hsz218.txt 8.0 KB

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