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'Remembering the Wall'

Remembering the Wall    [Hans A. von Spakovsky]

Not too long after the Berlin Wall was torn down in 1989, my wife and I visited Berlin. Crossing into what had been East Germany was like going through a time tunnel. It looked like it was still the 1940s. Through its physical environment, East Germany highlighted the difference between Western freedom and Communism. This difference was even more evident in Berlin. What struck me was the complete absence of color in what had been the Eastern Zone, which said quite a lot about the quality of life under communism.

West Berlin was full of bright colors, from shop windows and pennants flying on buildings, to the clothes worn by Berliners on the street. All of the buildings in East Berlin were gray and dirty. Some were still unoccupied and had bullet holes; they had never been repaired or renovated after the end of World War II. West Berlin was full of bright, sparkling vistas and shops filled with consumer goods of all kinds. East Berlin was dark and dingy. The few shops were empty of the everyday necessities and luxuries that give us the quality of life we enjoy. All of the differences between the liberty and prosperity of the free West and the prison conditions and poverty that characterized life behind the Iron Curtain were easy to see.

Even driving to West Berlin in our rental car was quite an experience. We were surrounded by Trabants — East Germany’s version of the Volkswagen, and one of the worst cars ever made (it sounded like a sewing machine). At that time, there were still only three highways leading into what had been East Germany. Close to the former border, a huge traffic jam on the autobahn brought the traffic to a stop. We got off the highway hoping that a secondary road would be a way around, but we ran into a major problem — the road ended when it got to the old border. All of the roads ended, except for those three major highways, because of the barbed wire and minefields that had divided Germany for more than 40 years.

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