The event that changed the world/ Today, 35 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall

2024-11-09 09:22:49Kosova&Bota SHKRUAR NGA REDAKSIA VOX
On November 9, 1989, people from the GDR began to flood into West Germany en masse

November 9 is one of the most important dates in modern German history. A day with which Germans remember the horror and joy, from the night of the pogrom in 1938 to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

On November 9, Germany celebrates the 35th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. An event that changed the world. A year later, on October 3, 1990, Germany was reunited after 41 years of separation. With the overthrow of the second dictatorship on German soil, i.e. the end of the GDR, the real-socialist camp in Europe disappeared from the political map. The West-East conflict ended. November 9, 1989 marks a day of particular importance for the history of Germany and Europe.

09.11.1918

But in the German historical calendar, November 9 has played an important role in other eras as well: On November 9, 1918, the social democrat Philipp Scheidemann declared from a balcony of the Reichstag (parliament) in Berlin that Germany was already a Republic. Monarchy of Emperor Wilhelm II. had ended: "Workers and soldiers, be aware of the historical meaning that this day brings. Something unheard of has happened: We will encounter great and difficult tasks. Everything for the people, everything with the people. Nothing will be allowed to happen that could harm the honor of the labor movement. Be united, honest and responsible. The old and broken - the monarchy - collapsed. Long live the youth, long live the Republic of Germany."

09.11.1923

Germany's new democracy had a rough start. The left and the right wanted to take him down as soon as possible. On November 9, 1923 in Munich hundreds of National Socialists (Nazis) stormed state buildings in an attempted coup. Their leader was Adolf Hitler, who 10 years later would legally take power in Germany and cause the biggest crisis in history: World War II.

09.11.1938

During this war the Jews were systematically fought, until in 1942 the machinery for their complete annihilation began. On November 9, 1938, that is, before the start of the War, synagogues were set on fire all over Germany, Jewish shops were almost all destroyed. About 100 people were killed, another 26,000 were deported to concentration camps. The pogrom was cynically called "Reichskristallnacht" and would serve as the "first dress rehearsal" for the Holocaust. November 9, 1938 is the most terrible date in the series of German historical days.

09.11.1989

A giant contrast was November 9, 1989, the day the Berlin Wall came down. "Unbelievable" was the word that was heard most often that night, when the borders were suddenly opened to the citizens of the GDR. In fact, months ago there were demonstrations against the totalitarian regime of the GDR state. Thousands of people had entered the embassy of the FRG and some Eastern European countries seeking political asylum. The pressure to ease the possibility of free movement of citizens of the GDR had been increasing day by day for months. But what happened on November 9, 1989, no one expected: When it was announced during an international conference in East Berlin that new laws on free movement would come into force immediately, there was no longer any possibility to stop them. measures. Tens of thousands of people immediately crossed the inner border of the divided city of Berlin. The joy was in the full sense of the word ``boundless''.

After this night there was no turning back. The first crack in the Berlin Wall brought about the complete collapse of the sick system. November 9 made German history for the fourth time - but this time it was a wonderful story. This fact cannot be changed even by the difficulties brought to Germany by the fall of the Berlin Wall. Creating internal unification needs more time than state reunification./DW

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