Tag Archives: Stasi

The Berlin Wall — what's gone and what remains

The 20th anniversary of the Cold War’s most tangible symbol celebrates the end of a fearful era, but the healing of Berlin is far from done.

BerlinWall

One of the last remaining fragments of the Berlin Wall, near the old Checkpoint Charlie.

When you travel, you find out how much you thought you knew. I’m reminded of that as I watch Germany celebrate the fall of the Berlin Wall.

It was 20 years ago today. The confused, unraveling dictatorship in East Germany finally allowed its citizens to cross freely through Checkpoint Charlie to the west. But after so many years of living in a divided city, thousands of East Berliners had no patience for the gate.

Television flashed the images around the world — joyous Berliners, east and west, climbing onto and over that cold, evil thing, dancing, singing, weeping. Total strangers hugging and kissing, sharing bottles of wine. No more risking prison or death just to be with your loved ones. It looked as if all Berlin were out there celebrating.

potsdamerplatz

Indeed, the whole world celebrated that night, and for good reason. If you’re just a teen or a 20something, you have no clue what that sight meant to those of us who had grown up with the Cold War.

Berlin was Ground Zero for the ongoing face-off between America and the Soviet Union. Our gang, NATO, versus their gang, the Warsaw Pact. Think Crips and Bloods, but with nuclear weapons. And both sides claimed Berlin.

Berliners must have felt as if were living on a knife’s edge, on a bullseye, all those years.

Now, it was over. The sight of Berliners dancing unhindered on the Wall meant that the imminent threat of global nuclear holocaust was gone. A generation that had been holding its collective breath since Hiroshima could finally exhale.

And after 28 years of ruthless division for the sake of ideology, Berlin was whole again — or so it seemed at the time from my comfortable distance.

When I visited Berlin for the first time last summer, I realized just how wrong I was.

This is still a divided city. You see it. You hear it. You feel it. Take a U-Bahn subway train from the west deep into the old East Berlin and it feels as if the spiritual temperature of the place has dropped to near freezing.

CkCharlie

Where the western half has the look and feel of a city, the east, with its endless rows of same-same apartment blocks and broad, straight boulevards suitable for tanks, seems more like a giant army base. Any social ill that Berlin suffers — unemployment, alcoholism, whatever — is usually worse in the east.

While looking for the Stasi museum, I wandered into a Ramada hotel on Ruschestrasse. It was a Sunday afternoon in July, the height of tourist season.

The only sign of life inside was a lone desk clerk, who promptly disappeared. In the restaurant, rows of rectangular tables more suited to an army mess hall, and all empty. No waitress. No cook. No diners. No sound. The nearby bar was full of warm, dark woods, rows of liquor bottles behind the bar — and devoid of life. A corridor of wood columns, inset with mirrors, led to the guest rooms, but no guests.

You felt as if you were on the set of a Stephen King horror film, only there were no cameras — or at least none you could see.

erodingwall

A slowly eroding section of the Berlin Wall. The emotional divides between East and West Berlin also are wearing away, but only gradually, even after 20 years.

Even worse are the expressions from older East Berliners who actually long to return to the “good old days.”

There’s a bar dedicated to Stasi, the justly infamous East German secret police. East Berliners have made a cult figure out of their electric crosswalk symbol and even given him a name, Ampelmann.

The Germans have a word for all this — ostalgie or “ostalgia” instead of nostalgia, a play on the German word “ost,” which means east.

However you say it, it’s insane.

The German government is putting up ultra-modern office buildings, apartment towers and shopping arcades where the Wall once stood, trying to fully reconnect the two Berlins.

It’s going to take a lot more than that. The Wall did more than just physically divide Berlin. It split its soul in two.

In many ways and in far too many people, the Berlin Wall is still up.

And had I never gone to Berlin, I never would’ve known.

This is one of the reasons why you travel. The classroom, the documentary, even the writings of a mad blogger, can show you only so much.

Berlin — parting shots

Some parting impressions left by one of the great capitals of Europe:

Spreelocks

Locks on the river Spree, Berlin

As large as Berlin is, its traffic doesn’t seem to be as dreadful as that of London or as perilous as that of Paris or Rome. A cyclist can get around Berlin without feeling he’s taking his life in his hands.

Speaking of cyclists, I am madly jealous of Berlin’s bike lanes — 385 miles of them. They’re everywhere, lining the streets and built into sidewalks, and people use them.

Not just the Lycra jersey-wearing, Lance Armstrong wannabe set (“I’m…too-sexy-for-my-bike, too-sexy-for-my-bike!” ), but ordinary folks in ordinary clothes.

Berlin Hauptbahnhof, the glass-walled central train station. If  it looks as if there's a train inside the building, that's because there is!

