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- <text id=90TT0354>
- <title>
- Feb. 12, 1990: "The Revolution Came From The People."
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 12, 1990 Scaling Down Defense
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 31
- THE GERMANYS
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>"The revolution came from the people. It is they who will bring
- our nation together."
- </p>
- <p>By James O. Jackson
- </p>
- <p> "Hello, boys," cries Ursula Schubert, 39, waving to a pair
- of green-uniformed border guards in Posseck, East Germany.
- Without bothering to show a passport or other identification,
- Schubert, with two of her children in tow, strolls past the
- smiling guards and across a blacktop that covers part of what
- was once the "death zone" between the two Germanys. "I'm off
- to pick up the newspapers," she explains, gesturing toward the
- West German border post 200 yards away.
- </p>
- <p> There are few formalities at the Posseck crossing these
- days. Traveling from East to West has become so commonplace
- that nobody, not even the border guards, pays much attention.
- Yet as recently as a year ago, entering that stretch of plowed
- frontier was an offense that could bring death. Until last year
- the East German guards, today pleasant and unarmed, carried
- automatic weapons and had orders to shoot anyone trying to
- escape to the West. Until the mid-1980s there were mines and
- trip-wire-triggered automatic guns, and even now the zone may
- not be entirely safe. "Stay on the footpath," Schubert warns
- her youngest son, Christian, 3. "We don't know if they took away
- all the mines."
- </p>
- <p> The Posseck crossing is one of 73 holes hacked into the
- 858-mile-long East-West German border since Nov. 9, when East
- Germany granted its citizens unrestricted travel rights.
- Schubert's daily chore is to pick up 25 copies of the
- Frankenpost, a newspaper published in Hof, a sizable town on
- the West German side. She is unaware of and untroubled by the
- fact that politicians in Bonn and Berlin have yet to agree on
- terms for the distribution of West German newspapers, which have
- been banned in East Germany for the past three decades.
- "Frankenpost has a special edition for us, with advertisements
- for clothes and such," she says. "The West German border police
- bring the papers along, and I pass them out in the village.
- Sometimes it's hard to believe this is happening."
- </p>
- <p> Yet it is happening. In a thousand ways large and small, the
- two Germanys are being united. Not by law, not by treaty, not
- by politicians: what is happening is happening from the bottom
- up. Silence and suspicion have been replaced by traffic jams
- and love affairs. While the allies talk of treaty commitments
- and politicians dither over the touchy issue of unification,
- Germans East and West are playing soccer together, going
- shopping together, drinking beer together, dancing together
- and, oddly, breeding rabbits together. "Don't laugh," says
- Arnold Friedrich, the mayor of Modlareuth, a divided border
- town near Hof. "There are rabbit strains over there that have
- developed separately, and rabbit breeders are eager to get
- them. There are government rules on sending animals across. So
- naturally, smuggling rabbits is very active."
- </p>
- <p> Farther north, in Wolfsburg, where the giant Volkswagen
- factory turns out 4,000 cars each working day, Mayor Werner
- Schlimme reels off half a dozen other examples of spontaneous
- East-West contacts that have occurred since the Iron Curtain
- lifted. "One day in November, a couple of garbage men from
- Klotze came over and saw one of our municipal garbage trucks
- at work," he says. "They thought it was wonderful how it lifted
- the cans and emptied them automatically." Garbage men from the
- two sides, separated by politics and technology but united in
- language, began talking trash. The West German workers,
- inspired, suggested to their superiors that Wolfsburg give one
- of its old trucks to Klotze. The city did. Observes Schlimme:
- "There is no better way for reunification to happen than for
- the people to do it instead of the governments. The revolution
- over there came from the people. It is they who will bring our
- nation together."
- </p>
- <p> A similar situation occurred in the border town of Zicherie,
- 15 miles north of Wolfsburg. The local volunteer fire
- department voted to give an old rescue van to Jahrstedt, a
- small East German farm center just 1 1/2 miles away via a newly
- opened border post. But the transfer bogged down in government
- red tape, and the van sits idle in a garage in the West. Still,
- the offer led to discussions among the fire fighters. Within
- two weeks the fire departments met over steins of beer and
- plates of wurst for professional talk. At present they are
- working out disaster plans and communications problems.
- </p>
- <p> Less formally, new friendships are sprouting, and old ones,
- long in forced abeyance, are being renewed. "I went to my
- family's old farm for the first time in 32 years," says Adolf
- Matthies, the former mayor of Zicherie. "It's part of a
- collective farm now, and I don't know anybody there anymore.
