History will likely not remember Erich Honecker, the East German dictator, with any fondness. It would likely not remember him much in the first place save for a bit of architectural planning that he was once proud to call his own: the construction of a wall meant to solve an uncomfortable problem for those who trumpeted the virtues of the Workers’ Paradise, for East Germans, as well as citizens of other Soviet bloc nations, were fleeing in great numbers to the capitalist West throughout the 1950s. More than 300,000 did so seventy years ago, in 1953, the height of the exodus. With increased police patrols and sturdier fences, the number fell by half three years later.
The logic was clear, and following one of several episodes of nuclear brinksmanship between Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev and American president John Kennedy, an old plan of Honecker’s went into effect. On August 14, 1961, the most porous section of the 900-mile-long fortified border between East and West Germany was sealed off. Along the border between Berlin’s French, British, Russian, and American occupation zones, great rolls of concertina wire suddenly zigzagged down the middle of busy streets, cut through parks and cemeteries, crossed train tracks and canals. Three days later, during which desperate East Germans dragged themselves over the metal (among them several police officers), a permanent concrete structure went up, set back a few yards from the barbed wire barrier.
This was the Berlin Wall, which, though only 5 or 6 feet tall in most places, came to be so heavily guarded and fortified that defection through Berlin was soon deemed nearly impossible. (Readers of John Le Carré’s The Spy Who Came in from the Cold will remember how true that was.) Even so, the snaggle-toothed wall that divided the great city of Berlin attracted thousands who tried to brave it, and thousands who succeeded. For 28 years it stood, a hated symbol of division; even the Soviet leadership thought that it made communism look bad. Finally, following a wave of popular rebellions across the Soviet bloc and within the Soviet Union itself, Erich Honecker’s government was forced from power in October 1989.
Section of the Berlin Wall in Fulton, Missouri, site of Winston Churchill’s “Iron Curtain” speech. Photograph by Gregory McNamee.
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