BEYOND THE BERLIN WALL / EAST GERMANY, 1989

Half a life ago, Katrin blew the Wall down

Headshot of Doug Saunders

DOUG SAUNDERS

November 7, 2009

LEIPZIG, GERMANY -- Through the bare tile walls of her solitary-confinement cell in Leipzig, Katrin Hattenhauer could feel a rumbling. As she lay on her bare, plank bed, her petite frame shook with a vibration from the main street outside, the sound of something large and heavy and determined.

She knew, from the air of distress among her Stasi guards, that something was going on. But it was damningly hard to make the distinction: Was this the thundering surge of huge numbers of people rising against the state, or of tanks and columns of soldiers restoring order?

It was Monday, Oct. 9, 1989. In a month, it would be her 21st birthday. It seemed unlikely she would live that long. Cancer had nearly killed her five years before, and now the Stasi, the East German secret police, had told her that they wanted her dead, soon.

She had been locked in isolation for five weeks, after being picked out of a crowd of hundreds and arrested for insurrection as she carried a large, cloth banner: "For an open country with free people."

The last time any East Germans had made such an explicit call for openness, in 1953, hundreds had been massacred by Soviet tanks, and nobody had dared protest openly for democracy after that.

Her Stasi interrogator had said to her, during one of their lengthy sessions: "When things start outside, when we are given the order to start shooting, you can be sure that you will be the first in this jail to be put up against the wall."

Unbeknownst to Katrin Hattenhauer, East Germany had erupted that Monday, in her name. The banner she had carried, and the air of martyrdom created by the arrest of her group of unknown students, had galvanized the nation.

During her confinement, the tiny, silent peace protests they had been holding on Mondays in the square of Leipzig's St. Nicholas Church had metamorphosed into a full-scale revolt with thousands of people, then into a mass insurrection with tens of thousands, then into a national revolution, bringing a million people onto the streets, that would precipitate the end of the Berlin Wall exactly a month later, on the night of Nov. 9.

When Berlin celebrates the 20th anniversary of the Wall's breach on Monday, it will mark a symbolically important event that was neither the beginning nor the end of anything. Communism would stagger on for a month after Nov. 9, and elections and German reunification wouldn't take place until well into 1990.

Nor was the Wall's fall the event that triggered the end of East German communism. That pivotal event, the day that ripped past from future, had taken place exactly a month earlier, in Leipzig, where pressure had been building quietly, for weeks and years, in a church courtyard.

Its eruption was what Katrin Hattenhauer had felt shaking her prison-cell bed. It was the eruption she and her friends had launched.

The rumbling she felt on Oct. 9 had been the force of 70,000 people marching past and occupying the city's downtown district. Tanks, dogs and train-loads of shells had been shipped into the city that morning, and stood waiting at the train station, along with thousands of troops.

The soldiers were under direct orders from Erich Honecker, the leader of the German Democratic Republic, to prevent the occurrence of mass protests "from the start," and, if provoked in any way, to respond "offensively." Only four months earlier, tanks had cleared Beijing's Tiananmen Square of democracy protesters, killing hundreds. Mr. Honecker was not against a Chinese option. Slaughter seemed the logical outcome.

But the soldiers did not fire. They didn't even block anyone's path. Mr. Honecker was shocked, and only a few days later the magnitude of the Oct. 9 protest (and the even-larger ones encouraged by its lack of violence) would force him to resign.

Their decision not to shoot - apparently made without much discussion - owed much to the collapse of East German confidence. Russian premier Mikhail Gorbachev had made it clear a year before that he wouldn't use Soviet troops to enforce communism in satellite states. Poland and Hungary had ceased to be communist earlier that year in peaceful, negotiated handovers, so they wouldn't provide troops.

But even more important was the tradition of calm, tranquil protest that began in Leipzig as "prayers for peace" with a few dozen people holding candles, expanded into the Monday demonstrations and then inspired the quiet queues of people who chanted open the Wall on Nov. 9.

On that Monday, the soldiers searched for provocations that might justify a violent response, but found none. "We were told we would be facing counterrevolutionaries," one soldier explained later, "and we realized it was just people like us."

It was the ultra-communist showroom of the Bloc

To understand what had made people here arrive so late to the world of democracy, and then to demand it in such an insistent, calm way, you have to understand the nature of the German Democratic Republic, as it was then known.

East Germany, unlike Poland or Hungary, had never had an organized anti-communist resistance. Nor had it ever had a reformist, liberalizing communist government, like Hungary in 1956 or Czechoslovakia in 1968.

Instead, it had been rigidly authoritarian, with a third of the population reporting their friends and neighbours to the Stasi, and very tightly controlled. It played a special role in the Eastern Bloc: It was a garrison state for 500,000 Soviet troops; it was also the model socialist society, a showcase of co-operative success on the edge of the fractious West.

When the Berlin Wall was built in 1961 by Mr. Honecker, then a mid-ranking official, it had been not just a symbol but a very tangible extension of the physical, ideological and psychological barriers that girded this country.

