both spatially and historically.
The Nazi period and the years of the divided city loom large, inescapable reminders of Germany’s troubled past: the famous Reichstag that saw the rise of Hitler; the Alexanderplatz, with its Soviet-era TV tower that is still Germany’s tallest structure and remains a symbol of the city; and such key sites as the Bebelplatz, where the Nazis held their most famous book burning, on May 6, 1933—including, in the pyre, 20,000 books and journals from Magnus Hirschfeld’s Institut für Sexualwissenschaft (Institute for Sexual Science), the world’s first center for LGBTQ+ studies.
Fortunately, though, there’s another side to Berlin, one that is in fact uplifting. Despite its horrifying cataclysms, the city has retained its own charm and vitality, and it’s important to remember that Berlin in the Weimar Republic was the city that Hitler hated, because of its tolerance and diversity. And, fortunately, in the end it was that Berlin which ultimately won!
After the tour, we gather for a welcome meal together, to start to get to know German cooking, and our new friends!