I’m not very big on Valentine’s Day and would usually prefer a nice dinner, and that’s it. But, I got the best surprise for Valentine’s Day this year.
One of my best friends reached out to my husband to tell him about Amazon Explore and urged him to purchase a virtual city tour for Valentine’s Day for me. Obviously, I learned these details afterwards. I suppose it’s evident that I’ve been struggling with not being able to travel internationally due to the pandemic, but it makes me smile that my friends and my husband understands me completely.
So what is Amazon Explore? It is a site where you can sign up for a live, virtual one-on-one sightseeing and/or cooking experience from all over the world. Each session is booked directly with a local tour guide who lives in the city and is about $10-$100+ depending on the location. You can see and interact (audio) with the tour guide, but they can only hear you and they cannot see you. You can even take screen shots and interact with other locals onsite virtually if you wanted to.
The one my husband booked on Amazon Explore was the ‘Royal Berlin: a virtual visit to two of Berlin’s most famous squares’ through the tour company Essence of Berlin. This was a 1-hour tour with our guide Sam who virtually walked us through the neighboring Gendarmenmarkt and Bebelplatz squares while pointing out the landmarks and explaining their significance. Sam actually grew up in Scotland and relocated to Berlin to study at the Humboldt University of Berlin. One of the things I’ve missed about traveling was meeting and talking with locals, so we took the opportunity to get to know Sam better.

We started our virtual tour in the Gendarmenmarkt square in front of the Konzerthaus concert hall. Sam pointed out the German cathedral on our left and the Huguenots (French) cathedral to our right. The Friedrick Schiller statue was standing in the middle of the square. Sam explained that this square and the cathedrals were built back in the 1700s under King Friedrick William after issuing the Edict of Potsdam to allow French Protestants to relocate and flee from religious persecution in France.

Next, Sam strolled across the street and into another one of Berlin’s most attractive squares, Babelplatz. My mouth dropped in awe as I gazed into my computer screen of the beautiful buildings and their architecture. Several well-known buildings such as the Staatsoper Unter den Linden (Berlin State Opera House), Alte Bibliothek (library) and St. Hedwig’s Cathedral were located in this square. When Friedrick the Great expanded the Prussia empire, he decided to build St. Hedwig’s Cathedral for the people to express religious tolerance in the land.
The most memorable (and unforgettable) landmark we saw was the Book Burning Memorial in the center of Bebelplatz. On May 10th, 1933, a group of the Nazi German Student Union and their professors burnt books that were written by authors that they believed the ideologies were against Nazism. Sam also pointed out a glass plate in the ground; he said to look closely and see what was underground. There was a white empty bookshelf underground beneath the glass plate. I immediately felt the emotion and stood stunned while I processed the symbolism of this memorial. There were also two bronze plates on the ground with the following inscription in German:
That was but a prelude;
where they burn books,
they will ultimately burn people as well.
Heinrich Heine 1820
As we near the end of our virtual city tour, Sam pointed out the German royal palace shining brightly in front our view. He said that this was a reconstructed building of the royal palace and has now been made into a museum. The reconstruction was completed in 2020 and was supposed to open to the public last year. Unfortunately it was not able to due to the pandemic, but we could take a virtual tour online.

Finally, we had to say goodbye and give Sam our thanks for taking us through this tour. Maybe I’m a bit deprived from travel, but this has been one of the best experiences I’ve had for the past year! It really made me feel like I was there in Berlin and walking through the city squares with Sam.
This experience was the breath of fresh air that I needed and I hope to see Berlin in person someday.
















