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- <text id=89TT3065>
- <title>
- Nov. 20, 1989: Berlin Wall:Freedom!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- The New USSR And Eastern Europe
- Nov. 20, 1989 Freedom!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 24
- COVER STORIES: Freedom!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Wall crumbles overnight, Berliners embrace in joy, and a
- stunned world ponders the consequences
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church
- </p>
- <p> For 28 years it had stood as the symbol of the division of
- Europe and the world, of Communist suppression, of the
- xenophobia of a regime that had to lock its people in lest they
- be tempted by another, freer life--the Berlin Wall, that
- hideous, 28-mile-long scar through the heart of a once proud
- European capital, not to mention the soul of a people. And then--poof!--it was gone. Not physically, at least yet, but gone
- as an effective barrier between East and West, opened in one
- unthinkable, stunning stroke to people it had kept apart for
- more than a generation. It was one of those rare times when the
- tectonic plates of history shift beneath men's feet, and nothing
- after is quite the same.
- </p>
- <p> What happened in Berlin last week was a combination of the
- fall of the Bastille and a New Year's Eve blowout, of revolution
- and celebration. At the stroke of midnight on Nov. 9, a date
- that not only Germans would remember, thousands who had gathered
- on both sides of the Wall let out a roar and started going
- through it, as well as up and over. West Berliners pulled East
- Berliners to the top of the barrier along which in years past
- many an East German had been shot while trying to escape; at
- times the Wall almost disappeared beneath waves of humanity.
- They tooted trumpets and danced on the top. They brought out
- hammers and chisels and whacked away at the hated symbol of
- imprisonment, knocking loose chunks of concrete and waving them
- triumphantly before television cameras. They spilled out into
- the streets of West Berlin for a champagne-spraying,
- horn-honking bash that continued well past dawn, into the
- following day and then another dawn. As the daily BZ would
- headline: BERLIN IS BERLIN AGAIN.
- </p>
- <p> Nor was the Wall the only thing to come tumbling down. Many
- who served the regime that had built the barrier dropped from
- power last week. Both East Germany's Cabinet and the Communist
- Party Politburo resigned en masse, to be replaced by bodies in
- which reformers mingled with hard-liners. And that, supposedly,
- was only the start. On the same day that East Germany threw open
- its borders, Egon Krenz, 52, President and party leader,
- promised "free, general, democratic and secret elections,"
- though there was no official word as to when. Could the
- Socialist Unity Party, as the Communists call themselves in East
- Germany, lose in such balloting? "Theoretically," replied Gunter
- Schabowski, the East Berlin party boss and a Politburo member.
- </p>
- <p> Thus East Germany probably can be added, along with Poland
- and Hungary, to the list of East European states that are trying
- to abandon orthodox Communism for some as-yet-nebulous form of
- social democracy. The next to be engulfed by the tides of change
- appears to be Bulgaria; Todor Zhivkov, 78, its longtime,
- hard-line boss, unexpectedly resigned at week's end. Outlining
- the urgent need for "restructuring," his successor, Petar
- Mladenov, said, "This implies complex and far from foreseeable
- processes. But there is no alternative." In all of what used to
- be called the Soviet bloc, Zhivkov's departure leaves in power
- only Nicolae Ceausescu in Rumania and Milos Jakes in
- Czechoslovakia, both old-style Communist dictators. Their fate?
- Who knows? Only a few weeks ago, East Germany seemed one of the
- most stolidly Stalinist of all Moscow's allies and the one least
- likely to undergo swift, dramatic change.
- </p>
- <p> The collapse of the old regimes and the astonishing changes
- under way in the Soviet Union open prospects for a Europe of
- cooperation in which the Iron Curtain disappears, people and
- goods move freely across frontiers, NATO and the Warsaw Pact
- evolve from military powerhouses into merely formal alliances,
- and the threat of war steadily fades. They also raise the
- question of German reunification, an issue for which politicians
- in the West or, for that matter, Moscow have yet to formulate
- strategies. Finally, should protest get out of hand, there is
- the risk of dissolution into chaos, sooner or later
- necessitating a crackdown and, possibly, a painful turn back to
- authoritarianism.