But East Germany offered one small window of dissent. The Protestant church, and the circle of small seminary schools it controlled, were tolerated by the regime, albeit suspiciously, and allowed a narrow form of autonomy. Their members could protest quietly for "peace" (so long as the protests were aimed at the West) and for ecological causes, with somewhat less surveillance and punishment than ordinary citizens would face.

It took a second East German generation, those who had been born more than a decade after Moscow had created the communist state after the Second World War, to take advantage of this.

This generation had grown up with neither the ideological zeal and optimism of their parents (as the socialist economy had begun to decline precipitously into debt and dependency in the 1970s), nor the mortal terror that gripped those who had experienced the Red Army invasion of 1945 and the slaughter of 1953.

At the same time, they had grown up with access to foreign TV and radio, and far easier travel: By the 1980s, six out of 10 East German families owned a car (albeit a cheap plastic Trabant), and could holiday anywhere in the Bloc.

"I didn't understand historically what was going on around me, but what was clear to me as a teenager was that the state was lying constantly," Katrin Hattenhauer, who was born in 1968, told me. Her father had died shortly before her birth, and she had watched her mother, a nurse, forced to have the "privilege" of working 12-hour shifts to support her four children.

"When there were elections, we'd hear on state television that Honecker had won with 99.9 per cent of the vote. ... The place I lived seemed both absurd and dishonest. So my protest activities came from a very personal place."

Starting in 1982, students began holding tree-plantings (some of which were violently crushed by the regime) and ecological protests. Ms. Hattenhauer had battled cancer at the age of 15, and the state nearly abandoned her because it believed she would die; neither further treatment nor education was considered worth the money.

When she survived, it gave her a defiant attitude: This led her to enroll in the Leipzig seminary school, which took in only a dozen students a year.

One of them was Rainer Müller, two years her senior, a serious young man who, like her, had been an inveterate protester from his early teens. Unlike her, he had travelled abroad, in 1988 going to Czechoslovakia, where he had met an older generation of dissidents, something East Germany didn't have - radical historians who were members of the Charter 77 democracy movement.

"When I began to talk to historians in Czechoslovakia, I came home feeling quite certain that the regime would collapse some day - that I would have children and that they would not be learning from the same lying textbooks I did," he told me at a café across from the church in Leipzig, where he still lives.

"By the fall of 1989, it seemed clear that the regime was mainly concerned with saving face - they wanted to figure out how best to manage the inevitable revolution for temporary advantage."

The "peace prayer" protests (only a small fraction of the participants had religious beliefs) and environmental statements had not been intended to challenge the existence of the state. Nobody dared imagine that. But the mood in East Germany changed in 1989: Between the increasingly dramatic liberalizations occurring in the USSR under Mr. Gorbachev, the sense of economic collapse within the GDR and the quiet revolutions in Poland and Hungary, there was a desire for change.

And one of the only vehicles for change was the small circle of protesters in Leipzig.

"No one was dreaming that the Wall would fall," Ms. Hattenhauer said. "That was unimaginable - 1989 was a year of escalation, where we had the feeling the state was getting more dangerous. People were being arrested faster and disappearing faster. Nobody had sensed that the system was kaput economically."

By July, after news of Poland and Hungary ending communism had reached the public, the Monday protests were attracting hundreds of people. The Stasi and police would sometimes arrest and beat protesters - they had started to worry.

But the protesters became organized. There was a circle of half-a-dozen young students who became very adept at sidestepping the Stasi. Mr. Müller devised ways to stay in touch with other protest groups forming in different cities. And he developed a way to get videotapes of protests, and subtle messages of coming ones, smuggled out to the West, where they would be broadcast on TV stations that could be received in towns close to the border such as Berlin and Leipzig.

Ms. Hattenhauer became skilled at creating and sending messages: She hid a set of photocopying machines in her dorm room, which was part of a convent and therefore immune from sudden searches.

Starting on Sept. 11, the protests suddenly started attracting very large numbers of people, in the hundreds. And the Stasi responded with savage beatings and multiple arrests.

"In the fall, the feeling was very nervous and tense," she recalled. "Most of us thought that the state was like an injured animal that was about to lash out irrationally. The only way we were going to prevent it from killing us was with numbers of people."

She was arrested at that early-September protest, along with several other protesters and leaders, as a warning to other possible protesters: This could happen to you.

But it backfired. As a direct consequence, the crowds grew exponentially, from thousands to tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands. Mr. Müller and his colleague Uwe Schwabe, an army veteran, penned a set of demands that were presented to the government. They expected a gradual loosening and reform. Instead, after the growing mobs of early November, the government simply stepped down.

She blows out candles -

and the lights of the state

Three weeks after her release from prison, on Nov. 9, Katrin Hattenhauer took the train to Berlin. This was illegal, as she was still under arrest for insurrection and was not allowed to travel.

But she wanted to celebrate her 21st birthday, on Nov. 10, so she defied the Stasi and went to meet her friends at a bar on Bornholmer Strasse, near a fortified checkpoint. Later in the evening, guests started leaving because they had heard a rumour that the Wall had opened.

