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Before the Fall
by
Andrew Curry
Untitled Document
The fall of the Berlin Wall was a dramatic moment in
time. In the minds of many East Germans, it was years in the making.
We remember the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 because it was such a perfect
metaphor—joyful Germans running into each other’s arms as
an entire system crumbled, lighting the night with relief and exhilaration.
On November 9, the world celebrates the end of communism and the liberation
of millions from decades of oppression.
Today, few remember the years of patient effort by
dissidents and activists from Warsaw to Budapest that set the stage for
that momentous night. Even in the German Democratic Republic
(GDR)—commonly known as East Germany—the beginning of
the end happened not in the divided capital of Berlin but in
lesser-known cities such as Leipzig, Dresden, and Plauen. In the
tumultuous 20 years since the end of communism in Germany and Eastern
Europe, the focus on the images of that single night has made it hard to
recognize just how much work is necessary for a democracy movement to
succeed.
In East Germany, more than in almost any other country
in the communist bloc, the events that became synonymous with the end of
communism were the fruit of a protest movement that began years before with
no hope of toppling the regime. There was no great symbolism or strategy.
The movement’s greatest ambition was to force East
Germany—which became one of the communist bloc’s most
hardcore regimes after its founding in the
Soviet-occupied zone of Germany in 1949—to live up to its
own ideals. No one imagined bringing down the Communist Party, much less
reunifying Germany.
If you had to put your finger on one thing that opened
the first cracks in the wall, it might be the American Pershing II missile.
When in 1978 NATO announced plans to deploy midrange nuclear
missiles in Europe in response to the Soviet nuclear buildup,
activists on both sides of the divided country protested the idea of
nuclear weapons on German soil. While hundreds of thousands signed
petitions and rallied in the West, in the East the protests were used for
propaganda purposes by the communist regime, which was happy to see people
spontaneously protesting against the United States.
But as the peace movement in the GDR grew, it began
asking hard questions about the situation at home. Protestant churches were
officially tolerated, though cut off from their counterparts in the West
and under constant scrutiny by the authorities. Nonetheless, the church
became a safe space for the peace movement, and many ministers organized
prayers for peace and rallies against militarization, military classes in
grade schools, and mandatory army service.
In 1982, Rainer
Eppelmann—a pastor well known for organizing
blues festivals for disaffected youth at his church in a
working-class East Berlin neighborhood—cowrote a
call for disarmament that was distributed illegally in East Germany and
passed to Western reporters. The “Berlin Appeal” earned him the
enmity of the feared East German secret police, known as the Stasi. (After
the wall fell, Eppelmann’s Stasi file revealed that for years he had
been the target of bugging,
surveillance, and a rumor campaign designed to destroy his marriage and his
ministry. A plan was even hatched to “eliminate” him in a
staged traffic accident.)
“The government told us Pershings and cruise
missiles were the tools of the devil, but [Soviet] SS-13s were doves of
peace,” Eppelmann says. “It was a chance for us, as people in
the GDR, to stand up and say something about the course of GDR politics and
the nuclear arms race.” Peace protesters turned propaganda on its
head. “Swords into plowshares”—the subject of a sculpture
given as a gift to the United Nations by the Soviet
Union—became a slogan. Teenagers sewed patches bearing a
stylized image of the sculpture onto their jackets, only to be threatened
by teachers and police.
Once the peace movement turned critical of the GDR, it
had outlived its welcome, and activists found themselves watched and
persecuted. The one safe haven was the church. Around the same time
Eppelmann was writing his Berlin Appeal, Christian Führer and
Christoph Wonneberger—two young pastors in Leipzig, East
Germany’s second-largest city—began holding
regular Monday evening prayers for peace at the St. Nicholas Church.
Sheltered by the church, the Monday meetings were a
forum for those who felt that East Germany had betrayed its own ideals.
“The church was the one space someone could express
themselves,” Führer says. “We had a monopoly on freedom,
physically and spiritually.”
