Houston Chronicle Sunday

Faced with new challenges, Germany marks 30 years since Berlin Wall’s fall

- By Frank Jordans

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.

Speaking to European leaders at Bernauer Strasse, 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.

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 post-war 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.

German Chancellor Angela 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.”

She also 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.

 ?? Carsten Koall / Getty Images ?? From 1961 until 1989, the Berlin Wall, built by the communist authoritie­s of East Germany to prevent people from East Berlin fleeing into West Berlin, divided the city. Its opening led to Germany’s eventual reunificat­ion.
Carsten Koall / Getty Images From 1961 until 1989, the Berlin Wall, built by the communist authoritie­s of East Germany to prevent people from East Berlin fleeing into West Berlin, divided the city. Its opening led to Germany’s eventual reunificat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States