Vacationers collect at a car parking zone within the middle of Berlin, Germany.
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Greg Rosalsky/NPR
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BERLIN — On a Wednesday afternoon in late August, I traveled to a vacationer attraction within the coronary heart of Germany’s capital. If I had no context, it could have appeared like a extremely bizarre place for vacationers to congregate. It is a car parking zone, surrounded by condominium buildings. On one aspect is Mimi Tea, a boba tea store that has a cutesy cartoon bear on its storefront.
However the vacationers do not come right here for boba tea. They arrive right here as a result of buried beneath this boring patch of pavement lies the stays of a darkish place of historic significance. It was underground right here that, 80 years in the past, one of many world’s most notorious villains swallowed a cyanide capsule and fired a bullet into his mind. It was right here that Adolf Hitler spent his final dwelling moments.
The positioning is understood in German because the Führerbunker, a subterranean bomb shelter that the Nazis constructed to guard their chief and his high henchmen from air raids throughout World Battle II. They constructed the bunker beneath the Reich Chancellery, a constructing advanced that served because the Nazi authorities’s headquarters.
The Reich Chancellery is lengthy gone. Aboveground, there is no such thing as a seen proof that this place was as soon as essential, besides a blue data plaque with a drawing of Hitler’s bunker and a complete lot of textual content in tiny font.
I grabbed a boba tea and watched as swarms of vacationers, typically led by tour guides, got here to this web site, squinted to learn the plaque, and stared at a car parking zone. Many vacationers come right here and get disillusioned.
“If you do not know why persons are standing in teams in a spot the place there may be nothing to see — that is the Führerbunker,” writes one vacationer on TripAdvisor, a journey web site. He charges the vacation spot two out of 5 stars.
“I used to be very sad with this place,” writes a vacationer from Canada. One star.
“I would not exit of your method to go to right here,” writes one other vacationer. “Nonetheless, it’s one other factor to be ‘ticked off the checklist.'”
Students have come to name tourism to locations just like the Führerbunker “darkish tourism,” which refers to sightseeing of locations recognized for loss of life, catastrophe, horror, or distress. Consider the tens of millions of people that go to the Auschwitz focus camp or the 9/11 Memorial or the Salem Witch Museum or the Chernobyl nuclear catastrophe web site. This type of tourism — and the estimated $30 billion annual trade round it — is the topic of a somewhat sizable educational literature.
Peter Hohenhaus, the creator of dark-tourism.com and the writer of a ebook titled Atlas of Darkish Locations, says you possibly can think about Berlin the “capital” of darkish tourism. Whether or not it is the Berlin Wall and the brutal historical past of communist East Germany, the Holocaust, or World Battle II, there are numerous grim points of interest for vacationers on this metropolis.
“Berlin is without doubt one of the few locations the place darkish tourism and mainstream tourism overlap to a big diploma,” Hohenhaus says. “My web site has extra entries for that metropolis alone than for many nations.”
Like each different market, there is a demand aspect and a provide aspect to the marketplace for darkish tourism. The demand aspect raises questions like, why the heck do folks need to spend their holidays visiting miserable locations and considering morbid stuff? The info is spotty, but it surely means that this type of tourism has boomed in latest many years. What has been driving that?
People have been fascinated by loss of life for mainly perpetually. Some students have in contrast darkish tourism to Romans watching gladiators die on the Colosseum or to the spectators of public executions throughout medieval occasions. They recommend one of these tourism could also be pushed by a type of voyeurism, which leads folks to get pleasure or pleasure from getting near loss of life or horror whereas not likely experiencing it themselves. There’s something in human nature that causes us to do issues like rubberneck once we cross automotive crashes and be extra captivated by information tales once they contain blood.
Hohenhaus, who has devoted a lot of his mental life to darkish tourism, rejects the notion that demand for one of these sightseeing is motivated by voyeurism. “I do not do darkish tourism for any type of kick to be derived from studying about different folks’s distress,” Hohenhaus says. “That is simply not the purpose. It is the academic component that’s within the foreground; plus the essential component of place authenticity.” Vacationer motivations, in fact, differ, and the explanations that they go to Auschwitz are doubtless very completely different than, say, Alcatraz or the London Dungeon.
However the provide aspect of darkish tourism could also be much more fascinating than the demand aspect. The suppliers of darkish tourism typically must awkwardly stroll a positive line between being profitable from the reminiscence of historic atrocities or disasters or villains whereas paying heed to the political sensitivities round their subject material.
The Führerbunker supplies a very compelling case research within the economics of darkish tourism. Why, regardless of the clear historic significance of this web site — and the clear tourism demand to see it — is the bunker now only a boring car parking zone? The story says so much about fashionable Germany and its battle to confront its darkish previous. And it additionally supplies an attention-grabbing story within the economics of “repugnant markets,” or what occurs when there is a marketplace for one thing however a society considers that market to be revolting and seeks to discourage it.