- </p>
- <p> In East Germany the situation came close to spinning out of
- control. Considered a hard-liner, Krenz succeeded the dour
- Erich Honecker as party chief only three weeks ago, and eleven
- days after a state visit by Mikhail Gorbachev. Ever since, Krenz
- has had to scramble to find concessions that might quiet public
- turmoil and enable him to hang on to at least a remnant of
- power. He has been spurred by a series of mass protests--one
- demonstration in Leipzig drew some 500,000 East Germans--demanding democracy and freedoms small and large, and by a fresh
- wave of flight to the West by many of East Germany's most
- productive citizens. So far this year, some 225,000 East Germans
- out of a population of 16 million have voted with their feet,
- pouring into West Germany through Hungary and Czechoslovakia at
- rates that last week reached 300 an hour. Most are between the
- ages of 20 and 40, and their departure has left behind a
- worsening labor shortage. Last week East German soldiers had to
- be pressed into civilian duty to keep trams, trains and buses
- running.
- </p>
- <p> The Wall, of course, was built in August 1961 for the very
- purpose of stanching an earlier exodus of historic dimensions,
- and for more than a generation it performed the task with
- brutal efficiency. Opening it up would have seemed the least
- likely way to stem the current outflow. But Krenz and his aides
- were apparently gambling that if East Germans lost the feeling
- of being walled in, and could get out once in a while to visit
- friends and relatives in the West or simply look around, they
- would feel less pressure to flee the first chance they got.
- Beyond that, opening the Wall provided the strongest possible
- indication that Krenz meant to introduce freedoms that would
- make East Germany worth staying in. In both Germanys and around
- the world, after all, the Wall had become the perfect symbol of
- oppression. Ronald Reagan in 1987, standing at the Brandenburg
- Gate with his back to the barrier, was the most recent in a long
- line of visiting Western leaders who challenged the Communists
- to level the Wall if they wanted to prove that they were serious
- about liberalizing their societies. "Mr. Gorbachev, open this
- gate!" cried the President. "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this
- wall!" There was no answer from Moscow at the time; only nine
- months ago, Honecker vowed that the Wall would remain for 100
- years.
- </p>
- <p> When the great breach finally came, it started
- undramatically. At a press conference last Thursday, Schabowski
- announced almost offhandedly that starting at midnight, East
- Germans would be free to leave at any point along the country's
- borders, including the crossing points through the Wall in
- Berlin, without special permission, for a few hours, a day or
- forever. Word spread rapidly through both parts of the divided
- city, to the 2 million people in the West and the 1.3 million
- in the East. At Checkpoint Charlie, in West Berlin's American
- sector, a crowd gathered well before midnight. Many had piled
- out of nearby bars, carrying bottles of champagne and beer to
- celebrate. As the hour drew near, they taunted East German
- border guards with cries of "Tor Auf!" (Open the gate!).
- </p>
- <p> On the stroke of midnight, East Berliners began coming
- through, some waving their blue ID cards in the air. West
- Berliners embraced them, offered them champagne and even handed
- them deutsche mark notes to finance a celebration (the East
- German mark, a nonconvertible currency, is almost worthless
- outside the country). "I just can't believe it!" exclaimed
- Angelika Wache, 34, the first visitor to cross at Checkpoint
- Charlie. "I don't feel like I'm in prison anymore!" shouted one
- young man. Torsten Ryl, 24, was one of many who came over just
- to see what the West was like. "Finally, we can really visit
- other states instead of just seeing them on television or
- hearing about them," he said. "I don't intend to stay, but we
- must have the possibility to come over here and go back again."
- The crowd erupted in whistles and cheers as a West Berliner
- handed Ryl a 20-mark bill and told him, "Go have a beer first."
- </p>
- <p> Many of the visitors pushed on to the Kurfurstendamm, West
- Berlin's boulevard of fancy stores, smart cafes and elegant
- hotels, to see prosperity at first hand. At 3 a.m., the street
- was a cacophony of honking horns and happily shouting people;
- at 5 some were still sitting in hotel lobbies, waiting for dawn.
- One group was finishing off a bottle of champagne in the lobby
- of the Hotel Am Zoo, chatting noisily. "We're going back, of
- course," said a woman at the table. "But we must wait to see the
- stores open. We must see that."
- </p>
- <p> Later in the day, two young workers from an East Berlin
- electronics factory who drove through Checkpoint Charlie in a
- battered blue 1967 Skoda provided a hint that Krenz may in fact
- have scored a masterstroke by relieving some of the pressure to
- emigrate. Uwe Grebasch, 28, the driver, said he and his
- companion, Frank Vogel, 28, had considered leaving East Germany
- for good but decided against it. "We can take it over there as
- long as we can leave once in a while," said Grebasch. "Our work
- is O.K., but they must now let us travel where we want, when we
- want, with no limits."
- </p>
- <p> The world has, or thought it had, become accustomed to
- change in Eastern Europe, where every week brings developments
- that would have seemed unbelievable a short while earlier.
