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Stories. Pieces of the Berlin Wall around the world. On the evening of
Thursday, Nov. 9, 1989, the world changed forever when the Berlin Wall
opened up after 28 years of dividing the city.
Interactive graphic: The Berlin Wall then and now
1
On the evening of Thursday, Nov. 9, 1989, the world changed forever
when the Berlin Wall opened up after 28 years of dividing the city.
The wall was originally built in 1961, although it had been touted in some East German government as early as 1951. There was already a fortified border between East and West Germany but there was nothing stopping East Germans entering the enclave city of West Berlin.
Closing off access any earlier had not been an option due to the existing rail lines that travelled through West Berlin. After the completion of new rail lines in 1961, the East German government was in a position to finally seal off West Berlin.
Any attempt to escape over or through the wall was met with deadly
force. More than 100 people were killed attempting to get into West
Berlin that way.
RELAXATION OF RULES IN 1989
Throughout the summer of 1989, East German citizens took advantage of the open border in Hungary. They were free to travel through Czechoslovakia into Hungary, both of which were Eastern Bloc nations. Once in Hungary, they travelled though Austria and into West Germany.
With mass demonstrations happening, the East German government under new leadership decided to open their borders, including the Berlin Wall, in November. However, the chain of communication broke down rather quickly.
Handed a memo on the new border rules during a live press conference on the night of Nov. 9, East Berlin party boss Gunter Schabowski assumed that the open border took effect immediately and announced it live on East German TV.
Over the following weeks and months, the wall was taken down piecemeal by people and machines, looking to make new openings or to have a piece as a souvenir. Within a year Germany was reunified.
UNIFIED CITY, MEMORIAL AND RECLAIMED SPACE
Since its dismantling, the area where the wall stood has become a monument in some places, as well as new urban development in other places.
Harald Jaeger said in an interview with Reuters that he spent hours before his history-changing decision trying in vain to get guidance from superiors on what to do about the 20,000 protesters at his border crossing clamouring to get out.
When he had had enough of being laughed at, ridiculed and told by commanders to sort it out for himself, Jaeger ordered the 46 armed guards under his command to throw open the barrier.
He then stepped back and cried - tears of relief that the standoff had ended without violence, tears of frustration that his superiors had left him in the lurch and tears of despair from a man who had so long believed in the Communist ideal.
He had joined the border guard unit in 1961. Over 28 years, he saw the barrier grow from an infancy of coiled barbed wire, to a brick wall and then to maturity as a towering 160 Km (100 mile) double white concrete screen that encircled West Berlin, cutting across streets, between families, through graveyards.
"My world was collapsing and I felt like I was left alone by my party and my military commanders," said Jaeger, now 71, remembering the night. "I was on the one hand hugely disappointed but also relieved that it ended peacefully. There could have been a different outcome."
Historians point to Jaeger's courage at the Bornholmer Street crossing as a decisive moment - at 11:30 p.m. on Nov. 9, 1989 - in the demise of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War. Within hours East Germans were dancing on the Berlin Wall at the Brandenburg Gate and other border crossings soon opened.
Such scenes had been inconceivable for all but the naive. U.S. President Ronald Reagan had only recently held a speech at the border urging the Soviet leader, whose troops still held sway in the East: "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall." His words drew some smiles. The Wall, of course, was there to stay.
"Once I was able to come to terms with what happened I was happy for all the East German citizens too because they got what they wanted," said Jaeger, who himself could have faced treason charges for his actions and was briefly subject of a state prosecutor's investigation.
Earlier that evening, Jaeger had been on a dinner break at 7 p.m. and saw the now-famous televised press conference by Guenter Schabowski.
The senior Communist Party official, fumbling with a document before him, flustered and confused, announced almost by accident that East Germans would with immediate effect be allowed to travel freely to the West - something denied to generations after the Wall's construction.
"When I saw him on TV say that I thought 'what a load of total crap'," said Jaeger. "He should have known that East Germans would head straight for the exits when they heard that. But they didn't inform us at all. We were kept in the dark. Had I not seen that by chance, I'd have looked even more clueless."
WHY DID HE DO IT?
