Published: 5:14AM Thursday October 22, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersA worker moves a domino pieces that symbolises a segment of the Berlin Wall in a warehouse in Berlin
The Berlin Wall will be back to briefly divide the German
capital again next month - but with giant brightly coloured dominos
rather than cement slabs.
As the highlight of a five-million Euro celebration marking the
20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, a
1.5-km long segment of the Wall will stand for two days along its
original route in front of the Brandenburg Gate.
The row of 1,000 20-kg dominos standing 1.5 metres apart - painted
in bright colours by school children and rising 2.5 metres high -
will be toppled at the end of a gala ceremony as a symbolic tribute
to the collapse of the Wall 20 years earlier.
"It's only a temporary attraction," said Berlin Mayor Klaus
Wowereit, outlining plans for a two-day festival commemorating the
fall of what the communist East had portrayed as an Anti- Fascist
Protection Barrier to ward off Western aggression.
"I don't think anyone will come up with the idea that we're
building a Wall between East and West Berlin again. But there were
many who ridiculed this idea at first. Now it's being seen as a
wonderful way to symbolise the falling of the Wall."
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, French President Nicolas
Sarkozy, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and US Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton will attend the festivities, he said.
The Berlin Wall burst open on November 9, 1989 after months of
rising tension in East Germany.
Many rushed immediately to border crossings after a Communist
East German government leader told a news conference they were free
to travel to the West.
The Berlin Wall, a symbol of the Cold War that had split the city
and Germany, was peacefully swept away in the months that
followed.
The two Germanys reunited 11 months later in 1990.
Death strip
Wowereit said the far grander scale of the festival for the 20th
anniversary compared to smaller previous events reflected both a
growing interest in exploring the history of Berlin's Cold War
divisions and a greater need to keep the past alive.
"I think 20 years marks a good moment to take stock, to take a
deeper and more critical look than 10 years ago, and to take a look
at what unites us," Wowereit said, referring to some of the
lingering divisions between east and west two decades on.
The Wall began as a cordon of barbed wire thrown up by communist
guards early on August 13, 1961, to stem a loss of skilled workers
and professionals drawn by West Germany's post-war 'economic
miracle'.
Families were split, houses demolished and roads truncated for what
mutated over years into two parallel walls separated by a raked
sandy death strip where at least 136 people were killed trying to
cross to the West.
Wowereit admitted that perhaps too much of the 160-km long Berlin
Wall was too hastily torn down in the heady days of 1989 and 1990 -
depriving both tourists and Berliners of more than a few token
remnants of the original Wall.
"Maybe it would have been wiser to leave more of the Wall in place
to show what it was. But at the time the mood was to get rid of it
all as fast as possible. I don't think anyone in Berlin would have
tolerated keeping more of it standing."
Advertising