
Where were you when the wall came down?
| I grew up in West Berlin during the 70s and 80s, and some things were just perfectly normal for me. It was never possible for me to step out of my house and ride a motorbike in one direction for more than 25 miles. I never felt that there was something wrong with this; I didn't know anything different. I didn't feel constrained by this fact.
It was perfectly normal to me that I had to apply for a visa and spend several hours at a border just to visit my relatives in Dessau, an otherwise short two-hour drive away. Of course it was annoying but, that's just how life is, right?
All that changed for me, just as it did for so many others, in the night the Berlin Wall came down.
I was a student at that time, focusing on the important things in life: parties, concerts, nightlife… That particular night I was at a party, watching videos from a white water canoeing trip together with some friends. Every mountain grew higher, every rapid moved faster with every beer we consumed. A few hours after midnight we decided that it's time to adjourn the party.
I took my bicycle and debated briefly which route I should take to get home. The most direct way would lead me along the Wall and past the Brandenburg Gate, an area usually deserted at night. Perfect for a nice and peaceful ride home.
But something was odd that night. The area around the Brandenburg Gate was not dark and deserted as usual. It was crowded and I was not the only person who had a few drinks more than I should have. My initial idea was that there was a soccer game somewhere I didn't know about. I never cared about soccer, and it would explain why everybody was waving a German flag in one hand and champagne in the other. It only felt strange that everybody was trying to hug me and treated me like a long lost friend. “I'll never understand those soccer fans,” I thought. My brain was in no condition to find an explanation for anything
unusual that was happening around me.
I finally arrived at my apartment and was surprised to find my roommate wide-awake in our living room, telling me that “they opened the wall!” I realized that I just witnessed a historical moment in German history. I was in the heart of Germany, at the Brandenburg Gate, when the Wall came down. I just didn't realize it while I was there.
The weeks and months that followed were filled with events that changed my life. I made my first trips to the former GDR without the delay at the border and enjoyed the new freedom. I developed a closer relationship with my relatives in the former East Germany. I stood in front of empty shelves in my grocery store.
Looking back, I find it hard to believe that it was normal for me to live surrounded by “The Wall.”
It was good that I never knew anything different while growing up, and I will never forget the positive aspects about life in West-Berlin: the Allied Forces.
The Allies brought us RIAS (Rundfunk im Amerikanischen Sektor), a radio station in Berlin at that time. The French military organized the annual 25 km de Berlin, a running race. American soldiers introduced me to American ice cream and popcorn.
I always experienced the American, British and French forces and their families as valuable and friendly members of the multicultural life in Berlin, my hometown.
From Heymo Vehse
Bowling Green, Ohio
Photo © Press and Information Office of the Federal Government This image does not depict any person mentioned in this wall story
|
|
The opinions expressed in the wall stories are those of the authors and do not neccessarily reflect the views of the German Embassy.
|  |

Anniversary: Fall of the Berlin Wall
Anniversary: Fall of the Berlin Wall Voices from the Wall Timeline 1961 - 1990 Video: Fall of the Berlin Wall
Events in DC and New York Mark 18th Anniversary of Fall of the Wall Deciding on a Monument to Peaceful Revolution of 1989 
 Read More Wall Stories
(Click link in scoll bar below)
| |
|
| |
“I remember my parents had the windows rolled down in our car, and the people threw chocolate in our car, and the first western chocolate I tasted was "Hanuta," and I will never forget those pictures for as long as I live.
”
Peggy Morrison
Vienna, VA |
| |
“I wouldn’t have had the Cold War be extended one more day. We are so lucky it never went hot.
”
Peter W. Liander
Staten Island, NY |
| |
“Great, I thought, another one of those dumb films showing the Wall coming down, or the East invading, or the West taking over, or something.
”
Ulrich Hacker
Camino, CA |
| |
“It seemed a horrible inconvenience that I would have to make the best of. Instead, it was a wonderful coincidence for me (the grown-up German major) to be in Germany when the Wall came down!
”
Leslie Friedrich
Houston, TX |
| |
“When we re-grouped to attack again we were given the news of the Wall coming down. There were a lot of hesitant looks between the soldiers and a lot of ‘can we go home now’ questions.
