Daily Press (Sunday)

BERLIN WALL: 30 YEARS LATER

In its 28 years, divide cut through city as a sign of Iron Curtain

- By Frank Jordans Associated Press

Germany marked the 30th anniversar­y Saturday of the opening of the Berlin Wall.

BERLIN — Germany marked the 30th anniversar­y Saturday of the opening of the Berlin Wall, a pivotal moment in the events that brought down Communism in Eastern Europe.

Leaders from Germany, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic attended a ceremony at Bernauer Strasse — where one of the last parts of the Berlin Wall remains — before placing roses in the once-fearsome barrier that divided the city for 28 years.

“The Berlin Wall, ladies and gentlemen, is history,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said later at a memorial service inside a small chapel near where the Wall once stood. “It teaches us: No wall that keeps people out and restricts freedom is so high or so wide that it can’t be broken down.”

Noting the cruelty of the East German regime — which had torn down a previous church on the former death strip site so snipers could get a better shot at people fleeing to the West — Merkel paid tribute to those who were killed or imprisoned during the Communist dictatorsh­ip and insisted that the fight for freedom worldwide isn’t over.

“We are bereft of excuses, challenged to do our part for freedom and democracy,” she said.

In a statement issued by his office, President Donald Trump congratula­ted Germany on its anniversar­y, saying that “courageous men and women from both East and West Germany united to tear down a wall that stood as a symbol of oppression and failed socialism for more than a quarter of a century.”

“The United States and our allies and partners remain steadfast in our unwavering allegiance to advancing the principles of individual liberty and freedom that have sustained peace and spawned unparallel­ed prosperity,” he added.

Speaking to European leaders at Bernauer Strasse, the head of the Berlin Wall memorial site, Axel Klausmeier, recalled the images of delirious Berliners from East and West crying tears of joy as they hugged each other on the evening of Nov. 9, 1989.

Built almost overnight in 1961 as what the East German government described as an “antifascis­t protection barrier,” the 96-mile wall quickly emerged as one of the most striking symbols of the so-called Iron Curtain between the West and the Soviet Union.

The collapse of the Berlin Wall was brought about largely by peaceful protests and a stream of people fleeing East Germany that piled pressure on the country’s Communist government to open its borders to the West and ultimately end the nation’s postwar division.

Thirty years on, Germany has become the most powerful economic and political force on the continent, but there remain deep misgivings among some in the country about how the transition from socialism to capitalism was managed.

Merkel acknowledg­ed this in a recent interview with daily Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung, saying that “with some things, where one might have thought that East and West would have aligned, one can see today that it might rather take half a century or more.”

During the ceremony at

Bernauer Strasse, she recalled that Nov. 9 remains a fraught date in German history, as it also marks the anniversar­y of the so-called Night of Broken Glass, an anti-Jewish pogrom in 1938 that foreshadow­ed the Nazi’s Holocaust.

“It reminds us that human rights cannot be taken for granted,” said the chancellor, who grew up in the Communist East.

Light installati­ons, concerts and public debates were planned across the city and other parts of Germany to mark the fall of the Wall, including a concert at Berlin’s Brandenbur­g Gate.

Among those who came to Berlin to celebrate were members of the Trabant Club Middle Hesse, which promotes the old East German car affectiona­tely known as the Trabi.

Jens Schmidt, who fled East Germany before the fall of the Wall by driving his Trabi to Hungary and then across the open border to the West, said the club has many young members for whom learning to repair the simple but sturdy vehicles can be a lesson in history and civics.

“The team spirit,” he said. “It was stronger back then.”

Meanwhile in Paris, a French chocolate sculptor celebrated the 30th anniversar­y by taking a hammer to a chocolate replica of the infamous barrier, distributi­ng the sweet chunks to applauding bystanders.

Patrick Roger said it felt “amazing to share the taste, the values and a certain wind of liberty.”

Made with more than 400 pounds of chocolate, the wall scrawled with the words “freedom” and, in German, “I am a Berliner!” was then brought crashing down onto the pavement in front of Roger’s chocolate store, shattering into hundreds of pieces.

 ?? MARKUS SCHREIBER/AP ?? People put roses in remains of the Berlin Wall during a ceremony to celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of its fall at the Wall memorial site Saturday at Bernauer Strasse in Berlin.
MARKUS SCHREIBER/AP People put roses in remains of the Berlin Wall during a ceremony to celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of its fall at the Wall memorial site Saturday at Bernauer Strasse in Berlin.

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