Looking back, activists remember a mixture of
exhilaration and fear. Sitting in his office at the Forum of Contemporary
History in Leipzig, museum historian Uwe Schwabe—a
friendly, garrulous man with a long ponytail—remembers
feeling transformed when he started attending Monday meetings at St.
Nicholas in 1984. He was just out of compulsory service in the East German
army. “At 22, I experienced young people talking freely about
politics for the first time,” he recalls.
That freedom could be costly: Attending church, let
alone prayer meetings, could mean the end of careers or blackballing by
universities. Under pressure from the authorities, attendance at the Monday
peace prayers shrank to fewer than 10 regulars by the mid-1980s. Gathered
in the chilly, centuries-old church in the city’s center, under
constant surveillance, they could hardly have been called a movement, much
less a threat.
“It wasn’t always easy,” says
Führer, a stocky man who still wears the denim vest that became his
trademark in the 1980s, when the Monday meetings made him one of the most
prominent figures in the East German dissident movement. “Once a
participant said to me, ‘We shouldn’t give up, because if we do
there won’t be any hope at all.’ ”
Slowly, word got around. “It was known
throughout Germany, and everyone in Leipzig knew about it,” Schwabe
says. “The advantage over Berlin or Dresden was that there was this
fixed point over years.” The Monday meetings grew. One of the largest
constituencies was East Germans who had applied to leave the country.
Hopeful emigrants were trapped in a cruel limbo, sometimes waiting years to
hear if they’d be allowed to leave. In the meantime, they lost their
jobs and were ostracized by friends and neighbors. (Many in the dissident
movement, committed to staying and changing the system, saw them as
traitors of a different sort and were reluctant to embrace them; St.
Nicholas Church was one of the few places in East Germany where the two
groups mixed.)
Others started coming too: environmentalists,
conscientious objectors, democracy activists. Each week a different group
organized the meeting, connecting people whose only common cause was a
desire for change. By February 1988, attendance had swelled to 600.
“There was a critical mass,” Führer says.
“Activists, émigré applicants, and curious people from
all over—everything came together at the peace
prayers.”
Leipzig’s Monday
meetings were a sort of North Star in a rapidly growing constellation of reform-minded
citizens’ groups. The thaw was accelerated by events beyond the
borders of East Germany. Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet
Union in 1985, and soon began to implement reforms that gave hope and
energy to people all over the Soviet bloc—and exposed the
inflexibility of their own leadership. After all, if the Soviet Union, long
heralded as the model society by communist parties around the world, was
loosening up, why couldn’t East Germany?
At the same time, warming relations with the West gave
East German activists more breathing room. (GDR head of state Erich
Honecker made his first official visit to West Germany in 1987, and was
intent on securing an invitation to Washington.) Jailing prominent
dissidents brought quick condemnation from the West, for example. By 1989,
Stasi agents were monitoring nearly 200 separate citizens’ groups
pressing for reform on issues ranging from the environment to travel
restrictions.
Much of the unrest was apolitical, but any challenge
to the status quo was implicitly a challenge to the ruling party. Still,
the popular mood was changing fast. “Normal people were fed
up,” says Berlin historian Jens Schöne. “They didn’t
want to wait 15 years for a car, they didn’t want to work in a
factory; they wanted to be able to travel and buy things.” The fact
that the regime never managed to block West German television broadcasts
meant that an entire generation of young people born after the 1968 Soviet
crackdown in Prague wanted the lives they saw beamed into their living
rooms every night.
In 1987, Schöne remembers, the Stasi scrambled to
clear the streets of East Berlin when a David Bowie concert in West Berlin
prompted hundreds of teens, angry that they couldn’t attend, to
gather and chant, “The wall must go.” A year later, the Stasi
deployed agents to monitor Michael Jackson while the singer was in West
Berlin for a concert. Local groups heading out to plant trees or clean
up riverbanks found themselves blocked by police and scrutinized by the
Stasi.