- But the people who lived in our old house were very kind to me.
- We had a meal together. I always believed that this terrible
- border would open and that our nation would be together again."
- </p>
- <p> Near Matthies' home lies a memorial stone engraved with the
- words DEUTSCHLAND IST UNTEILBAR (Germany is indivisible),
- placed there three decades ago by a private organization. Yet
- Zicherie and the East German town of Bockwitz, just across the
- double fence, were divided for 32 years. In the old days,
- getting from Zicherie to Bockwitz entailed a drive of 120 miles
- and special permission, rarely given, to enter the border zone.
- Few took the trouble. On Nov. 14 East German workers cut the
- wire, and now hundreds of two-stroke Trabants pour across the
- line every day, loaded with East German shoppers headed to
- Wolfsburg to buy cheap clothes or tropical fruit--or to find
- </p>
- <p>increasingly, Volkswagens and Opels trundle in the other
- direction as former East Germans head back to visit friends and
- relatives. Polls indicate that an astounding 47 million of the
- 61 million West Germans plan to cross the border on visa-free
- visits during 1990.
- </p>
- <p> "Can you believe it? We ran away four days before the border
- opened," says Birgit Zittlau, 26, stopping in Bockwitz with her
- husband Bernd, 27, to chat with an old school chum, Ulrike
- Bromann. "We didn't know if we'd ever see our friends again.
- Now we come over once a week." Bromann says she was shocked and
- saddened when the Zittlaus fled: "I thought they were gone
- forever, but here they are." A divorced mother of three,
- Bromann says she would never contemplate leaving East Germany
- for the West, adding optimistically, "Anyway, the standard of
- living over here will be the same within five years."
- </p>
- <p> The Zittlaus have prospered since they left. Bernd found a
- job as an electrician in Tulau, a farm village near the border.
- The family moved into a modest apartment, made a down payment
- on a 1979 VW and began a new life only two miles from their old
- one in the East. "We'll never come back here to live," he says.
- "But we can visit whenever we want. Everything is normal now."
- </p>
- <p> Not every resettler has found it that easy. At least 125,000
- newly arrived East Germans are still jobless, and West German
- officials hope the shortage of work will prevent a further rush
- from the East. More than 58,000 East Germans crossed over
- permanently during January alone, and by some estimates 3
- million are ready to flee westward if general elections
- scheduled for March 18 fail to produce a government capable of
- reforming the economy and restoring stability.
- </p>
- <p> "Everything depends on democratization," says Wolfsburg
- Mayor Schlimme. "People have to see that they have a future
- over there. Otherwise, they will come over here to find it. And
- no businesses from here will take risks in the East unless they
- have the security of a reliable democracy." Nevertheless,
- Schlimme is enthusiastic about the prospect of Wolfsburg as an
- economic magnet drawing on resources stretching from Hannover
- in the West to Magdeburg in the East. "VW employs 65,000 people
- and draws them from a radius of 60 miles," he says, sketching
- a 60-mile semicircle cut off by the East German border. He
- then completes the circle, taking in Magdeburg, only 40 miles
- away across the border. "Why not draw workers from here as
- well? And why not have workers from Wolfsburg go to factories
- in Magdeburg?"
- </p>
- <p> Volkswagen, in fact, has already made a large commitment in
- East Germany. A development company financed by VW is planning
- a plant in Karl-Marx-Stadt to produce an East German-designed
- replacement for the beloved but outmoded Trabant. "With our
- help they can do it," says VW spokesman Ortwin Witzel. "They
- have excellent workers and fine engineers. They just haven't
- had a chance to show the world what they can do."
- </p>
- <p> In Posseck something else is happening. Schubert's
- 17-year-old daughter Yvonne, pretty and blue-eyed, shows up to
- read the Hof newspaper. She is wearing a Hof-bought T-shirt
- embossed with the word KAMIKAZE and a grinning skull in Day-Glo
- colors. "The kids from here go over to Hof a lot," she says.
- "We shop for clothes. We try new cosmetics. We listen to music.
- We go to clubs. We meet other kids." Youngsters from the West,
- she says, come back with them to Posseck to play music and
- dance at the village youth club, once the ballroom of a manor
- house confiscated from a former aristocrat.
- </p>
- <p> Does she have many Western friends?
- </p>
- <p> "Yes."
- </p>
- <p> A young man?
- </p>
- <p> Blue eyes flutter; a blush rises.
- </p>
- <p> "Yes."
- </p>
- <p> In Posseck, in the Schubert household, unification has
- already arrived.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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