A posthumous historical past of the Führerbunker
On the day I visited the Führerbunker web site, I met up with Kay Heyne, a historian on the Berliner Unterwelten (or, in English, the Berlin Underworlds Affiliation). The non-profit group seeks to coach folks about and protect Berlin’s huge variety of underground archaeological websites, from tunnels dug to flee East Germany, to previous beer and wine cellars, to the Führerbunker. It was the Berliner Unterwelten that positioned an data plaque on the Führerbunker web site again in 2006.
Nearly instantly after Allied forces invaded Berlin in 1945, Heyne says, this place turned a vacationer attraction. Allied troopers, authorities officers, journalists, and others got here right here. “They wished to see the place the place Hitler lived, the place he made selections, and the place he died,” Heyne says.

Sightseers stroll amid the ruins of Hitler’s air raid shelter within the Nineteen Forties.
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This explicit a part of Berlin was underneath the command of the Soviet Union throughout that point. And, Heyne says, Stalin did not like that so many individuals flocked right here. Soviet forces destroyed the Reich Chancellery and tried to destroy the bunkers beneath.
The factor was that the Führerbunker had a roof made up of virtually 12 toes of bolstered concrete and partitions equally sturdy. The subterranean construction was constructed to outlive heavy bombing. The Soviets had been in a position to destroy a lot of the inside and largely seal off the bunker. However the bones of the bunker survived early demolition makes an attempt.
In 1961, East Germany constructed the Berlin Wall to forestall its folks from escaping, and this explicit space turned a part of the “loss of life strip,” or a no man’s land, between East and West Berlin. Vacationers and anybody else who dared come to the place must circumnavigate snipers perched in watchtowers, booby traps, and roaming guard canines. Suffice to say, tourism on the Führerbunker halted throughout the Chilly Battle.
Heyne says the shortcoming to go to the Führerbunker solely added to its lure. It turned like a type of misplaced archaeological websites that Indiana Jones may attempt to discover.
Within the late Nineteen Eighties, East Germany was going through a housing scarcity, they usually began constructing extra flats. And authorities determined to cut back the width of the loss of life strip and construct a luxurious condominium advanced on its periphery, near the Berlin Wall. By constructing nice-looking flats right here, Heyne says, East German authorities wished to promote to West Berlin that their communist system was superior to the West’s capitalist one.
Whereas constructing these flats, German development crews reopened the Führerbunker and destroyed most of what was left, together with its blast-proof ceiling. They then stuffed the bunker with sand, gravel, and rubble, they usually buried it underneath the car parking zone that stands there in the present day.
Historians recommend that East German authorities believed that, by making the Führerbunker a soulless car parking zone, they had been lowering the location’s mystique and stopping it from changing into a memorial to Hitler.
Vergangenheitsbewältigung: Fashionable Germany’s battle to beat its darkish previous
Within the Nineties, after the Berlin Wall fell and Germany reunified, Germans started reimagining what their new nation stood for. In addition they made Berlin the capital once more, they usually started redeveloping the central a part of their newly reunified metropolis. Because the foundations for brand new buildings had been laid, Heyne says, they started discovering all kinds of archaeological proof of their previous, together with former Nazi bunkers. Germany had intense debates about how they need to reckon with their darkish historical past.
The Germans even have a type of lengthy, amazingly exact phrases their language is understood for to confer with this quest to grapple with their troubled previous: Vergangenheitsbewältigung (Vergangenheit is the German phrase for “previous” and Bewältigung is “coping” or “overcoming”).
Within the Nineties and early 2000s, Berlin started an intensive effort to memorialize the victims of the Nazi regime. Right this moment, a brief block away from the Führerbunker web site lies a lovely Holocaust monument referred to as the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. Additionally close by is the Memorial to Europe’s Sinti and Roma Murdered Below Nazism. “The Topography of Terror” museum paperwork horrors of the Gestapo and SS. And throughout Berlin there are “Stolpersteine,” or stumbling stones, that are positioned in entrance of the residences of individuals taken by the Nazis. Manufactured from brass, these cobble stone plates are usually etched with the names, birthdates, and fates of Nazi victims.

John Macdougall
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Nonetheless, the politics of reminiscence in Germany stay contentious. In 2017, Bjorn Höcke, a politician within the far-right Various for Germany (AfD) social gathering, complained that Germans are the “solely folks on the planet who planted a memorial of disgrace within the coronary heart of their capital.” These feedback created a firestorm of political controversy in Germany.