The last straw came on May
7, 1989, when regular elections for local party officials across East
Germany were exposed as fraudulent by a loose network of volunteers who
observed the vote count at local precincts—a right
enshrined in the East German constitution but never before exercised in an
organized way—and then gathered in churches to compare
results. The discrepancies were reported in samizdat pamphlets and passed
to Western reporters. “We could prove the people who were ruling our
country were criminal,” Eppelmann says now, his voice still rising
with outrage and amazement. “They weren’t satisfied with 70 or
80 percent [of the vote]. They needed almost 100. It was
sick—sick, and criminal.”
After a restless spring, summer brought a grim warning
of where things could head. In early June, Chinese tanks and soldiers moved
in on unarmed pro-democracy demonstrators gathered in Beijing’s
Tiananmen Square; hundreds were killed.
For older East Germans, the events in Beijing were no
surprise. Those who had lived through World War II remembered the cruelties
of the Soviet occupation. And there were more direct parallels. In 1953,
workers in 700 East German cities declared their opposition to the Unified
Socialist Party of Germany, or SED, the party that was synonymous with the
East German state, and demanded the reunification of the country. Soviet
soldiers fired on demonstrators, and more than 100 were killed. In the
years since, all opposition movements in the Soviet bloc had met the same
fate: “’53
in Germany, ’56 in Hungary, ’68 in Prague, ’89 in
China—that’s how communism dealt with critics,”
Führer says.
In Leipzig, an unofficial street music festival later
in the month ended with cellists from the Leipzig orchestra being loaded
into police vans. “It was like the Nazis all over again, and people
had tears in their eyes,” says Tobias Hollitzer, a former
environmental activist who now runs a museum in Leipzig devoted to exposing
the truth about the Stasi. “It finally touched people who had doubts
about what was going on at the St. Nicholas Church.”
There was no precedent for
a peaceful transition of power. Throughout Germany’s history,
revolutions had been blood soaked. Even for an ardent peace
activist such as Führer, who had spent eight months in jail as a youth
rather than serve in the army, political change without violence was
practically inconceivable: “It wasn’t imaginable that the GDR
would end. That they would willingly give up their scepter was
unimaginable, and [an opposition movement] taking it by force was equally
unimaginable.”
In the wake of Tiananmen, a different kind of fear pervaded the Monday
peace prayers. Egon Krenz, who soon would succeed Honecker as SED party
leader, visited Beijing days afterward and praised the way the Chinese
government had rescued communism from “counterrevolutionary
elements.” In Leipzig, fear of a “Chinese solution” grew.
“People had seen the pictures from Beijing—it
wasn’t at all clear this would be peaceful,” says
Schöne.
But behind the scenes, the Soviet Union’s
dynamic party secretary made it clear to party leaders throughout the bloc
that the Soviets were no longer interested in intervening in the domestic
politics of their neighbors and client states. Despite the presence of
nearly a million Soviet soldiers in East Germany, Gorbachev’s message
was clear: You’re on your own. Poland held free elections in June
that resulted in a landslide for the Solidarity opposition. Hungary had
relaxed border restrictions with Austria and begun its own process of
peaceful democratization in the spring.
For the first time, East Germans who wanted to
emigrate could make an end run around the Berlin Wall. All summer,
thousands of them voted with their feet, fleeing west via Hungary to
Austria. Thousands more abandoned their cars on the streets of Prague and
climbed over the fence around the West German Embassy, seeking
asylum—a feat previously attempted by only a trickle of
East Germans over the years. By the end of September, 4,500 were camping on
the embassy grounds despite temperatures in the 90s.
The situation was a huge embarrassment for the
leadership in East Berlin—on the eve of the GDR’s
40th-anniversary celebrations, thousands of people preferred living as
refugees to returning. But for those who had been trying to change the
system from within, the crisis was almost as great. “People lost
friends suddenly. Overnight, your doctor was gone, or the baker on the
corner disappeared,” Schwabe remembers. “Everyone had to come
to grips with the future and ask themselves, ‘Do I want to stay and
change things, or leave?’ ”
The official reaction from East Berlin toward those
who fled was contemptuous. “With their behavior, they’ve
trampled on our values and cut themselves off from our society. One
shouldn’t shed any tears for them,” read an editorial in Neues Deutschland, the
party’s official newspaper. The reaction incensed average citizens,
who were realizing that their leaders were completely out of touch.