Jaeger said he later realized there was a simple reason that none of his superiors dared to tell him what to do when he called for instructions seven or eight times. "Because it was something happening there that wasn't supposed to happen."
The Wall was meant by its creators to last until the day Western-style capitalism finally collapsed and Germany could be reunited under communism. During the 28 years it had stood, at least 136 people were killed trying to scramble across it. Many others failed in inventive escape attempts and were jailed.
Why did Jaeger opt to open the Wall instead of using force to disperse the growing crowd - which at some point late that evening even included the future Chancellor of a united Germany, Angela Merkel?
"I hoped it'd all somehow come to a peaceful conclusion," he said. "When I saw the masses of East German citizens there, I knew they were in the right. But I was only a lieutenant colonel and didn't have the authority. But when no one from above would give any orders, I was practically forced to take action."
Jaeger, who lives on a modest pension in a small town north of Berlin, said the 46 border guards under his command had also been growing nervous as the crowd swelled. There was a fear it could turn violent and their pistols and machine guns could fall into the hands of possible troublemakers in the crowd.
"There were fears they could get their hands on our weapons," said Jaeger. "My border guards were urging me to do something but they didn't know what. They knew their necks would be on the line, so they wanted me to make the decision."
At 11:30 p.m. he ordered his guards to open the wall. They reacted with such disbelief that he had to repeat it.
"They didn't resist but they hesitated because they knew what was happening here wasn't allowed to happen and they knew what was happening here was irreversible," he said. "It took them an instant to come to terms with it. But later on, after it all ended happily, the told me 'Well done, Harald'."
Jaeger, whose role in the fall of the Wall came to light only many years later, is uneasy with his growing celebrity.
Yet many wonder if the showdown could have ended in bloodshed if someone else had been in charge that evening.
"I think about that a lot," he acknowledged. "I wonder if others would have reacted differently in that situation. But it's pointless to philosophize about it. What happened happened."
end quote from:
The wall was originally built in 1961, although it had been touted in some East German government as early as 1951. There was already a fortified border between East and West Germany but there was nothing stopping East Germans entering the enclave city of West Berlin.
Closing off access any earlier had not been an option due to the existing rail lines that travelled through West Berlin. After the completion of new rail lines in 1961, the East German government was in a position to finally seal off West Berlin.
RELAXATION OF RULES IN 1989
Throughout the summer of 1989, East German citizens took advantage of the open border in Hungary. They were free to travel through Czechoslovakia into Hungary, both of which were Eastern Bloc nations. Once in Hungary, they travelled though Austria and into West Germany.
With mass demonstrations happening, the East German government under new leadership decided to open their borders, including the Berlin Wall, in November. However, the chain of communication broke down rather quickly.
Handed a memo on the new border rules during a live press conference on the night of Nov. 9, East Berlin party boss Gunter Schabowski assumed that the open border took effect immediately and announced it live on East German TV.
Fortunately for the thousands of East
German protesters gathered that night, the border guard commander just
happened to see the presser during his dinner break (see story below).
The Berlin Wall was opened late that night and the protesters and the
surprised West Berliners were elated. Among the East Germans there that
nigh was a young Angela Merkel, the current Chancellor of Germany.Over the following weeks and months, the wall was taken down piecemeal by people and machines, looking to make new openings or to have a piece as a souvenir. Within a year Germany was reunified.
UNIFIED CITY, MEMORIAL AND RECLAIMED SPACE
Since its dismantling, the area where the wall stood has become a monument in some places, as well as new urban development in other places.
Take a look at the graphic below to see
what the area of the old Berlin Wall looked like before and after its
demolition. Slide the bar across to see the area pre-1989 on the left
and in 2014 on the right.
By Erik Kirschbaum, Reuters
BERLIN - The East German lieutenant colonel who gave the fateful
order to throw open the Berlin Wall 25 years ago said he wept in silence
a few moments later as hordes of euphoric East Germans swept past him
into West Berlin to get their first taste of freedom.Harald Jaeger said in an interview with Reuters that he spent hours before his history-changing decision trying in vain to get guidance from superiors on what to do about the 20,000 protesters at his border crossing clamouring to get out.
