Berlin’s busiest squares,

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Transcript Berlin’s busiest squares,

The Wall cuts through the Potsdamer Platz, formerly one of Berlin’s busiest squares,
focus of the 1953 uprising. Later, many of the buildings on the eastern side [left] would
be levelled. Note the disused entrance to the U-Bahn station, R, once one of the
busiest East-West crossing points. It was blocked off when the border was sealed.
Blocked-off buildings on the Bernauer-strasse. Here, the sector ended at the house fronts, rather than down the middle
of the street. These forcibly emptied buildings show, with a particular pathos, the tragedy of the Berlin Wall. The tanktrap-like objects above the ground floor roofs are called Höckersperrn, “dragon’s teeth”. They are intended to prevent
escapers jumping down from above.
Border-zone sign at Charlottenstrasse, now blocked by the Wall, beyond which construction-work is in progress. In this early
form, a determined escapee still had a chance of crossing the Wall, though it was dangerous, and often fatal, to do so.
The Wall was penetrated with elaborate fortified crossing points, such as this one on Heinrich Heinestrasse. The
overlapping barrier walls prevented an escaping vehicle from being driven straight through at speed.
The cinder-block Wall under construction. In front, West Berliners have erected a hoarding with a photograph of East
German leader Walter Ulbricht and his fatuous statement: “No-one has the intention of building a wall.”
Nikita Khrushchev visits the eastern side of the Wall, 1962. Here, he rides with its political architect Walter Ulbricht, Secretary of
the Council of Ministers of the DDR. It was he who eventually pushed Khrushchev into allowing the Wall to be built.
Inset: Time magazine’s cover portrayal of Ulbricht on 25th August 1961, two weeks after the border was sealed.
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy visits the western side of the Wall, June 1963. He rides with Willi Brandt, centre, Mayor of
West Berlin, and Konrad Adenauer, right, Chancellor of West Germany. It was on this visit that Kennedy included [incorrectly] the
definite article, “Ich bin [ein] Berliner”, thus apparently proclaiming himself a jam doughnut rather than a citizen of West Berlin.
The Guardians of the Wall
Two Grenzer patrol the Wall, keeping a watchful eye on the decadent capitalists on the Western side.
The Grenzpolizei [Border Police, or Grenzer] were a special corps, originally NVA, later directly under
the control of the Ministry of Defence, established to patrol the DDR’s borders in order to stop East
Germans from escaping to the West. There were also Volkspolizei [Vopos, the “regular” police] and
Transportpolizei [Trapos], one of whose tasks was to ensure that the transport system did not
provide a ready means of exit fom the DDR]. The comment made by Peter Tannhoff in his account of
his military service, Sprutz, that the DDR was in fact a giant prison, is a just one.
Grenzer patrol the early barbed-wire “wall”. Of all the uniformed forces in the DDR, they were the most disliked, since it they
who enforced the borders of the DDR. If the DDR was a prison, then they were effectively its warders. Their task was to
“shoot-to-kill” any DDR citizen who tried to escape. Guards who refused or failed to shoot, or who turned a blind eye, were
subjected to some of the most brutal punishments in the Eastern Bloc, the most likely of which was a spell in the punishment
unit at Schwedt, near Brandenburg in Prussia. Being sent down to Schwedt was the most terrifying threat any NVA soldier
could hear, and was more than often enough to command abject obedience. About 50% of border guards were conscripts.
The Grenzer in this photograph are almost certainly conscripts.
Grenzer inspect the documents of an elderly West-Berliner crossing to the East.
Sentries patrol the Wall with the aid of guard-dogs. The
dogs later turned out to be nowhere as fierce as believed.
Another pair of apparently very
bored dog-handlers – or is it the
photographer who is bothering
them? The dog has no such
inhibitions, and is making its
feelings amply clear.
At the Chausseestrasse crossing-point, a French border-guard gazes across the painted white line at his East German
counterpart. The Wall was actually built five metres inside DDR* territory. The guard could easily have escaped to the
West, except that the DDR still had power over his family.
*DDR = Deutsche Demokratische Republik, the official name for East Germany.