“What an affront,” Schwabe says. “These were our
brothers, our sisters, people we might not see for 30 years.”
After a summer break (some
things in Germany are sacred, no matter the political situation), thousands
of people showed up at the St. Nicholas Church on Monday, September 4. In
view of Western television cameras in town for a biannual trade show, young
protesters in front of the church unfurled a banner demanding freedom of
travel. “The Stasi ripped it down and tackled the kids,”
Führer remembers; millions of East Germans saw the scene broadcast on
the news the next day.
A new slogan entered the East German vocabulary:
“We’re staying here.” A week later, the numbers at the
church doubled. This time, almost 100 people were arrested and the city
center was nearly shut down by the secret police. Too late: Fanned by West
German television, the flames had begun to spread. The same day,
“Monday Demonstrations” inspired by Leipzig’s peace
prayers were held at Lutheran churches all over East Germany. A movement
eight years in the making was growing exponentially.
Grasping at straws, government officials gave
permission for the embassy refugees in Prague and Warsaw to take special,
closed trains through East Germany to the West—and slammed the
borders with Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Poland shut. East Germans were
now truly prisoners in their own country. On October 3, word got out that
trains full of embassy refugees would be stopping in Dresden on their way
west. Thousands descended on the city’s train station in an
attempt to board what they saw as the last train out of the GDR.
“Closing the borders was like putting the lid on a boiling
pot,” Hollitzer says. Full-fledged street battles
broke out between police with clubs and water cannon and
stone-throwing rioters trying to reach the trains; dozens were
injured.
Long-planned 40th-anniversary celebrations in
East Berlin occurred just four days later, on a Saturday. A
counter-rally swelled to thousands, who marched spontaneously
through the middle of the city during the official parade. As they entered
a residential area a mile or so north, police and the Stasi swept in,
beating and arresting hundreds of people. In Plauen, a bleak industrial
town near the Czech border, police used water cannon to break up a crowd of
10,000 gathered peacefully in the main square.
In the space of five autumn days, the GDR’s
leaders had shown what they were capable of. After the events of that
chaotic week, the St. Nicholas Church Monday peace protests were on a
collision course with an increasingly desperate regime. “[Monday] was
the decisive day,” Führer says. “Either the ‘Chinese
solution’ or—we didn’t know what
‘or’ might be.”
Hollitzer, the Stasi museum director in Leipzig, says
the archival evidence is damning. In the first week of October, nearly
3,500 East Germans were arrested as the police tried to jail anyone they
thought capable of organizing protests. Hospitals in Leipzig were told to
prepare extra beds, detention centers were set up on the outskirts of the
city to handle arrestees, and 8,000 police were
brought in, enough to handle roughly 20,000 protesters. A few days before,
the cofounders of the Monday rallies, Führer and Wonneberger, had been
arrested and warned by a livid Stasi officer to call everything off, then
quickly released. “It’s clear what was supposed to happen on
October 9,” Hollitzer says. “They were going to clean
up.”
At 3 pm on Monday, Schwabe made his way to the church through an eerily
empty city. “It was like the calm before a storm,” he says. At
five, nearly 8,000 people crammed into St. Nicholas. Three other downtown
churches opened their doors to accommodate the overflow.
“When I came out, the square in front of the
church was full,” Schwabe recalls. Police had blocked the road that
led to the city’s historic marketplace, so the crowd flowed in the
other direction. “The next stop was the
Augustusplatz”—downtown Leipzig’s largest open space,
sandwiched between the philharmonic and the opera house—“and it
was full too, just black with people.”
In the end, nearly 70,000 Leipzigers, a sixth of the
city, poured into the streets in peaceful protest that night. Chanting
“Keine Gewalt”
(No violence) and what would become the iconic slogan of the opposition
movement, “Wir sind das Volk” (We are the people), the crowd carried their candles
onto the ring road around the city center, marching past the Stasi
headquarters and the hundreds of police gathered in front of the train
station. “It was a great sign of hope. To hold a candle, you need
both hands—one to hold the candle, and the other to keep it
from being blown out,” Führer says. “You can’t hold
a rock in your other hand.”