- Nonetheless, the opening of the Wall caught it off guard.
- President George Bush, who summoned reporters into the Oval
- Office Thursday afternoon, declared himself "very pleased" but
- seemed oddly subdued. Aides attributed that partly to his
- natural caution, partly to uncertainty about what the news
- meant, largely to a desire to do or say nothing that might
- provoke a crackdown in East Germany. As the President put it,
- "We're handling it in a way where we are not trying to give
- anybody a hard time." By Friday, though, Bush realized he had
- badly underplayed a historic event and, in a speech in Texas,
- waxed more enthusiastic. "I was moved, as you all were, by the
- pictures," said Bush. He also got in a plug for his forthcoming
- meeting with Gorbachev on ships anchored off the coast of Malta:
- "The process of reform initiated by the East Europeans and
- supported by Mr. Gorbachev...offers us all much hope and
- deserves encouragement."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev in fact may have done more than merely support
- the East German opening. It was no coincidence that Honecker
- resigned shortly after the Soviet President visited East Berlin,
- and that the pace of reform picked up sharply after Krenz
- returned from conferring with Gorbachev in Moscow two weeks ago.
- In pursuing perestroika--in his eyes not to be limited to the
- U.S.S.R.--and preaching reform, Gorbachev has made it clear
- that Moscow will tolerate almost any political or economic
- system among its allies, so long as they remain in the Warsaw
- Pact and do nothing detrimental to Soviet security interests.
- The Kremlin greeted the opening of the Wall as "wise" and
- "positive," in the words of Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennadi
- Gerasimov, who said it should help dispel "stereotypes about the
- Iron Curtain." But he warned against interpreting the move as
- a step toward German reunification, which in Moscow's view could
- come about only after a dissolution of both NATO and the Warsaw
- Pact, if at all.
- </p>
- <p> West Germany, the country most immediately and strongly
- affected, was both overjoyed and stunned. In Bonn members of
- the Bundestag, some with tears in their eyes, spontaneously rose
- and sang the national anthem. It was a rare demonstration in a
- country in which open displays of nationalistic sentiment have
- been frowned on since the Third Reich died in 1945.
- </p>
- <p> "Developments are now unforeseeable," said West German
- Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who interrupted a six-day official
- visit to Poland to fly to West Berlin for a celebration. "I have
- no doubt that unity will eventually be achieved. The wheel of
- history is turning faster now." At the square in front of the
- Schoneberg town hall, where John F. Kennedy had proclaimed in
- 1963 that "Ich bin ein Berliner," West Berlin Mayor Walter
- Momper declared, "The Germans are the happiest people in the
- world today." Willy Brandt, who had been mayor when the Wall
- went up and later, as federal Chancellor, launched a Bonn
- Ostpolitik that focused on building contacts with the other
- Germany, proclaimed that "nothing will be the same again. The
- winds of change blowing through Europe have not avoided East
- Germany." Kohl, who drew some boos and whistles as well as
- cheers, repeated his offer to extend major financial and
- economic aid to East Germany if it carried through on its
- pledges to permit a free press and free elections. "We are ready
- to help you rebuild your country," said Kohl. "You are not
- alone."
- </p>
- <p> Running through the joy in West Germany, however, was a
- not-so-subtle undertone of anxiety. Suppose the crumbling of
- the Wall increases rather than reduces the flood of permanent
- refugees? West Germany's resources are being strained in
- absorbing, so far this year, the 225,000 immigrants from East
- Germany, as well as 300,000 other ethnic Germans who have
- flocked in from the Soviet Union and Poland. According to
- earlier estimates, up to 1.8 million East Germans, or around 10%
- of the population, might flee to the West if the borders were
- opened--as they were last week all along East Germany's
- periphery. (Within 48 hours of the opening of the Wall, nearly
- 2 million East Germans had crossed over to visit the West; at
- one frontier post, a 30-mile-long line of cars was backed up.)
- West Germans fear they simply could not handle so enormous a
- population shift.
- </p>
- <p> Thus West German leaders' advice to their compatriots from
- the East was an odd amalgam: We love you, and if you come, we
- will welcome you with open arms--but really, we wish you would
- stay home. "Anyone who wants can come," said Mayor Momper, but
- added, "Please, even with all the understandable joy you must
- feel being able to come to the West, please do it tomorrow, do
- it the day after tomorrow. We are having trouble dealing with
- this." In Bonn, Interior Minister Wolfgang Schauble warned
- would-be refugees that with a cold winter coming on, the country
- is short of housing. Hannover Mayor Herbert Schmalstieg, who is
- also vice president of the German Urban Council, called for
- legal limits on the influx--an act that federal authorities
- say would be unconstitutional since West Germany's Basic Law
- stipulates that citizenship is available to all refugees of
- German ethnic stock and their descendants.
