The fall of the Berlin Wall 25 years ago, heralding the end to the Cold
War between East and West, showed the world “dreams can come true” and
should inspire people trapped in tyranny everywhere, Chancellor Angela Merkel said today.
Festivities to mark the anniversary have drawn more than 100,000 Berliners and tourists to the centre of the once-divided city.
Many wandered along a 15km former “death strip” where the Wall once
stood, and 7,000 illuminated helium balloons were perched 3.6 metres
high on poles - matching the height of the barrier built in 1961 by
Communist East Germany.
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Fall of the Berlin Wall: 25 Years on
Dr Merkel, a young scientist in Communist East Berlin when she got her
first taste of freedom on November 9th, 1989, said in a speech that the
Wall’s opening in response to mass popular pressure would be eternally
remembered as a triumph of the human spirit.
“The fall of the Berlin Wall showed us that dreams can come true - and
that nothing has to stay the way it is, no matter how high the hurdles
might seem to be,” said Dr Merkel, who is now 60 and has led united
Germany since 2005.
“It showed that we have the power to shape our destiny and make things better,” she said, noting that people in Ukraine, Syria, Iraq and elsewhere around the world should feel heartened by the example of the wall’s sudden demise.
“It was a victory of freedom over bondage and it’s a message of faith
for future generations that they can tear down the walls - the walls of
dictators, violence and ideologies.”
Germans have latched onto memories of the peaceful East German
revolution that felled the wall as a bright, shining moment in their
history.
But even the date November 9th bears historical burdens, as Dr Merkel
noted. It was also the day in 1938 of the anti-Jewish pogrom
Kristallnacht, or Night of Broken Glass, when Nazis carried out attacks
on synagogues and Jewish shops across Germany.
“It was a date of shame and disgrace,” said Dr Merkel, referring to
Kristallnacht. “So on this 25th anniversary of the Wall’s fall, I feel
not only the joy of November 9th, 1989 but also the responsibility of
German history.”
Lighted baloons mark wall
The artistic display of balloons, which dramatically illustrate how the
Wall cut through the heart of Berlin, is also porous to enable people
to easily move back and forth between the former East and West Berlin.
The balloons will be set free this evening - symbolically reenacting the
Wall’s collapse.
“We have every reason to celebrate,” Mayor Klaus Wowereit, whose city
government has been rebuilding small segments of the Wall for posterity
and tourists after almost all of the original concrete barrier was
hastily torn down over two decades ago.
“We were all happy at the time that it had fallen and (so it) was torn down,” he said.
The Berlin Wall was built in 1961 to stop East Germans fleeing to the
West. It began as a brick wall and was then fortified as a heavily
guarded 160 km double white concrete screen that encircled West Berlin,
slicing across streets, between families, and through graveyards.
At least 138 people were killed trying to escape to West Berlin and many who were captured ended up in jail.
Communist regimes collapsed in the face of popular uprisings across Eastern Europe in 1989, signalling the end of the Cold War, of which the Berlin Wall had become the starkest symbol.
But despite the Wall’s fall, German unity a year later and 2 trillion
euros pumped into the formerly communist east of the country, there are
still lingering east-west political, economic and social divisions in
the city and country.
Voting patterns in east Berlin and eastern Germany are different, there
is still an east-west income and wealth gap, and unemployment is nearly
twice as high in the east.
“Forty years of division left their mark on many,” said Kai Arzheimer,
political scientist at the University of Mannheim. “The differences
might be diminishing as years pass but only a lot slower than anyone
would have dreamt 25 years ago.”
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