The entire city was swept up. Trams ground to a halt,
and drivers left their cars in the middle of the road to join the march.
After frantic requests for instructions from East Berlin went unanswered,
the police packed up and left. “They were ready for everything except
candles and prayers,” Führer says. “That night, the GDR
was a different place than it had been that morning.”
A 10-minute tape of the march, filmed in secret by a
TV crew hidden in a church steeple, was smuggled back to East Berlin and
across the wall, then broadcast on West German television. (Not until after
the Stasi archives were opened did more pictures of the
protests—from the secret police
perspective—come to light.) The sheer number of people who
peacefully took to Leipzig’s streets had disarmed the East German
regime. “The decisive day was in Leipzig,” Eppelmann says.
“They were all ready to crack down on 30,000, but
30,000 didn’t show up, 70,000 did. Seventy thousand people who
didn’t know if they’d come home intact or see their families
again. It was a heroic and enormous act of moral courage.”
In the weeks that followed, there was chaos behind the
scenes in East Berlin as the party tried desperately to save itself. Many
of the SED’s hard-liners were pushed out of their
leadership positions in the hopes that a compromise with the opposition
might be made. But the dam had broken. On October 16, a procession of
150,000 people marched around Leipzig’s ring road; the week after it
was 300,000, the crowds of Leipzigers joined by people from all over East
Germany. On November 4, more than 500,000 people flooded Alexanderplatz in
East Berlin.
After the drama of the
Monday Demonstrations, the fall of the wall was an anticlimax. On November
9, the day after a party congress designed to get the SED back on its feet
and reclaim control, a routine press conference was called to announce the
party’s latest decisions. As the conference drew to a close, an
Italian journalist asked Politburo member Günter Schabowski if there
would be any changes to the repressive East German travel restrictions.
Flummoxed, Schabowski said that as far as he knew all restrictions were
being lifted immediately. His casual announcement on live television sent
thousands to Berlin’s border crossings on the night of November 9,
where confused, overwhelmed guards stood back and let people through.
After the heady days of opposition, the sudden
collapse came as a shock. Even then, reunification was unimaginable. For
the dissidents who had been filled with hope at the sight of East Germans
rallying to their cause, the fall of the wall was initially seen as a huge
setback. “We were disappointed,” Schwabe admits. “We
thought everyone who would help us change the country would leave, and
there would be no reason to come out on the street.” A friend of
Eppelmann’s made it a few hundred yards across the border that night
before panicking and running back to East Berlin, afraid the entire scene
had been a Stasi trick to get rid of troublemakers so the door could be
closed firmly behind them.
Of course, we know now that November 9 was merely the
end of the end. Within a year, the two Germanies—divided
for almost half a century—were united again, and communism
was a relic. But because of the way we remember the fall of the wall,
we’ve assumed ever since that the sudden end of an unpopular
regime—in Serbia, in Iraq, in Ukraine, in
Georgia—is enough to replicate the successes of 1989, and
that the institutions and attitudes that form the basis for civil society
can be created overnight. For the same reason, opposition movements that
don’t succeed immediately tend not to garner much lasting
interest.
But talk to the people who risked everything to show
up at St. Nicholas Monday after Monday, never dreaming of a night when
there would be no need, and one thing becomes clear: In the places
where it mattered—in Warsaw, in Budapest, in East
Berlin—change took time. After the wall came down, Rainer
Eppelmann spent 15 years as a member of parliament and now runs the
government-funded Foundation for the Study of the SED Dictatorship. Looking
back, he says revolutions can’t—and
shouldn’t—be rushed. “No chancellor, no U.S.
president, no British prime minister, could send in troops to Central
Europe and liberate the people. It would have meant war,” he says.
“What happened was a self-liberation. Soft water breaks the
hardest stone.”

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Andrew
Curry is a freelance writer based in Berlin. His work has appeared in Smithsonian, Wired, Foreign Policy, and elsewhere.
Reprinted from Autumn
2009 Wilson Quarterly
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