More background info: Hamburg's Nikolaikirche, whose tower now serves as the centrepiece of the memorial, was built between 1846 and 1874 (to replace an earlier church that had burned down). When it was finished, its 482 feet / 147m tower was the tallest building in Europe (until it was surpassed by the cathedral in Rouen in
France), and it still is the highest church spire of the city (and the fifth highest in the world).
Its height partly contributed to its fate – being the most prominent point in the centre of Hamburg, it was used by the
RAF as a target and orientation marker in the bombings of the city. After the end of
WWII, reconstruction was dismissed, and a replacement modern church was erected elsewhere, near the Klosterstern roundabout in the Harvestehude district of
Hamburg.
The ruined old St Nikolai church remained in ruins. Most of what remained of the church's nave was later even demolished, so that almost only the tower was left standing, which took on the role of a grim reminder of those dark days in the war.
As a memorial, however, it had not been maintained very well for many years, and it took decades before funds were raised for restoration work and the setting up of a proper memorial site. This now also includes a museum, updated and expanded in 2013, in the former crypt of the church. The tower has been made accessible by means of a lift to an observation platform.
What there is to see: The recently upgraded and expanded memorial museum in the former crypt of the church (reopened in September 2013) is probably one of the best places to learn about what massive aerial bombings of cities really mean. To pre-empt the conclusion: it was/is a war crime (that, by the way, is also the conclusion a British (sic!) historian, whose book I read at the memorial but cannot remember the name of, arrives at ... against all the attempts of Bomber Harris,
Churchill et al. to justify the bombing strategy ideologically). The exhibition does not, however, hammer that conclusion in, far from it, but it lets you arrive at it in your own time. Nor does it deny
Nazi Germany's responsibility for having let it come so far in the first place – nor the fact that it was Nazi
Germany that started it all.
That latter point was even more prevalent in the old exhibition which had a fairly large section on the German Luftwaffe's bombings of
London and, in particular,
Coventry. This is now somewhat reduced in the new exhibition. What has been retained, however, are sections about Germany's use of aerial bombing in the destruction of
Poland's capital
Warsaw during
WWII – in fact these sections have been on permanent loan from the Historical Museum of Warsaw since 2009.
But let's briefly go through the sections of the current exhibition as they are ordered (mostly chronologically, that is). The first bit I saw when I was last there (in early May 2014) was a temporary exhibition – namely about a French comic on the barbarism of the
First World War (called “Tour le monde kaputt”). This of course will have been replaced by something else (if anything) by the time you read this.
The first section of the permanent exhibition begins with outlining the history of the church, from its precursors to the current structure and up to the rise of Nazi power. The latter is the topic of the next section, which covers the years 1933 to 1943, i.e. up to just before the disastrous aerial bombings of
Hamburg. This also includes aspects of how the Nazis exploited the bombings of German cities for expelling Jews (and giving their flats to bombed-out “Aryans”) as part of the
Holocaust.
Adjacent to this second section is the extra section about
Warsaw, before you get to the fourth and main part of the exhibition, the one about “Operation Gomorrah”. This also gives the entire exhibition its official name: “Gomorrah 1943”.
This main part incorporates parts and exhibits from the previous older exhibition, but also adds significantly to it. It is also more modern than had previously been the case in that it involves contemporary media installations. For example you can listen to eyewitness reports at audio stations. One main addition is also a large horizontal info screen, which, for instance, describes the physics of a firestorm and has an animated schematic description of the Allied bombing strategy. The latter mainly involved using high explosive bombs first to “break open” the roofs of houses and then in a second wave drop incendiary bombs to set all these buildings ablaze.
On display are not only text-and-photo panels but also artefacts such as replica bombs, air-raid-shelter signs, items from the bunkers as well as some rather chilling gas masks and even a gas-protection crib for babies, complete with the instruction manual. Also very poignant are items such as deformed glass bottles that melted in the heat of the firestorm. One item I remember especially well: a pair of simple shoes fashioned from straw – the accompanying text reveals that these were given by a nurse to a girl who had run for miles through the blaze and rubble, losing her shoes en route so that she had to run part of the way barefoot ... through the heat of the phosphorus still sizzling on the ground ...
A particularly interesting detail: I found the panel with a quote from a former bomber command navigator who declared that it was only the invisibility of the victims from the bombers that it made it possible for them to rain down death on such masses of civilians. Had they seen babies and mothers burning to death, they could not have done it. But he also remarked that at the time their sole concern was to just get out of the whole raid alive themselves.
This contrasts with the totally unrepentant declarations of the ideological basis of the use of large-scale aerial bombing of cities, e.g. by the main man on the
British side, Arthur 'Bomber' Harris, who proclaimed that the intention of the operations was simply to break the morale of the civilian population. Had that indeed been the sole rationale behind the bombings then they could just as well have called them off, given to what minimal degree they were achieving this goal. So there must have been other reasons, plus simply the fact that it could be done, as from mid-1943 the fortunes of war had so turned in favour of the Allies.
The exhibition continues by looking at the aftermath of the bombings – both in the short term, i.e. how people coped with living in the rubble and with the clearing-up efforts, as well as the longer term. The latter is given a separate final section: commemoration of the Hamburg firestorm.
Apart from more eyewitness memories there are panels and photos listing the other memorials within
Hamburg that pertain to the same chapter of the city's history, including
bunkers (especially the
Bunkermuseum Hamm) and the special sections and memorials within
Ohlsdorf cemetery.
Just before you get back to the foyer there's a map showing which parts of Hamburg suffered from the destruction to what degree. It is telling that the largest areas worst affected were not so much industrial parts of the city but the districts in which mostly working class civilians lived, namely in the eastern half of Hamburg (so it looks as if most of the bombs overshot their officially declared target by quite a few miles).
All in all, the exhibition is well worth a visit. It is now also largely bilingual, with most texts (explanatory texts and labels – but not original documents) coming with English translations. These are not always one-hundred per cent perfect linguistically, but perfectly sufficient to guide foreign visitors through it all.