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TIME,
November 20, 1989
Freedom!
The Wall crumbles overnight,
Berliners embrace in joy, and a stunned world ponders the consequences
by
GEORGE J. CHURCH
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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!).
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.''
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.''
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.''
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.''
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.
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.
''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.''
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.''
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.
Reported
by Michael Duffy with Bush, James O. Jackson/Bonn and Ken Olsen/Berlin
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