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Remembering Erika, the Teacher Who Brought the Cold War to Life

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
July 14, 2026 3:02 am

Remembering Erika, the Teacher Who Brought the Cold War to Life

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

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July 14, 2026 3:02 am

Lawson Bader pays tribute to his late teacher, Erika, by sharing a letter he wrote to her brother, describing how she changed his life and his perspective on freedom. He recounts their trips to Berlin, Germany, and how the city has transformed over the years, from the Berlin Wall to the modern high-rises.

COVERED TOPICS / TAGS (Click to Search)
Freedom Liberty Teacher Erika Berlin Germany History
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Ask a rheumatologist about Cosentix. Yeah. This is Lee Habib, and this is Our American Stories. It's time for our final thoughts series, where we bring you the final thoughts From loved ones. To those Who've passed?

An obituary A eulogy, a note. And today's comes to us from Lawson Bader, who paid tribute to his late teacher, Erica. And he did it in the form of a letter. to her brother. Let's take a listen to Lawson.

And his letter. Fall twenty fourteen. Dear Eberhardt, You and I have never met. but I knew your sister, Erica. I'm sorry I missed your memorial service.

I did manage to go online and sign the obituary page. and I included myself in the Facebook group But I feel compelled to write this. two years after her death, because of what my family and I were just able to do. You see, I was one of Erika's kids. I know she had many of them.

but I also think that I was part of her original gaggle. the ones who traveled with her to Germany that first time. We were her guinea pigs, as she called us. David was also in my class. In fact, he and I had been in Montessori school together in the early 1970s.

I probably met Erika then, but I had no idea who she would become later in my life. She changed my world. I know that's an overused phrase, but it's true. and not just because I learned to appreciate another language.

Well, at least I tried learning German.

Okay. She thought it. Fairly ironic that it actually became a college minor of mine later on. She was also instrumental in helping my brother through some rough times. But that's his story.

Not mine.

Now, she changed my life because she made it so clear. that the best teachers are the ones who know you. Really know you. It's why I learned so much. I married a teacher.

a seriously great one.

So I appreciate Erika even more now. that I see what's going on in the background of the best teachers. There is a cost to being a great teacher. but such a great reward, too. She also changed me because she's the one who got this Scot to go to Germany.

As you know, we were the group that did that first exchange. We lived with families who in turn became a family. I spend a lot of time these days working among people and groups that are committed to promoting the causes of freedom. I have had what I would call many interruptions in my life that have led me down that path. Erika is one of those interruptions.

and I would simply not be as content with what I'm doing today. without her.

So allow me to tell you about it. Even though I'm really telling her. I was nine I wasn't you thirty one years ago. We first visited Berlin. Do you remember Erika?

And in Berlin, I was changed. Yeah. I loved being in your city of Hamburg. Entertaining long evening hours with Herr Pren discussing World War II and his experience of being forced into the Hitler youth. Mm.

We drove north through empty woods to Die Grenze, that ominous fence separating East and West Germany. and I saw Helga weep at that tragic reality. Of her separation from the village where she grew up, which we could just see over the fence. a few kilometers away. I wonder how you felt when you journeyed away those many years ago.

Mm. And then you took us to Berlin. In Berlin, the past collided with the present. The bullet-riddled Reichstag, the old German parliament building which backed up to Demauer, that infamous graffiti-adorned wall that surrounded and separated that city. The expanse of no man's land, Potsdammer Platz.

A great public square covering what remained of Hitler's bunker while providing an open firing range for the East German snipers. The contrast between colorful nightlife of the Kurfenstendamstrasse. West Berlin's equivalent to Times Square. contrasted with the dull gray of Alexanderplatz, which was the East Berlin response to Times Square, which, as you know, wasn't really much of a response, frankly. On wooden scaffolding we would gaze up and over the wall, And beheld anonymous binoculars staring back at us from behind cement block watchtowers.

31 years later, earlier this month, I returned to Berlin. It was a bit strange to be back. This time I was with my children. the youngest of whom, Margaret, was now the same age I think I was on that first visit. We spent most of our two days exploring what used to be the Soviet sector.

We walked to Checkpoint Charlie. which of course marked the end of the American sector and the beginning of the Soviets' claim on the city, but we approached it from a decidedly different angle than I first did in nineteen eighty three. Today, a large McDonald's dominates the intersection. the golden arch replacing what was once a tense set of switchback plates and armed guards. At eleven o'clock at night.

Alexander plots as a mass of humanity. Young and old enjoying a balmy evening of street performers and endless food tents. Potsdammer Platz is now a temple to modern high-rises. glitzy and gleaming. and dismissive of what once lay beneath its foundations.

A solitary guard tower remains, though. tucked away on a tree lined street, where for a few Euros you can have your photo taken with East German soldiers plain dress-up.

Now the only place to see a Trebant That ubiquitous East German car is at a special museum. that could actually fit perfectly with a Kichi-Coni Island boardwalk. It even advertises where nostalgia is guaranteed. Up for man. the iconic symbol that was once used by the East Germans to epitomize the importance of work.

now has its own capitalistic infused retail store opposite the Franzosischedom. the old Berlin Cathedral which lay so quiet and empty those many decades behind the wall. Late one evening we all took the subway to the coup d'Am. which is still the central shopping district of Berlin, just as it was in the nineteen seventies and eighties. Gucci, Dijo, Zahra, H and M, and Kenneth Cole Storth.

Line the street still bathed in the blue reflection off the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church windows. But unlike the last time I was there, It was quiet. I wasn't looking for a metaphor. Maybe it was there. the capitalistic West becoming stale as it gives way to entrepreneurial energies from the East or maybe it was just a quiet night in August when many folks were on holiday.

There was no need to make it more than it was, and You and I never agreed in our politics anyway. Thirty-one years ago. You took me to Berlin. In the years that followed, I made multiple trips. But my last visit was just before De Mauer came down.

Now here I was back. Those early days had been sobering experiences.

Now, thirty-one years later, I watched my children whiz through the Brandenburg gate on bikes.

soaking up the sunset and the populated plaza. without a care or first hand appreciation. of how that place has changed. I had to stop. and through misty eyes reach out.

and touch it. Erica, I touched it. Profoundly grateful. that their first visit to Berlin brought with it such greater promise and hope than did my visits those many decades before. Anyway.

I thought you'd appreciate hearing that.

Something you started. decades later still having an impact. I miss you. As do many others. Thanks.

Lawson. The power of one teacher to change a life. Lawson Bader, it changed his and his view toward freedom. Our final thoughts series. Lawson Bader.

On his final words to his German teacher, Erika. Here on our American stories. Liberty has never been just a word to we Americans. It has guided every one of our endeavors for the past 250 years. And now it takes form in a new way.

The 2026 Semi-Quincentennial Coin and Metal Program from the United States Mint. It celebrates the founding ideals that have long shaped our coinage. Available one year only, this historic collection features new coin designs, limited edition releases, and reissues. Shop new official coins at usmint.gov forward slash semi-q. That's usmint.gov/slash S-E-M-I-Q.

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