”
Brian Brown
Palatine, IL |
| |
“On the other end I heard the voice of my supervisor, totally out of breath, almost shouting. “Aren't you from Berlin, Germany?" I responded, yes, indeed I was, and he told me to turn on the old TV.
”
Doris Eck
Manville, NJ |
| |
“After a short walk through Eschwege and ogling over kiwis, we returned to the border. We actually asked the humble and ridiculous question to an officer of the East German customs office if we may please return again. Our stomachs turned at those words, but we had to, needed to, must return for my dad’s sake.
”
Janet Ullrich-Theriot
Lafayette, LA |
| |
“The next day, November 10, a Friday, was dress-down day in our office, meaning we could wear blue jeans and casual shirts…. I pointed out that I was wearing black, red, gold in honor of the event of the previous day
”
Waltraut Lehmann
Shoreline, WA |
| |
“On the evening of the 9th of November, I was at work and we had a television turned to the American channel, AFN. An announcer came on and announced that East Berliner's were happily rushing through the gates into the West!
”
Michael Laverty
Manassas, VA |
| |
“We had no idea were we were. West Berlin was whited out on our maps.
A taxi took us free of charge to the heart of the city, Kurfürstendamm. All pubs were open; it was one huge party
”
Jens Pfefferkorn
Fair Oaks, CA |
| |
“Once I walked past the Checkpoint Charlie military post, I took a cab back to my hotel in West Berlin. On the way, the cab driver—and Berlin cab drivers are great conversationalists—asked me if I had heard that the Wall was going to open at midnight”
Juan Walte
Alexandria, VA |
| |
“After we drove to our host family for the night, we were greeted graciously and talked until late in the night, exchanging ideas, memories of the last few days and hopes for the future”
Kai-Uwe Adebahr
Lakewood, WA |
| |
“The fall of the Wall was not about tearing down one border but a fundamental crack in the mental walls that divided the East from the West. And while I was very happy about this, I was sad because I was 9,000 kilometers away and could not share the happiness with my German friends.”
Steven Schneider
Hugo, MN |
| |
“Following the first weekend after the fall of Berlin Wall, I drove to Dallas, Texas, to celebrate its demise with my family and our German-American friends. Like those East Germans, we were having the best time of our lives, too.”
Oliver Markwirth
San Francisco, CA |
| |
“Many, many cars in Chicago were honking horns and the drivers giving V for victory signs all over. Believe me, Chicago, which has many residents of German descent, celebrated too.”
Erich Krausser
Palatine, IL |
| |
“[W]e were shocked, we just couldn’t believe and digest what we were hearing and seeing. And then we started laughing, crying and dancing at the same time.”
Gabriele Beaudin
Arlington Heights, IL |
|
“I felt both sad and happy for the many years of not being able to be part of the other Germany and yet being young enough to take advantage of all the opportunities that were just about to offer themselves to me.”
Monika Hohbein-Deegen
Berlin, WI |
| |
“Unlike the violent and deadly earthquake I had experienced in Berkeley just a few weeks before November 9, the political quake at the Berlin Wall was peaceful, hopeful and daring in a beautiful way.”
Katja May
Sammamish, WA |
| |
“My brother and my friends (...) went to the Brandenburg Gate in the middle of the night because they realized something historic was going to happen. I could only watch the news coverage from Oklahoma, speechless about what I saw.”
Fabiola Janiak-Spens
Norman, OK |
| |
“When I left my house the next morning I was stunned. Thousands of East German visitors had “arrived” and were hustling through the western part of the city.”
Marco Mielcarek
Seattle, WA |
| |
“The emotions, joy and happiness we saw citizens and, in some cases, families express in being able to meet and greet one another without political and physical barriers was overwhelming.”
Steven Steininger
Gelnhausen, Germany |
| |
“I don’t remember whether we hugged or shared the champagne; I only remember floating up and down the Kurfürstendamm that night in a wave of people overjoyed”
Tanja Beshear
Lafayette, CO |
| |
“What I barely realized myself, is that my relief stemmed from the feeling that much guilt was lifted from my shoulders at that moment as well.”
