Sergei Moskalev, Uliana Sapronava
This is a piece of the Berlin Wall, displayed at the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
For a long time the wall not only separated East Berlin from West Berlin, but also was a symbol of two worlds: the one that was free and the one behind the “Iron Curtain.”
But how did the wall appear?
Divisive split
It was common at the time for Berliners to live in the East but work in the West, and vice versa. Every day, half-a-million people traveled freely from “socialism to capitalism” and back.
'Berlin Crisis'
Why did it happen? Because West Berlin was a “headache” for the Soviet Union and the East German regime. People and resources were leaving the communist side through the transparent border; free-market ideology was seeping through it from the West. For East Germany, it was a deeply destabilizing factor. After consulting with Moscow, the East German government decided to close off the border.
The West was infuriated. Tension in the city was growing. It all resulted in the so-called “Berlin crisis” - one of the most critical confrontations between the Soviet Union and the United States.
On October 28, US military jeeps, bulldozers and tanks began moving from the Western sector to the Brandenburg Gate - planning to destroy the barriers. But toward them came Soviet tanks. This was the peak of the crisis. All night the tanks stood facing one another. In the morning the machines retreated, and the immediate crisis was over. It became clear - the wall was there to stay.
Oppressive barrier
The Wall stood for 20,315 days. Several hundred people died trying to cross from East Berlin to the western side. The West kept fighting for the right to free movement. Almost 50 years later, people still remember U.S. President John Kennedy’s words during a visit to Berlin in 1963: "In the world of freedom, the proudest boast is, ‘Ich bin ein Berliner’.”
And in 1987, also in Berlin, the world heard another famous speech, as President Ronald Reagan appealed to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
Miraculous demolition
“Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate,” said Reagan.
In 1989, the wall fell, as the East German government suddenly re-opened the border.
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