The same crossing-point. The car is entering East Berlin. Grenzer tended to be surly; over-friendliness towards
Westerners was regarded with great suspicion by Communist authorities, and could be career-destroying. Notice how this
Grenzer folds his arms and pointedly turns his back towards the photographer in both pictures.
Two sentries patrol a section of the Wall, 1963 – a cemetery in no-man’sland. Is the fellow on the left showing a friendlier face than usual – or is he
just embarrassed at being caught unawares?
The lighter side of the Wall: A sentry converses smilingly with a small boy looking through his binoculars.
Not even totalitarian leaders of the type who ruled the DDR were able to eliminate the normal instincts
and interactions of human nature.
The many and varied duties of a DDR border-guard
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[1] A fast patrol-boat on the
Spree. Some of the sectorborders were canals and rivers.
[2] Patrolling a wooded area of
the Wall. Note the characteristic peaked, green-banded
uniform cap, marking this man
as a Grenzer.
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The length and varied terrain of
the Wall necessitated many
different types of border-duties
for the Grenzer, in order to
protect DDR citizens from
escaping into the decadent
arms of the waiting West. Here
are a few of them:
[3] The view from inside one of
the big guard-towers.
[4] Vigilance on a wharf at
Berlin’s Osthafen.
[5] Guarding an U-Bahn
[underground] station in Berlin.
[6] Keeping watch over a hole
broken through the Wall by
escapees in a vehicle.
[7] Patrolling a bridge-crossing
over a river or lake.
A desolate, grey view of the tank-traps, reinforcing the Wall that divided a city for nearly forty years. West Berlin was a tiny
island in the middle of the DDR, but was so remote to East Germans that it might as well have been on another planet. Even
today, the West still hunts 90-year-old Nazis. But the forty years of Soviet oppression suffered by the citizens of the DDR are all
but forgotten outside of Germany itself.
The headquarters of the feared Stasi [Ministerium für Staatssicherheit - Ministry
for State Security], the DDR’s secret police, in Normannenstrasse, East Berlin.
One in five East Germans is believed to have supplied them with information.
The civilian wearing a hat at the extreme left of the photograph, inset, is without
doubt a Stasi agent.
The Wall claims its victims
One of the very lucky, early escapees. This young man simply cut the first wire fence and ran through to freedom. There was,
as yet, no death strip, and the crowd of people standing looking through the wire probably gave him some cover. It could easily
have been fatal. Others were not so lucky. The Grenzer, from early in the Wall’s history, were required to “shoot-to-kill” anyone
trying to escape the DDR over the Wall, who did not respond to a single warning shot, a requirement that was later dropped.
The first victim of the Wall…
Above: Günter Litfin, 24, was shot while trying to escape
by swimming across the Teltow canal, 24th August 1961.
Right: Litfin is fished, dead, out of the waters of the
Humboldt harbour. He was the first fatality of the Wall. He
was shot by a Trapo [Transport Police] patrolling the
bridge nearby. Below: A Trapo patrols a bridge in Berlin’s
Osthafen [Eastern Harbour].
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“Helft mir doch!” The most infamous Wall death of all…
Peter Fechter [inset], 18, is shot while trying to climb over the Wall, 17th August
1962. 1: Fechter lies at the foot of the Wall, crying out for help, for fifty minutes
before he bleeds to death. He had been shot in the femoral artery. West German
police tried to help at risk to their lives; the East Germans held them off with
automatic fire. They eventually dropped first-aid packages over the Wall, but it was
too late. 2: Grenzer arrive to take the body away. 3: Fechter is carried off by Grenzer
– the fear and tension can be seen in their faces and gestures. 4: Though they tried
to hide their actions as best they could, there was no way of escaping the publicity of
Fechter’s death. 5: The last-known view of Fechter’s body as he is carried beyond
the death strip into East Berlin. Fechter’s harrowing death provoked outrage, and
angry demonstrations in West Berlin. It finally exposed the true nature of the “antifascist protection wall”, and occasioned major revisions in policy by the DDR. Never
again was anyone left to die of his wounds.
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A young man wishing merely to approach the white border line and speak with his West-Berlin girlfriend, from whom he has
been cut off by the Wall, is shot. He lies on the Western side of the border, while French military police hold off Grenzer trying
to take him back into East Berlin. The press, as usual, is taking photographs.