When he had had enough of being laughed at, ridiculed and told by commanders to sort it out for himself, Jaeger ordered the 46 armed guards under his command to throw open the barrier.
He then stepped back and cried - tears of relief that the standoff had ended without violence, tears of frustration that his superiors had left him in the lurch and tears of despair from a man who had so long believed in the Communist ideal.
He had joined the border guard unit in 1961. Over 28 years, he saw the barrier grow from an infancy of coiled barbed wire, to a brick wall and then to maturity as a towering 160 Km (100 mile) double white concrete screen that encircled West Berlin, cutting across streets, between families, through graveyards.
"My world was collapsing and I felt like I was left alone by my party and my military commanders," said Jaeger, now 71, remembering the night. "I was on the one hand hugely disappointed but also relieved that it ended peacefully. There could have been a different outcome."
Historians point to Jaeger's courage at the Bornholmer Street crossing as a decisive moment - at 11:30 p.m. on Nov. 9, 1989 - in the demise of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War. Within hours East Germans were dancing on the Berlin Wall at the Brandenburg Gate and other border crossings soon opened.
Such scenes had been inconceivable for all but the naive. U.S. President Ronald Reagan had only recently held a speech at the border urging the Soviet leader, whose troops still held sway in the East: "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall." His words drew some smiles. The Wall, of course, was there to stay.
"Once I was able to come to terms with what happened I was happy for all the East German citizens too because they got what they wanted," said Jaeger, who himself could have faced treason charges for his actions and was briefly subject of a state prosecutor's investigation.
Earlier that evening, Jaeger had been on a dinner break at 7 p.m. and saw the now-famous televised press conference by Guenter Schabowski.
The senior Communist Party official, fumbling with a document before him, flustered and confused, announced almost by accident that East Germans would with immediate effect be allowed to travel freely to the West - something denied to generations after the Wall's construction.
"When I saw him on TV say that I thought 'what a load of total crap'," said Jaeger. "He should have known that East Germans would head straight for the exits when they heard that. But they didn't inform us at all. We were kept in the dark. Had I not seen that by chance, I'd have looked even more clueless."
WHY DID HE DO IT?
Jaeger said he later realized there was a simple reason that none of his superiors dared to tell him what to do when he called for instructions seven or eight times. "Because it was something happening there that wasn't supposed to happen."
The Wall was meant by its creators to last until the day Western-style capitalism finally collapsed and Germany could be reunited under communism. During the 28 years it had stood, at least 136 people were killed trying to scramble across it. Many others failed in inventive escape attempts and were jailed.
Why did Jaeger opt to open the Wall instead of using force to disperse the growing crowd - which at some point late that evening even included the future Chancellor of a united Germany, Angela Merkel?
"I hoped it'd all somehow come to a peaceful conclusion," he said. "When I saw the masses of East German citizens there, I knew they were in the right. But I was only a lieutenant colonel and didn't have the authority. But when no one from above would give any orders, I was practically forced to take action."
Jaeger, who lives on a modest pension in a small town north of Berlin, said the 46 border guards under his command had also been growing nervous as the crowd swelled. There was a fear it could turn violent and their pistols and machine guns could fall into the hands of possible troublemakers in the crowd.
"There were fears they could get their hands on our weapons," said Jaeger. "My border guards were urging me to do something but they didn't know what. They knew their necks would be on the line, so they wanted me to make the decision."
At 11:30 p.m. he ordered his guards to open the wall. They reacted with such disbelief that he had to repeat it.
"They didn't resist but they hesitated because they knew what was happening here wasn't allowed to happen and they knew what was happening here was irreversible," he said. "It took them an instant to come to terms with it. But later on, after it all ended happily, the told me 'Well done, Harald'."
Jaeger, whose role in the fall of the Wall came to light only many years later, is uneasy with his growing celebrity.
Yet many wonder if the showdown could have ended in bloodshed if someone else had been in charge that evening.
"I think about that a lot," he acknowledged. "I wonder if others would have reacted differently in that situation. But it's pointless to philosophize about it. What happened happened."
end quote from:
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