The glass-walled central train station. If it looks as if there's a train inside the building, that's because there is!

The statistical wonks say that less than half the population of Berlin even owns a car — and I believe it. The city’s topography looks to be as flat as that of Amsterdam, custom-made for two-wheeling.

Something else you’ll see a lot of here are folding bicycles. They may look like toys, but are actually serious machines. They’re wildly popular in Berlin and their riders don’t defer to anybody.

Also saw scores of bike tourers. The Hauptbahnhof, their gorgeous new central train station, is awash with bikes loaded down with panniers and sleeping bags, their riders walking them through the station like dismounted cavalry, bound for everywhere. Delightful.

“Die Berliner Mauer,” the Berlin Wall, may have been down for 20 years — a fact that Berliners plan to celebrate with gusto come November — but Berlin remains very much a tale of two cities.

The light, the youthful energy and vigor, are all pretty much on the west side still.

Tiergarten park, part of what makes Berlin one of the world's greenest cities.

Tiergarten park, part of what makes Berlin one of the world's greenest cities.

Walking around the former West Berlin, you get the sense of a city that made itself very livable when it rose from the ashes of World War 2, especially with its emphasis on trees and green spaces.

The winding river Spree adds its own serenity, as does Tiergarten park, which the river skirts.

The western side of Berlin is also very racially diverse. That diversity includes a surprising number of black faces — not merely the descendants of African-American GIs who stayed in Germany or returned to it after their tours of duty were up, but from a number of different African countries as well.

Germany has its own cultural ties to black Africa dating back to colonial times, so perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise.

The former East Berlin is a different story.

Sax2

The areas nearest where The Wall once stood were the showcases of the old Communist regime, one ornate museum and opera house after another, not to mention Museum Island and the huge Berlin TV Tower, which is an emphatic visual statement in its own right.

“See, we can be big and bold and imaginative over here, too!” it seems to say.

But go just a little deeper in the old East Berlin, and the picture changes. Block after block of monotonous apartment blocks, so numbing in their visual sameness that you could almost use video of them as anesthesia. Different sizes, different numbers of floors, different paint schemes — and they still managed to make them look all the same.

These aren’t homes. These are barracks.

Human statue plays a wino for laughs and tourist change at the Brandenburg Gate.  But the city has a alcoholism problem that is very real.

Human statue plays a wino for laughs and tourist change at the Brandenburg Gate. But the city has a alcoholism problem that is very real.

A few blocks past the former Stasi secret police headquarters on Ruschenstrasse, you come to a Ramada hotel. It feels more like a haunted house. A lone desk clerk in the lobby. No one in the restaurant, laid out like an army mess hall. No one in the dark, adjoining bar. Ask for something to eat or drink and the clerk has to scramble to find someone to serve you.

You wonder if you’ve blundered onto the set of a horror movie. Is some little girl going to emerge from behind the bar in a faded Young Pioneer uniform, whispering “Murder!” backwards in German?

The only outward sign of life is in the bar. Stevie Wonder is on the box, soul music in a soulless place.

Berlin TV Tower

Berlin TV Tower

If the bulk of Berlin’s problems with alcoholism are on the east side of the city, it wouldn’t surprise me a bit.

The city fathers of the reunited Berlin are trying to address some of this in the form of redevelopment aimed at shifting the spiritual center of Berlin closer to physical one, closer to the old east. Glitzy, glassy building in Potsdamerplatz is just one example.

It’s going to take a lot more than that.

A slowly eroding section of the Berlin Wall. The emotional divides between East and West Berlin also are wearing away, but only gradually, even after 20 years.

A slowly eroding section of the Berlin Wall. The emotional divides between East and West Berlin also are wearing away, but only gradually, even after 20 years.

You also get the sense there are some lingering attitudes in Berlin that need some therapy, as well. Like that of the middle-aged woman driving the cab whose first question to her visitor is, “Are there a lot of black people in San Diego?”

Hmmm.

Or the guide on the hop-on-hop-off tour bus who proudly includes in her narrative spiel that Berlin is a marvelously diverse city — and then tells you exactly how many different ethnic groups live there. Lots of people in lots of places in the world appreciate their full spectrum of humanity, but how many of them make a point of counting each band in the human rainbow? (And for the record, the number was 183).

Like I said, hmmm.

East Berlin’s Spy Central

stasiHQ

Building 1, once HQ of the East German secret police Stasi, now the Stasi Museum. The entrance is hidden behind the concrete latticework facade.

East Germany’s secret police, known as Stasi, stole secrets out of West Germany and spied on almost everyone in East Germany. Their headquarters is now a museum.

