It was November 9th, 1989, in Berlin, Germany. It was cold and dark and Harald Jaeger was at work, walking to the canteen to get a sandwich. He lived in a city divided into two by a 150 km wall of concrete and barbed wire. Harald helped build this wall in 1961 and had worked there ever since. He was there that night.
The Fall of the Berlin Wall
It was November 9th, 1989,
in Berlin, Germany. It was cold and dark and Harald Jaeger was at work, walking
to the canteen to get a
sandwich. He lived in a city divided into two by a 150 km wall of concrete and barbed
wire. Harald helped build this wall in 1961 and had worked there
ever since. He was there that night.
After losing the Second World War,
Germany was divided into four zones,
controlled by the United States, the United Kingdom, France and the Soviet
Union. The capital city, Berlin, was also divided into four areas. Over time,
the US, UK and French zones became one. The Soviet Union, however, believed in
a very different political and economic system. With no trust between the
Soviet Union and the three Western countries, the east of Germany became a
separate state. Berlin was inside this new communist country but was still
divided. As a result, any young, educated people could leave the communist east
for the capitalist west by walking into West Berlin. To stop this, East Germany
began to build a wall around West Berlin. Anyone trying to cross the wall could
be shot. From 1961 to 1989 around 140 people died trying.
Harald, however, still believed in
the wall and in East Germany. Forty-six years old, he was in the Stasi, the
East German secret police. East Germany was a police state and
the repressive Stasi was feared
by many. Jaeger, however, specialised in passport
control. He was now in charge of the
Bornholmer Street border crossing in
the Berlin Wall, where you could move between East and West Berlin.
The communist system that Harald
believed in was in trouble. One month before, Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev had been in Berlin to celebrate East Germany's fortieth anniversary. Gorbachev was trying to reform the Soviet Union and he didn't like
what he saw in East Germany. He saw a weak government hated by many of its own
people. He listened to East Germany's leader, Erich Honecker, and thought he
was a doddery old man, living
in the past.
Gorbachev's dissatisfaction was
clear and that was the green light to get rid of Honecker. On 17th October,
Honecker's colleagues kicked him out and he was replaced by Egon
Krenz. Soon after, Harald and the other border guards were told that there was
a change in policy: do not shoot anyone trying to cross the wall. Krenz had got
a very clear message from Gorbachev: use new ideas and not force to
control the people.
Krenz started a daily press conference on TV to announce any
new ideas. The most urgent thing was to allow East Germans some freedom to
travel. This would make people happier and stop any protests. Reluctantly,
the government agreed that people could travel, but only after getting an exit visa from an office. The law was
quickly rushed through. They would tell
people about the new law on 10th November.
At the same time that Harold
Jaeger was walking to get his sandwich, Krenz saw his colleague Gunter Schabowski.
“Do you have anything for me
to announce?” Schabowski asked.
Krenz quickly handed him the new
law. People will be really pleased to hear any news about freedom to
travel, he thought. Schabowski took the paper. He glanced quickly at it and raced ahead to announce
the end of the Berlin Wall.