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- The Berlin Wall
- For twenty-eight years, the Berlin Wall separated friends, families, and a nation.
- After the second World War in 1945, the victorious Allies, the US, Britain, France,
- Russia divided Germany into four sectors, each under the control of an ally. The US,
- British, and French Sectors combined to form a democratic state, The Federal Republic of
- Germany, or West Germany. The Soviet sector became a communist state, The German
- Democratic Republic, or East Germany, on October 7, 1949.
- A barrier now separated east and West. Winston Churchill named this barrier the
- Iron Curtain. Even though Berlin lay deep within the Soviet sector, the Allies thought it
- best to divide this metropolis. Therefore Berlin was also divided into four sectors. Again
- the US, British, and French Sectors combined to form West Berlin. The Soviet sector
- became the East German capital, East Berlin.The governments of these two new countries
- were set up by the occupying forces, not the populous. Most of the residents of East
- Berlin and East Germany did not like the communist regime. In fact, most people were
- not communists.
- The Berlin Wall, though not part of the iron curtain, was a reminder of it. The
- wall was made of steel, cement, and barbed wire fences with traps and explosives. There
- were guard towers with machine guns and other weapons. It was almost impossible to
- cross this barrier without the communist government's permission.
- Conrad Shuman was a nineteen year old border guard when he witnessed families
- tearfully separated. He realized he was not protecting his country, but imprisoning its
- people. Three Days after the border was closed, he leapt to freedom.
- The people of East Germany became dissatisfied with the economic and political
- conditions of the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Private trade was outlawed, as
- was the ownership of private land. People were forced to work on collective state owned
- farms. There were food and supply shortages. Onehundred-sixty thousand refugees
- crossed the border from East Berlin to West Berlin between January and the beginning of
- August of 1961 in search of a better life. This upset the East German government and the
- Soviet countries. (East Germany was a Soviet satellite, but was of special interest to
- Moscow).
- Nikita Kruschev, the Soviet premier of that time ordered the Berlin wall built to
- stop the flow of refugees. The GDR began building what they called the anti-fascist
- protection wall on August 13, 1961, using barbed wire and anti-tank obsticales.
- However the East German citizens were still escaping. The GDR added tanks at
- important streets some supplied by the red army. They tore up the streets to use the
- paving stones to build barricades.
- There were many escape tunnels dug under the wall. The tunnel system was an
- extraordinary resistance movement dug by hundreds of East Berlin students with
- thousands more willing to help. The first successful tunnel was in an East Berlin
- Graveyard. Mourners brought flowers to a grave and then dropped out of sight. A woman
- with a baby accidentally found the tunnel and escaped leaving the baby carriage. The
- police found the carriage and closed the tunnel. The largest tunnel was in the basement of
- a house at number sixty Wernerstrasse, twenty-nine people were freed from this location.
- On August 23, 1961, the GDR stopped the subways, the railroads, and the
- telephone lines going to West Berlin. The people of East Berlin were no longer allowed
- to enter West Berlin, including the sixty-thousand workers who worked in West Berlin.
- However East Berliners still managed to get out. Some of them bribed their way out with
- cigarettes and money. After some people managed to scale the wall, there was a ban on
- the sale of rope and twine.
- On September 20, 1961, the GDR began to demolish all of the houses near the
- wall. They began construction of a more permanent concrete wall. When completed the
- wall was onehundred-sixtysix kilometers long, and an average of four meters high,
- topped with concrete tubing and barbed wire. Behind the wall was a trench to stop
- vehicles. After that was a patrol track with a corridor for watch dogs, watch towers, and
- bunkers. Behind that was a second wall. This area of no man's land cut off
- onehundre-ninetytwo streets.
- Checkpoint Charley was the main crossing point for the American sector of West
- Berlin. It was sixhundre-eighty feet west of the Brandenberg Gate. On October 27, 1961,
- the Unites States sent tanks, jeeps and soldiers to Checkpoint Charley go guarantee US
- officials access to West Berlin.
- During the twenty eight years the wall was standing, over five thousand people
- tried to escape. Over one-hundred died in the attempt. most were shot by the GDR border
- guards.
- On August 17, 1962 near Checkpoint Charley, Peter Fechter, age eight-teen, was
- shot down and left to bleed to death by the border patrol as he tried to climb over the
- wall. After Peter's tragic death, riots broke out in West Berlin, and the West Berliners
- began to resent the Americans for failing to help the bleeding youth. This prompted US
- President John F. Kennedy to visit Berlin to ask East Germany and the USSR to tear
- down the wall.
- The Wetzels and the Strelzycks secretly purchased many small amounts of nylon
- cloth. They made a hot air balloon large enough to lift four adults and four children.
- Close to midnight on September 15, 1979 they drove to a deserted field and took off.
- Twenty three minutes after liftoff the gas burner died ant the balloon fell. Soon they
- realized that they had triumphantly landed on West German soil. After their escape,
- purchases of lightweight fabrics were limited in East Germany.
- The beginning of the end of the German Democratic Republic and the Berlin Wall
- was when Hungary (another communist state) opened its doors to the west. Migration
- between Communist states was unrestricted, therefore, East Germans would go from East
- Germany to Hungary and from there to West germany, or any other Western European
- state.
- There were large demonstrations in Leipzig on Mondays. East Germany began to
- reform. On November 9, 1989 at about 7:00 PM, the leader of the East Berlin communist
- party, Gunter Schabowski, announced that the boarder with West Berlin would be opened
- for private trips abroad. Wall woodpeckers started to use hammers and chisels to
- knock out pieces of the wall. Shortly thereafter, a massive emigration of East berliners to
- West Berlin began.
- There were mass celebrations at the important places in both cities, including the
- Brandenberg Gate and Kurfstendam in West Berlin. On November 10, 1989 and later on
- December 22, 1989 checkpoints were opened for pedestrians at Potsdamer Platz and the
- Brandenberg Gate. Finally on July 1, 1990 East and Wast Germany were united. They
- assumed West Gernamy's old name, The Federal Republic of Germany. All restrictions,
- travel and otherwise between East Germany and West Germany were dropped. The entire
- wall was taken down except for the areas of historical importance such as the section in
- front of the parliament of Berlin and the places with graffiti artwork.
- The reunification of Germany was a great victory for the German people and the
- nations of the west.but the Berlin Wall has left economic and emotional scars that can
- only be healed by the hard work and understanding of generations to come.
- Finally, my research found many residents of the GDR who welcomed the
- Communist Government both during the time the wall was up and to a greater extent
- immediately after reunification when unemployment and inflation in East Germany
- soared, it remains our conclusion that most East Germans did not like the communist
- regime. In support of this position is the fact that while thousands of people tried to cross
- the wall from East Germany to West Germany and over one hundred people died in the
- attempt, there does not appear to be a single case of anyone climbing the wall in the other
- direction. Overall the arrising and destruction of The Berlin Wall proved to seperate two
- nations, but overtime brought those nations from being allies to comrads.
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- Words: 1346
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