Sentinel & Enterprise

Berlinwall relic gets a ‘second life’ on border as Biden adds barriers

- By Elliot Spagat

As the U.S. government built its latest stretch of border wall, Mexicomade a statement of its own by laying remains of theberlinw­all a fewsteps away.

The 3-ton pockmarked, gray concrete slab sits between a bullring, a lighthouse and the border wall, which extends into the Pacific Ocean.

“May this be a lesson to build a society that knocks down walls and builds bridges,” reads the inscriptio­n below the towering Cold War relic, attributed to Tijuana Mayor Montserrat Caballero and titled, “A World Without Walls.”

For Caballero, like many of Tijuana’s 2 million residents, the U. S. wall is personal and political, a part of the city’s fabric and a fact of life. She considers herself amigrant, havingmove­d fromthe southern Mexico city of Oaxaca when she was 2 with hermother, who fled “the vicious cycle of poverty, physical abuse and illiteracy.”

The installati­on opened Aug. 13 at a ceremony with Caballero andmarcelo­ebrard, Mexico’s former foreign secretary who is now a leading presidenti­al candidate.

Caballero, 41, is married to an Iranian man who became a U.S. citizen and lives in the United States. She and their 9-year- old son used to cross the border between Tijuana and San Diego.

Since June, Caballero has lived in a military barracks in Tijuana, saying she acted on credible threats against her brought to her attention by U.S. intelligen­ce officials and a recommenda­tion by Mexico’ s federal government. Weeks earlier, her bodyguard survived an assassinat­ion attempt.

Caballero said that she doesn’t know who wants to kill her but suspects payback for having seized arms from violent criminals who plague her city. “Someone is probably upset with me,” she said in her spacious City Hall office.

Shards of the Berlin Wall scattered worldwide after it crumbled in 1989, with collectors putting them in hotels, schools, transit stations and parks. Marcos Cline, who makes commercial­s and other digital production­s in Los Angeles, needed a home for his artifact and found an ally in Tijuana’s mayor.

“Why in Tijuana?” Caballero said. “How many families have shed blood, labor and their lives to get past the wall? The social and political conflict is different than the Berlin Wall, but it’s a wall at the end of the day. And a wall is always a sphinx that divides and bloodies nations.”

President Joe Biden issued an executive order his first day in office to halt wall constructi­on, ending a signature effort by his predecesso­r, Donald Trump. But his administra­tion has moved ahead with small, already- contracted projects, including replacing a two-layered wall in San Diego standing 18 feet (5.5 meters) high with one rising 30 feet (9.1meters) and stretching 0.6 mile (1 kilometer) to the ocean.

The wall slices through Friendship Park, a cross- border site inaugurate­d by thenU.S. first lady Pat Nixon in 1971 to symbolize binational ties. For decades, families separated by immigratio­n statusmet through barbed wire and, later, a chainlink fence. It is a cherished, festive destinatio­n for tourists and residents in Mexico.

At an arts festival in 2005, David “The Human Cannonball” Smith Jr. flashed his passport in Tijuana as he lowered himself into a barrel and was shot over the wall, landing on a net on the beach with U. S. border agents nearby. In 2019, artist Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana covered the Tijuana side of the wall with paintings of adults who moved to the U. S. illegally as young children and were deported. Visitors who held up their phones to bar codes were taken toawebsite that voiced their first-person narratives.

Cline said he was turned away at thewhiteho­use when he tried delivering the Berlin Wall relic to Trump and then trucked it across the country to find a suitable home. He said the piece has found “its second life” at the Tijuana park alongside the colorful paintings on the border wall that express views on politics and immigratio­n.

 ?? GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A family pushes a snack cart past a slab of the Berlinwall, displayed near the borderwall that separates the United States frommexico, in Tijuana, Mexico, Friday, Aug. 25, 2023. The 3-ton pockmarked, gray concrete slab sits between a bullring, a lighthouse and the borderwall, which extends into the Pacific Ocean.
GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A family pushes a snack cart past a slab of the Berlinwall, displayed near the borderwall that separates the United States frommexico, in Tijuana, Mexico, Friday, Aug. 25, 2023. The 3-ton pockmarked, gray concrete slab sits between a bullring, a lighthouse and the borderwall, which extends into the Pacific Ocean.

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