A repugnant market
As Germany made intensive efforts to memorialize Nazi victims within the Nineties and 2000s, additionally they needed to grapple with what to do about notorious websites related to Nazi perpetrators, just like the Führerbunker. Through the years, Germans have proven resistance to something that provides any whiff of memorializing — and even depicting — Hitler and his henchmen.
In 2008, for instance, the wax museum Madame Tussauds opened up a brand new department in Berlin. And, with a lot controversy, they unveiled a wax determine of Adolf Hitler. On the museum’s opening day, a former policeman from Berlin entered the museum, jumped over a barrier, and decapitated wax Hitler. He reportedly screamed, “No extra warfare!”
For years, the German authorities resisted even recognizing the situation of the Führerbunker. Some discovered visitation of this web site distasteful, they usually feared any official recognition of it might assist it develop into a type of shrine for neo-Nazis.
The Nobel Prize-winning economist Al Roth has developed an idea he calls “repugnant markets.” That is when society has a distaste for explicit sorts of market exercise and should take actions to outlaw or discourage it. Examples he offers embrace prostitution, shopping for and promoting human organs, ticket scalping, value gouging within the wake of disasters, and consuming canine or horse meat. One may add darkish tourism of politically delicate locations to Roth’s checklist.
Heyne says that, regardless of official reluctance to acknowledge the situation of the Führerbunker and supply something attention-grabbing for vacationers to see there, vacationers, with the assistance of guidebooks, got here to the location anyhow.
Tourism to the Führerbunker actually boomed after 2004, with the discharge of the film “Downfall,” which dramatized Hitler’s final dwelling days within the bunker. Actually, so many vacationers flocked to the car parking zone after the film was launched that the house owners of the condominium advanced reached out to Berliner Unterwelten.
Heyne says they heard tour guides and vacationers had been spreading misinformation concerning the web site, like what actually nonetheless existed beneath the bottom (the actual reply, Heyne says, will not be a lot besides some remnants of its basis and partitions). The house owners of the condominium advanced wished the non-profit to place up an indication with correct data.
And, so, in 2006, the Berliner Unterwelten, with the approval of presidency authorities, erected the knowledge plaque that also stands there in the present day, the one official recognition that this web site has historic significance. They selected to make the register each German and English. It reveals a schematic of the Führerbunker (and a linked bunker often known as the Vorbunker) and a timeline of key occasions on the web site. It has a German title, “Mythos und Geschichtszeugnis Führerbunker,” or, in English, roughly, the parable and historic document of the Führerbunker.

One of many key occasions the signal highlights occurred on March 20, 1945, about six weeks earlier than Hitler would take his personal life. “From the ‘Führerbunker,’ Hitler issued the ‘Nero Decree’ — the destruction of all technique of existence of the German civilian inhabitants,” the signal states. “With this mindless order, Hitler displayed his contempt for his supposedly ‘Beloved Germany.'”
Heyne says that the Berliner Unterwelten felt it was crucial to spotlight Hitler’s order. “A lot of the destruction of Germany that occurred in 1945 was due to him,” Heyne says. “His Nero Decree reveals that he had not even a single thought concerning the folks of Germany. It was at all times about him.”
On the day I visited the Führerbunker and skim the knowledge plaque, there have been three sandwich-board commercials standing actually proper behind the signal. They marketed a restaurant that served “All Day Brunch,” a classic bike store, and Mimi Tea. Every had been clearly making an attempt to catch the eyeballs of anybody trying to find out about the place Hitler commanded his army and dedicated suicide. The commercialization of such a morbid place was a bit surreal.
As time has handed — and Berlin has erected sprawling monuments to Nazi victims — Germans appear to have gotten a bit extra comfy with the concept Hitler is a vacationer attraction.
Maybe recognizing that many vacationers had been coming to the Führerbunker and getting disillusioned there was nothing there, a Berlin historical past museum, in 2016, unveiled a full duplicate of Hitler’s bunker that vacationers can now go to. (That is type of just like different repugnant markets; regardless of efforts to discourage and even ban a market, demand typically proves irrepressible and finds keen suppliers. Consider the failure of Prohibition).
The museum, which is a couple of five-minute drive from the ruins of the actual Führerbunker, is known as “Berlin Story Bunker.” When the Führerbunker duplicate was introduced, some Germans criticized the museum for being profitable from what they recommended was a form of Hitler Disneyland.
The museum’s director Wieland Giebel, nonetheless, defended the exhibit. “We don’t need to make a Hitler present right here,” Giebel instructed a German newspaper. “We need to present the tip of World Battle II and what it means if nationwide socialism controls society.”
The Führerbunker duplicate continues to be a part of an exhibit referred to as “Hitler — How It Might Occur.” It markets itself because the story of “How a contemporary, progressive, and cultured state can descend into barbarism in a really brief time, culminating in unimaginable brutality and genocide.”