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- <text id=89TT2779>
- <title>
- Oct. 23, 1989: East Germany:Lending An Ear
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 23, 1989 Is Government Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 44
- EAST GERMANY
- Lending an Ear
- </hdr><body>
- <p>East Berlin's leaders finally seem willing to listen to the
- country's dissenters, whose fledgling movement lacks an agenda
- and a Walesa
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe
- </p>
- <p> A nation's leadership often hears what it wants to hear, but
- few have seemed quite so deaf to the public's demands as East
- Germany's rulers. Thousands flee the country, protesters stage
- hunger strikes in churches, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev offers
- a gentle lecture in person -- none of it seemed to make a
- difference. But last week as the cries for democratic reform
- reached a crescendo in cities across East Germany, the leaders in
- East Berlin demonstrated that their hearing faculties were intact
- -- and that they were distressed by the rising noise level.
- </p>
- <p> After a two-day session, the 21 members of the ruling Politburo
- issued a statement that for the first time expressed official
- concern about the recent exodus of 50,000 East Germans to the West.
- Then, in an unprecedented gesture of conciliation, the leadership
- acknowledged, "We are open to discussion." Hinting that press and
- travel restrictions might be eased, the statement continued,
- "Together, we want to discuss all basic questions of our society."
- </p>
- <p> The Politburo's tentative first step toward a softening of its
- policies was already more than many had anticipated. Just two days
- earlier, President Erich Honecker, 77, had all but threatened a
- Tiananmen Square-style crackdown to halt the demonstrations that
- were spreading like a virus from city to city. But after the number
- of protesters multiplied into the tens of thousands, the Politburo
- announced a newfound willingness to discuss limited reforms. The
- sudden shift not only indicated a crack in one of the East bloc's
- most ossified regimes, but also spurred speculation that the ruling
- party was in disarray -- and that Honecker's days were numbered.
- </p>
- <p> As East Germany's Communists struggled to dampen the volatile
- situation, their brethren in Hungary were busy taking steps that,
- even a few months ago, would have seemed impossible. A majority of
- the 1,274 delegates at a Communist Party congress voted to
- rechristen themselves the Hungarian Socialist Party. Hungarian
- Communism, for all practical purposes, was going out of business.
- Coming less than two months after the installation of Poland's
- first non-Communist government since the end of World War II, the
- Hungarian decision reinforced the historic shift taking place in
- Europe.
- </p>
- <p> The popular uprising in East Germany's streets last week, the
- biggest such challenge since 1953, presents Honecker with a far
- graver crisis than the refugee tide. It threatens both to fracture
- civil order and to splinter the once monolithic regime. The
- confused leadership ricocheted between stern warnings and appeasing
- gestures. As Honecker greeted visiting Chinese Deputy Prime
- Minister Yao Yilin, the official news agency ADN warned that "there
- is a fundamental lesson to be learned from the counterrevolutionary
- unrest in Beijing." But the Politburo's subsequent statement
- suggests that many within the ruling elite were drawing different
- conclusions from the Tiananmen debacle. Reports circulated that the
- Politburo had demanded an account of the nation's "critical
- situation" from Honecker. Soon thereafter Honecker postponed a
- visit to Denmark, fueling rumors that he was struggling for his
- political -- and maybe his physical -- life.
- </p>
- <p> The heart of the opposition movement is the New Forum, an
- amorphous collection of mild-mannered pastors, artists and writers
- who coalesced only six weeks ago around a vague demand for
- "democratic dialogue." Although New Forum is technically illegal,
- it has gathered the signatures of more than 20,000 adherents,
- ranging from teachers and train drivers to electricians and factory
- foremen. Unlike Poland, where union workers sparked a popular
- insurrection, no single sector of society fuels the unrest in East
- Germany. The dissenters lack both a leader with Lech Walesa's
- charisma and a specific agenda.
- </p>
- <p> The movement's strength is its links to the Protestant Church,
- which is attended by more than 40% of East Germany's 16 million
- citizens. Since the 1970s, it has provided a forum for human-rights
- and peace advocates. Last week churches in East Berlin, Leipzig and
- Dresden became the gathering points for demonstrators and the
- refuges for protesters when they met up with truncheon-swinging
- riot police.
- </p>
- <p> The demands of East Germany's reformers seem mild when compared
- with the changes unleashed by opposition forces in Poland, Hungary
- and the Soviet Baltic states. The unfocused New Forum has called
- for its own legalization, dialogue with authorities and basic civil
- rights. Only now is it beginning to identify other possible issues:
- ecological and economic problems, industrial and scientific
- development. Though the New Forum's ranks are filled with a wide
- variety of socialists, ranging from doctrinaire Marxists to
- Western-style Social Democrats, they share the goal of a
- liberalized East Germany, not a capitalist one. "We are not enemies
- of the German Democratic Republic or a threat to anyone," says Jens
- Reich, a molecular biologist who helped found New Forum. "We just
- want the country to get out of its present crisis."
- </p>
- <p> Some members will not go even that far. Beneath the New Forum
- umbrella are half a dozen smaller groups that bear such optimistic
- names as Democratic Awakening and Movement for Democracy Now. One
- of them, the United Left, seeks to eliminate the ruling party's
- Stalinist heritage and to form independent trade unions, but its
- members are avowed Marxists who fret that any "fundamental opening
- up of society" could threaten Communist rule. These differences
- could make consensus difficult if the New Forum attempts to draw
- up an agenda. For now, the various factions are not inclined even
- to merge. Says Barbel Bohley, one of the founders of New Forum: "We
- want to remain pluralist because we have suffered under this
- conformist-minded system which has governed our lives."
- </p>
- <p> Some local party officials have shown sympathy for the
- dissidents' cause. In Leipzig, where New Forum brought up to 70,000
- people into the streets last Monday, three party secretaries signed
- a declaration promoting a more open dialogue. In Dresden party
- functionaries met with 20 opposition representatives. Encouraging
- as these moves may be, there is always the possibility of a
- reversal. If the state decides to clamp down, it is hard to predict
- whether the opposition forces will turn out to be marathoners, like
- the Poles, or easily winded sprinters, like the Panamanians.
- </p>
- <p> It is also possible, however, that East Germany's leaders --
- with or without Honecker -- will decide that the status quo can no
- longer hold. They face mounting pressure not only from the
- citizenry but from local government and party officials as well.
- Pragmatists know that the question no longer is if East Germany can
- change but rather how to control the pace of reforms that look
- increasingly inevitable. The risk is that if the East German
- leaders do not listen closely and respond now, they may lose all
- later.
- </p>
- <p>--James O. Jackson and Ken Olsen/Bonn
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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