From street level on Normannenstrasse, it’s just a bunch of drab Soviet-style office buildings in the former East Berlin. But from 1950 to 1990, this may have been the most feared address in Europe.

This was headquarters of East Germany’s Ministry of State Security, best known by its German acronym: Stasi.

Stasi Museum guide explains a coat worn by Stasi agents. One of its zippered pockets concealed a tiny surveillance camera. Smile!

They called themselves “the sword and shield” of the country’s communist party. Not the nation, the party.

Building 1 is now the Stasi Museum. No markers identify it. No street signs point the way to it. Many who live nearby claim to be unaware of it. But the moment you leave the Magdalenenstrasse U-Bahn station, the whole sinister complex is balefully staring down on you.

If you want a feel for the realities behind the Cold War, you start here.

STASI SUCCESSES
Stasi thoroughly penetrated West German counter-intelligence, and gave the CIA some black eyes, too.

When the Russians wanted to examine an American air-to-air missile, Stasi agents stole one off the wing of a US jet fighter and shipped it whole to Moscow to be reverse-engineered.

Display showing a special briefcase used to surreptitously hold and fire a Czech submachinegun. Left, the case itself.

Even West German successes against Stasi tended to rebound against them. One of their most popular heads of state, chancellor Willy Brandt, was forced to resign in disgrace after his closest adviser was exposed as a Stasi agent.

Imagine George Bush waking up one morning to find out that Condoleezza Rice was a KGB “mole.” That’s how big the scandal was.

SNITCHES ABOUND
In West Germany, Stasi spied on the government. In East Germany, they spied on everybody.

As many as one out of every ten East Germans — and one of eight East Berliners — was a Stasi operative, employee, contact or informant. Guided tours, in German or English, will show you how they did it.

Fake rock used for remote eavesdropping. The red circle indicates where the microphone was hidden.

Eavesdropping equipment hidden in fake rocks. Miniaturized cameras sewn into neckties and zippered jackets. Cars rigged to shoot infrared photographs through their doors. Submachine guns small enough to fit in a briefcase — and rigged to fire from inside it.

Paddy wagons disguised as delivery trucks, mail trucks, bread trucks, some with fancy curtains fixed to their windows.

They bugged offices, schools, homes, churches, even cemeteries.

They literally sweated “suspicious” people during interrogations and then released them, collecting their perspiration in cloth swatches. Those bits of cloth, cataloged and preserved, were to be used by Stasi dog teams to hunt them down at some later date.

Stasi officers didn’t arrest people. They made them vanish.

THE DRAINS
Then there are the drains in the floor, in rooms where it makes no sense to have drains…until you remember the Soviet style of execution.

The condemned is led into a room and made to kneel in front of a drain. The executioner puts a gun to his head and fires.

The tour doesn’t tell you about that part.

Stasi had its own 9,000-man armored regiment, separate from the regular East German army. Its loyalties were to Stasi first, the party second.

The desk of Stasi chief Erich Mielke.

The East German nation presumably got the bronze.

If Stasi was East Germany’s idea of the FBI, the man who ran it, Erich Mielke, was their J. Edgar Hoover. Ruthless, paranoid and a stone killer from a young age, he had dirt on almost everybody.

He also controlled a fund estimated to be worth close to $40 billion.

IF YOU GO
Take the U5 subway train to the Magdalenenstrasse station on Frankfurter Allee. Walk up Magdalenenstrasse to Normannenstrasse. Turn left at the corner and walk to the first driveway. Turn left into the drive and walk behind the latticework facade to the entrance.

Admission is 4 euros for adults, 2.50 for children.

And yet it was here, not at The Wall, that the division of Germany died in November 1989.

COUNTED TREES, MISSED THE FOREST
When East German citizens, led by a pro-democracy movement called New Forum, began mass street protests, the regime had plans in place that could’ve made Tienanmen Square look like a block party — and at the heart of those plans were Stasi and its special regiment.

But at the moment of crisis, the East German leadership froze. Their Soviet mentors basically told them “You’re on your own.” Angry East Berliners converged on Stasi headquarters. The Wall fell.

East Germany was done.

For all their anal-retentive surveillance, Stasi had utterly missed the unraveling of the East German state — until it collapsed on their doorstep.

They didn’t miss everything, though. Stasi’s secret $40 billion stash has never surfaced.

POSTSCRIPT
There are suggestions now that key Stasi officers played both sides in East Germany’s downfall, preventing the government from triggering its doomsday plans while stalling the angry crowds long enough to let their cohorts shred millions of documents.

Today, volunteers using special software are piecing those documents back together. You can read about their work in this 2008 story from Wired magazine (many thanks to my good friend Agustin Armendariz for pointing me to it).

Twenty years on, a reunited Germany is still periodically rocked by the revelations in those documents.