Checkpoint Charlie, Berlin |
Today, The Grandma is reading about Checkpoint Charlie, the best-known Berlin Wall crossing point between East Berlin and West Berlin during the Cold War.
This place in Berlin was witness of terrible stories during the years of the Cold War (1947-1991) and it was dismantled on a day like today in 1990. One of the most terrible events that The Grandma remembers is the story of Peter Fechter, a German bricklayer who was killed at the Berlin Wall when he was shot by East German border guards while Fechter was trying to cross over to West Berlin.
This place in Berlin was witness of terrible stories during the years of the Cold War (1947-1991) and it was dismantled on a day like today in 1990. One of the most terrible events that The Grandma remembers is the story of Peter Fechter, a German bricklayer who was killed at the Berlin Wall when he was shot by East German border guards while Fechter was trying to cross over to West Berlin.
This story was only one of thousands that happened because of the existence of the Berlin Wall, a construction that separate families and friends and that broke hopes and dreams. The Grandma remembers a Spanish song named Libre sung by Nino Bravo, a Valencian singer who died in a car accident at 28 years old.
Checkpoint Charlie or Checkpoint C was the name given by the Western Allies to the best-known Berlin Wall crossing point between East Berlin and West Berlin during the Cold War (1947–1991).
Peter Fechter (14 January 1944-17 August 1962) was a German bricklayer who became the twenty-seventh known person to die at the Berlin Wall. Fechter was 18 years-old when he was shot and killed by East German border guards while trying to cross over to West Berlin.
Peter Fechter was born on 14 January 1944, in Berlin, Germany, during the final years of World War II. Fechter was the third of four children, and raised in the Weißensee district of Berlin. His father was a mechanical engineer and his mother was a saleswoman. Fechter finished school at the age of 14, and graduated as a bricklayer.
Peter Fechter |
After World War II had ended, Weißensee was located in the Soviet occupation zone of Berlin when the city was divided during the Allied Occupation, with the Soviet zone later becoming East Berlin in East Germany. Fechter's eldest sister had married and now lived in West Berlin, where she was regularly visited by her parents and siblings.
On 13 August 1961, the East German authorities abruptly closed the border and began construction of the Berlin Wall, effectively separating Fechter and his family from his sister in West Berlin.
Fechter's colleague, Helmut Kulbeik, later stated that he and Fechter had been contemplating defecting to West Berlin for a while, and that they had also explored the border installations, but no concrete planning was ever made at the time. Shortly after, Fechter was denied a legally sanctioned trip to West Germany by his company, despite receiving good judgement.
On 17 August 1962, around one year after the construction of the Berlin Wall, Fechter and Helmut Kulbeik attempted to flee from East Germany. The plan was to hide in a carpenter's workshop near the wall on Zimmerstrasse and, after observing the border guards from there, to jump out of a window into the death-strip, a strip running between the main wall and a parallel fence which they had recently started to construct, run across it, and climb over the two metre wall topped with barbed wire into the Kreuzberg district of West Berlin near Checkpoint Charlie.
More information: Checkpoint Charlie-Crossing the Recent History
Their plan was initially successful as both Fechter and Kulbeik reached the final wall, but as they began to climb the East German border guards fired at them.
Although Kulbeik succeeded in crossing over the wall, Fechter was shot in the pelvis while still climbing, in plain view of hundreds of witnesses. He fell back into the death-strip on the East German side, where he remained in view of West German onlookers, including journalists.
Peter Fechter Memorial, Berlin |
Despite his screams,
Fechter received no medical assistance from the East German side, and
could not be tended to by those on the West side. West Berlin police
threw him bandages, which he could not reach, and he bled to death after
approximately one hour.
As a result of his death, hundreds in West
Berlin formed a spontaneous demonstration, shouting Murderers! at the
border guards.
The lack of medical assistance for Peter Fechter was attributed to mutual fear: Western bystanders were apparently prevented at gunpoint from assisting him, although according to a report in Time magazine, a second lieutenant of the US Army on the scene received specific orders from the US Commandant in West Berlin to stand firm and do nothing.
It also emerged during the trial that any aid attempt from the West had indeed been made impossible, but according to a report from forensic pathologist Otto Prokop, Fechter had no chance of survival. The shot in the right hip had caused severe internal injuries.
More information: The Berlin Wall
Likewise, the head of the East German border platoon stated that he was afraid to intervene, because of an incident just three days earlier when an East German soldier Rudi Arnstadt had probably been shot by a Western federal policeman. Nonetheless, the East German border soldiers did retrieve Peter Fechter's body an hour after he had died.
In March 1997, seven years after the reunification of Germany, two former East German guards, Rolf Friedrich and Erich Schreiber, faced manslaughter charges for Fechter's death, and admitted to his shooting. They were both convicted, and sentenced to 20 and 21 months' imprisonment on probation.
Peter Fechter ...er wollte nur die Freiheit |
Due to a lack of conclusive evidence, the court was unable to determine which of three gunmen, one of whom had already died, had fired the fatal bullet. After pleading guilty to the crime, during sentencing, both guards apologized for killing Fechter, adding that they would forever live with the guilt of their crime.
A cross was placed on the western side near the spot where Fechter was shot and bled to death. At the invitation of Willy Brandt, the then-mayor of West Berlin, the Yale Russian Chorus sang a German translation of Mozart's Ave Verum Corpus near the site in the week following the shooting.
On the first anniversary, a wreath was placed there by Willy Brandt and US major general James Polk. The story of Peter Fechter was the headline of American news magazine Time in August 1962. In this article was used the noun Wall of Shame, Mauer der Schande, and this became a synonym for the wall.
More information: The Guardian
After German reunification in 1990, the Peter-Fechter-Stelle memorial was constructed on Zimmerstrasse, at the precise spot where he had died on the Eastern side, and this has been a focal point for some of the commemorations regarding the wall.
The shooting has also been the subject of documentaries on German television. Cornelius Ryan dedicated his book The Last Battle to the memory of Fechter. Composer Aulis Sallinen wrote an orchestral work Mauermusik to commemorate Fechter.
In 2007, artist Mark Gubb was commissioned by the Institute of Contemporary Arts to create a performance based on the death of Peter Fechter. The performance was a one-hour live piece that was later recorded and screened at the ICA with a discussion panel at the end consisting of the artist, and actor Dominik Danielewicz who played the part of Peter Fechter.
The 1972 ballad Libre, -Free- a recording famous in all Ibero-America- by Spanish singer Nino Bravo, remembers this event.
In 2012 Canadian playwright Jordan Tannahill's play Peter Fechter: 59 Minutes, a poetic re-imagining of the final hour of Fechter's life, was produced in Canada and Berlin.
More information: Cold War Sites
The Berlin Wall wasn't the only barrier
to fall after the collapse of the Soviet Union
and the end of the Cold War.
Traditional barriers to the flow of money,
trade, people and ideas also fell.
Fareed Zakaria
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