It happened 30 years ago...
During the 1980s, political opposition in the GDR developed in the Protestant churches and at private meetings. The oppostion groups and networks increasingly succeeded in reaching the public, raising awareness of subjects such as human rights, militarisation, environmental destruction, education policy and urban decay. The exposure of the electoral fraud in May 1989 became a defining moment. The growing dissatisfaction became evident, particularly amongst young people who, increasingly, began to reject the state-imposed constraints.
Migration and flight were key to the breakdown of the SED regime. While many voted with their feet, leaving the GDR, others sought to reform its society. Grass roots movements and parties were founded. The will for change grew among the population. On 7 October, the 40th anniversary of the founding of the GDR, security forces once again beat down the protests; however, on the day of judgement, 9 October in Leipzig, the demonstration passed off peacefully, despite a high security presence. The SED tried to hang on to power by replacing their leaders, but the wave of demonstrations continued to grow.
On 4 November 1989, the largest demonstration in the history of the GDR took place at Alexanderplatz in Berlin. Just a few days later, the Wall fell. By fighting for power, the SED visibly lost ground: The people continued to demonstrate, countless new movements, parties and initiatives were established and the question of power was more openly discussed.
The Alexanderplatz demonstration was a demonstration for political reforms and against the government of the German Democratic Republic on Alexanderplatz in East Berlin on 4 November 1989. With between half a million and a million protesters it was one of the largest demonstrations in East German history and a milestone of the peaceful revolution that led to the fall of the Berlin Wall and German reunification. The demonstration was organized by actors and employees of theaters in East Berlin. It was the first demonstration in East German history that was organized by private individuals and was permitted to take place by the authorities. The speakers during the demonstration were members of the opposition, representatives of the regime and artists, and included the dissidents Marianne Birthler and Jens Reich, the writer Stefan Heym, the actor Ulrich Mühe, the former head of the East German foreign intelligence service Markus Wolf and Politburo member Günter Schabowski.
On 4 November 1989 the demonstration started at 9:30 with a protest march to the Alexanderplatz in the center of East Berlin. At 11:00 the first protesters arrived at the Alexanderplatz. The more than 500,000 protesters came not only from East Berlin but from all over East Germany. Thousands of banners showed the slogans that were already used by hundred of thousands of protesters in other East German cities during the still illegal Monday demonstrations. Neither the opening of the Berlin wall nor a possible German reunification were among the demands. Instead the protesters concentrated on the democratization of East Germany, with references to paragraphs 27 and 28 of the East German constitution which in theory but not in practice guaranteed freedom of speech and freedom of assembly.
The opening speeches were held by Marion van de Kamp, Johanna Schall, Ulrich Mühe and Jan Josef Liefers, who were stage actors from East Berlin. Ulrich Mühe, actor at the Deutsches Theater demanded in his speech the abolition of the first paragraph of the East German constitution which guaranteed the leading role of the Socialist Unity Party. In the next three hours a series of speakers voiced their demands for democratic reforms in East Germany. The three-hour-long demonstration was televised live on East German television, including the scenes of representatives of the regime being jeered and booed by the protesters. Later the dissident Bärbel Bohley would say about Markus Wolf, former head of the East German foreign intelligence service and speaker during the demonstration:
"When I saw that his hands were trembling because the people were booing I said to Jens Reich: We can go now, now it is all over. The revolution is irreversible." |
The most often used protest slogan of the Monday demonstrations as well as the Alexanderplatz demonstration was "We are the people" (German: Wir sind das Volk) which became "We are one people" (German: Wir sind ein Volk) after the fall of the Berlin Wall, thus changing the nature of the demonstrations. Many other slogans and banners have been documented by photographs and by an exhibition in the Deutsches Historisches Museum:
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This double cd features the speeches held at this demonstration.
The demonstration is also well documented on youtube.
Berlin Alexanderplatz - 4.11.`89 - Die Kundgebung am Vorabend des Mauerfalls CD 1
Berlin Alexanderplatz - 4.11.`89 - Die Kundgebung am Vorabend des Mauerfalls CD 2
(256 kbps, cover art included)
2 Kommentare:
Jetzt muss ich einfach mal ein ganz großes Kompliment loswerden ... Deine musikalische wie dokumentarische Aufarbeitung deutsch-deutsch Geschichte (inkl. dem "Fall der Mauer") sucht seinesgleichen ... mag ja sein, dass Dein Angebot eher nur eine Minderheit anspricht ... aber Deine Präsentation in Deinem blog sind einfach einmalig genial ! Vielen Dank dafür !
Thanks a lot for your very uplifting feedback!
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