Nobody believed it until the bar owner himself shut down the place, ushered everyone out and made his way down the street to the crossing.

What had happened at the Wall that night, like what had happened in Leipzig in September and October, was by no means inevitable and relied entirely on the quiet accumulation of large numbers of people.

An official had announced, earlier that day, that more-liberal travel policies would soon be in effect. Without clear instructions, he mistakenly announced that they were in effect immediately. Within an hour, East Germans were rushing to the border crossings to find out if they could get visas to the West.

The bureaucratic confusion and the sheer number of people pressing at the gates, especially those at Berlin's Bernholmer Strasse checkpoint, eventually provoked the guards simply to throw up their hands, open the gates and walk away.

Shortly after that, the heroes of 1989 simply melted into the crowd. Unlike in Poland and Czechoslovakia, people such as Ms. Hattenhauer and Mr. Müller were not transformed into heads of state and cabinet ministers: There was a pre-existing German government waiting to absorb the reunified East.

Mr. Müller stayed east and had the family he had put off during the underground years, staying an environmental activist. Ms. Hattenhauer moved west and became an artist. Most of their colleagues followed similar paths: Now in their early 40s, they reminisce about the moment, half a lifetime ago, that they changed history.

"It was completely absurd: We didn't really believe it until we saw it," Ms. Hattenhauer said while making me coffee in her flat in one of the quiet bedroom communities that make up much of the former West Berlin, now that the city's core has shifted sharply east.

"It was almost cute to see how the East Germans just went to see if it could possibly be true, and just by being there in such numbers they made it come true.

"For me, it was a sign of what could have happened had we gone to the Wall years earlier, instead of doing a typical German revolution where we all went to work during the day and then we went to the St. Nicholas Church afterwards and protested."

She laughed at this, and reflected for a moment. "Maybe something would have happened much earlier if we'd done that, but we went about it in a very organized, very peaceful, German way, so it took a lot longer."

Doug Saunders is a member of The Globe and Mail's European bureau.

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Lichtfest - 20 Jahre friedliche Revolution am 9. Oktober 2009
Startseite
»Liebe Leipziger, liebe Freunde, liebe Gäste,

für mich ist es etwas sehr Besonderes heute hier zu stehen. Vor 20 Jahren konnte ich leider nicht dabei sein. Ich war im Gefängnis. Ich möchte mich hier an dieser Stelle heute bei jedem einzelnen der 70.000 Demonstranten bedanken, die am 9.10. vor 20 Jahren das Land verwandelt haben und meine Freiheit und die vieler anderer Inhaftierten erkämpft haben.

Danke an dieser Stelle auch an unsere Freunde in ganz Osteuropa. Vielleicht können ein paar von Ihnen mich heute hier hören oder sehen. Die Solidarnosc in Polen und die Charta 77 in Tschechien waren für uns Vorkämpfer und Unterstützer in der Zeit der Wenigen.

Wir waren wenige, wir hatten Angst und wir waren mutig.
Als ich im September 89 ins Gefängnis kam, war die Kirche voll. Als ich aber im Oktober wieder frei kam, waren die Kirchen, die Strassen und die Plätze in dieser Stadt und an vielen anderen Orten voll mit protestierenden Menschen.

Wir haben etwas gewagt und wir haben gewonnen. Wir in Leipzig sind Vorbild für unser Land. Wir haben die Demokratie nicht geschenkt bekommen, wir haben sie uns erkämpft. Das war das Wunder von Leipzig.

Deshalb lasst uns heute unsere Freiheit feiern.«

english »
Graffiti-Wand, erstellt von Studenten des Seminars Prof. Weissenberger. Foto anlässlich des Gastvortrags an der Rice-University/Public Library, Houston.
Fest der Freiheit - 20 Jahre Mauerfall am 9. November 2009
»Auf unserem Transparent stand: "Für ein offenes Land mit freien Menschen". Das war unser Traum - damals - und ich und meine Freunde waren bereit einiges dafür zu tun und zu kämpfen. Ich bin dafür auch ins Gefängnis gegangen. Als ich wieder raus kam, war für uns das Besondere: Es hatte sich das Land verändert. Auf den Straßen dieses Landes war meine Freiheit erkämpft worden und auch die Demokratie. Das ist das Großartige.

Ich will hier daran erinnern - hier in Berlin: Die Freiheit ist im ganzen Land erkämpft worden, auch in Berlin. Aber doch ganz besonders in der Stadt Leipzig, wo am 9. Oktober 70.000 Menschen Ihre Angst verloren oder besser gesagt sie überwunden haben und eine Diktatur in die Knie gezwungen haben. Und damit dieses Fest heute erst ermöglichten.

Ich will nocheinmal wiederholen: Unser Traum war ein offenes Land mit freien Menschen. Deshalb meine Botschaft auch an die jungen Leute, die heute 20 sind, wie ich es damals war: Träumt und tut alles für Eure Träume. Denn diese Geschichte zeigt, dass Träume wahr werden können - dass wir sie wahr machen können.

Nehmt Euch die Freiheit.«