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Updated Sunday, November 1, 2009 12:39 am TWN, By Dimitri Bruyas, The China Post Marking 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin WallMeanwhile, as the Berlin Wall was peacefully swept away in the months that followed, the two Germanies began a reunification process that was completed 11 months later in 1990 — to the surprise of some political commentators. “You couldn't go back,” she went on,“you couldn't turn back time, no way, it was impossible. I think in the East and also in the West, there were some politicians who said 'Oh! Maybe not so fast!' but how could you say that?” “German unification and European integration are just two sides of the same coin; because that was clear from the beginning, deep integration in Europe could be a political solution for the two Germanies,” she continued. To Brigitt Ory, there was no doubt of the success of a peaceful reunification from the outset; the series of events that first triggered the fall of the Berlin Wall were surprisingly peacefull. “I think the East German security was also surprised that it was so peaceful, and they couldn't use violence against these peaceful people,” she said. Ory remarked that “if they would just have been given the order to use their guns, [the security forces] would have done this. But they never came out with this order, this is quite interesting.” Contrary to the prediction of Erich Honecker, the longtime leader of East Germany, who in January 1989 said the wall would stand for a “hundred more years” if the conditions which had caused its construction did not change, she stressed that “such conditions” might have changed progressively. 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. |
![]() Brigitt Ory, director-general of the German Institute in Taiwan, tells The China Post of her experience in Germany in November 1989, when she learned about the fall of the Berlin ... Enlarge Photo
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