- </p>
- <p> The reaction is another indication of how the sudden
- mellowing of the East German state and the crumbling of the Wall
- have taken the West by surprise. The West German government has
- done little or no planning to absorb the refugees: it has left
- the task of resettlement to states, cities and private charity.
- "There is no real contingency plan for reunification" either,
- admits a Kohl confidant. Only in recent days has a small group
- been assigned to examine the reunification question, and it has
- not even been given office space.
- </p>
- <p> Much will depend, of course, on whether, and how soon,
- Krenz delivers on his rhetoric of freedom. The conviction that
- they will be able to decide their future could indeed keep at
- home most East Germans who are now tempted to flee; it is
- difficult to see anything else that might. Until the opening of
- the Wall, however, Krenz's reformist inclinations had seemed
- ambiguous. For many years he had been a faithful follower of
- Honecker's, and as recently as September defended the Chinese
- government's bloody suppression of pro-democracy demonstrators
- in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. His conversion seemed sparked
- less by ideological conviction than by a desperate desire to
- cling to power in the face of street protest and refugee
- hemorrhage.
- </p>
- <p> Even some of last week's moves were ambiguous. The mass
- resignation of the 44-member Cabinet was not so significant as
- it was dramatic, since the Cabinet had been a rubber stamp. Its
- dismissal, however, did serve to rid Krenz of Premier Willi
- Stoph, a Honecker loyalist. The dissolution of the 21-member
- Politburo, and its replacement with a slimmer ten-member body,
- was far more pointed, since that is where the real power lies.
- Some of its more notorious hard-liners got the ax, including
- Stoph; Erich Mielke, head of the despised state security
- apparatus; and Kurt Hager, chief party ideologist. Hans Modrow,
- 61, the Dresden party leader, was named to the Politburo and
- will be Premier in the new government. He has been likened
- alternately to Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin, the reformist thorn
- in the Soviet President's side. Some conservatives, however,
- remain in the reshaped Politburo, and the way Krenz rammed his
- slate through the Central Committee was scarcely an exercise in
- democracy.
- </p>
- <p> The initial reforms, in any case, did not satisfy the
- opposition. "Dialogue is not the main course, it is just the
- appetizer," proclaimed Jens Reich, a molecular biologist and
- leader of New Forum, the major dissident organization. Founded
- only in September, it claims 200,000 adherents and has just been
- recognized by the government, which originally declared it
- illegal. The opposition pledged to keep up the pressure for a
- free press, free elections and a new constitution stripped of
- the clause granting the Communist Party a monopoly on power.
- </p>
- <p> The Central Committee responded in co-opting language. "The
- German Democratic Republic is in the midst of an awakening," it
- declared. "A revolutionary people's movement has brought into
- motion a process of great change." Besides underlining its
- commitment to free elections, the committee promised separation
- of the Communist Party from the state, a "socialist planned
- economy oriented to market conditions," legislative oversight
- of internal security, and freedom of press and assembly.
- </p>
- <p> Thus, rhetorically at least, the opposition no longer gets
- an argument from the government. Gerhard Herder, East German
- Ambassador to the U.S., pledged reforms that "will radically
- change the structure and the way the G.D.R. will be governed.
- This development is irreversible. If there are still people
- alleging that all these changes are simply cosmetic, to grant
- the survival of the party, then let me say they are wrong."
- </p>
- <p> Yesterday, with the Wall still locking people in, such talk
- might have been hard to believe. Today, with the barrier
- chipped, battered and permeable, it is a good deal easier to
- accept. In the end it does not matter whether Eastern Europe's
- Communists are reforming out of conviction or if, as one East
- German protest banner put it, THE PEOPLE LEAD--THE PARTY LIMPS
- BEHIND. What does matter is that the grim, fearsome Wall, for
- almost three decades a marker for relentless oppression, has
- overnight become something far different, a symbol of the
- failure of regimentation to suppress the human yearning for
- freedom. Ambassador Herder declared that the Wall will soon
- "disappear" physically, but it might almost better be left up
- as a reminder that the flame of freedom is inextinguishable--and that this time it burned brightly.
- </p>
- <p>-- Michael Duffy with Bush, James O. Jackson/Bonn and Ken Olsen/
- Berlin
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-