Rolf Schulze
San Diego, CA |
| |
“Then the Wall came down. I realized the cold and wet nights I had spent in Germany were all worth it.”
Frank Liebmann
American Fork, UT |
| |
“All day the phone kept ringing. My many West German relatives checked in with concern and advice. "You are NOT going back there, are you?!"
Helga Ehudin
Washington, DC |
| |
“Well, we had been driving quite a distance and could not possibly have seen the news that night. It hit us like a brick!”
Maximiliane Brenner
Goose Creek, SC |
| |
“While our German relatives complain a lot about the cost of this whole thing, in reality the German Government (West German) bit the bullet and did the right thing.”
Ralph Riemensperger
Franklin Square, NY |
| |
“I had been stationed in the American Berlin Brigade from 1966 to 1969 and had been back and forth quite a few times between East and West Berlin.”
James Bullard
Alhambra, CA |
| |
“Cities, landscapes, and cultural milestones I had known only through pictures and my imagination have come to life with a vividness that I can only hope has communicated itself to my students.”
Donald H. Crosby
Springfield, VA |
| |
“At the Brandenburg Gate, at 10 a.m. it was bitter cold, but there was the party.”
Richard Fischer
Foxboro, MA |
| |
“And then something happened I had never envisioned in my wildest imaginations: an East Berliner taxi rolled across the border into West Berlin.”
Udo Gorsch-Nies
Ashland, OR |
| |
“I noted a hole already chiseled entirely through the Wall and stuck my arm through, reaching around to feel the DDR-side
Richard Schade
Cincinnati, OH |
| |
“It was almost impossible to believe that this momentous event had occurred without Soviet and/or Warsaw Pact military counter action and bloodshed.”
Richard F. Pendleton
Huntsville, AL |
| |
“The hammering, singing, climbing, and celebrating thereafter were wonderful, but for me no match for that broadcast.”
Richard King
Madisonville, KY |
| |
“My initial idea was that there was a soccer game somewhere I didn't know about…. it would explain why everybody was waving a German flag in one hand and champagne in the other.”
Heymo Vehse
Bowling Green, OH |
| |
“At one o’clock in the morning I connected with them (it was hard to get through to Germany that night), and we talked and talked and cried together.”
Brigitte Krummel
Lawrence, MI |
| |
“They let the people pass’ was all I needed to hear to find the next phone to call my then boyfriend to find out what the scoop was.”
Julia McLaughlin
Boynton Beach, FL |
| |
“I promised myself that I would not go back until the Wall came down.”
Frauke Simon
Ann Arbor, MI |
| |
“My American friends were so in awe with these few small pieces of grey concrete with some yellow and purple graffiti stains on it.”
Christiane Frasca
Port St. Lucie, FL |
| |
“I can say that seeing a wall torn down was the greatest honor I could ever receive.”
John Richardson
Newnan, Georgia |
| |
“We were amazed to see people lifted up upon the Wall where they would have been shot just two months earlier.”
Claudia Bell
Glens Falls, NY |
| |
“I may say the bonds of friendship between us were created by the wall through Europe, as contradictory as that sounds.”
Chalmers Hardenbergh
Yarmouth, ME |
| |
"I told all my friends and colleagues that this was the beginning of the end of the American military presence in Germany."
Pete Williams
Louisville, KY |
| |
I spent the next three days at the wall experiencing history—even attacking the wall with an iron crowbar, breaking out pounds of rock as historical mementos.
Sheldon Curtis
New York, NY |
| |
I was working in my office here in Lancaster on that great day. One of my people came in and said to me: “The people of Berlin are breaching the wall at this minute!”
Herwig Schutzler
Lancaster, PA |
| |
“Listening to the hymns that evening to mark Germany’s reunification reminded me of my heritage!”
Annemarie Bryan
Potomac, MD |
| |
And then, one of us came out with a word which none of us had dared using so far: “REUNIFICATION!” We stood there, frozen with our mouths open.
Christian Seebode
San Francisco, CA |
| |
|

Newsletters

Printer-Friendly
Page
Email This Article |