BERLIN (AP) - Chancellor Angela Merkel thanked former Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev for making change possible in East Germany as she visited
what was once a fortified border crossing on Monday —
retracing her steps on the night 20 years ago the Berlin Wall
fell.
The Bornholmer Strasse bridge was the first crossing to open on
Nov. 9, 1989 following a confused announcement that East Germany
was lifting travel restrictions — a pivotal moment in the
collapse of communism in Europe.
Merkel, who grew up in East Germany and was one of thousands to
cross that night, recalled that "before the joy of freedom came,
many people suffered."
She lauded Gorbachev for his role in pushing reform in the
Soviet Union.
"We always knew that something had to happen there so that more
could change here," she said.
"You made this possible — you courageously let things
happen, and that was much more than we could expect," she told
Gorbachev, winning applause and cheers from a crowd of several
hundred people gathered in light drizzle on the bridge over railway
lines.
Merkel also welcomed Poland's 1980s pro-democracy leader, Lech
Walesa, to the former crossing, saying that his Solidarity movement
provided "incredible encouragement" to East Germans.
The bridge crossing was one of a series of events marking
Monday's anniversary of the border's opening after the wall kept
East German citizens penned in for 28 years.
Music from Bon Jovi and Beethoven was to recall the joy of the
border's opening, which led to German reunification less than a
year later and the swift demolition of most of the wall —
which snaked for 96 miles (155 kilometers) around West Berlin, a
capitalist enclave deep inside East Germany.
Memorials also were planned to the 136 people killed trying to
cross the border. Candles were lit and 1,000 towering plastic foam
dominoes placed along the wall's route to be tipped over later
Monday.
Also expected in Berlin for the ceremonies were the leaders of
all 27 European Union countries and Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev.
The wall's opening came hours after a botched announcement by a
senior communist official on a cold, wet night in 1989.
At the end of a plodding news conference, Politburo spokesman
Guenter Schabowski offhandedly said East Germany was lifting
restrictions on travel across its border with West Germany.
Pressed on when the regulation would take effect, he looked down
at his notes and stammered: "As far as I know, this enters into
force ... this is immediately, without delay."
Schabowski has said he didn't know that the change wasn't
supposed to be announced until the following morning.
East Berliners streamed toward border crossings. Facing huge
crowds and lacking instructions from above, border guards opened
the gates — and the wall was on its way into history.
Merkel said she was among the East Germans who, hearing
Schabowski's words, thought "something might happen on the evening
of Nov. 9." Like many others, she made her way across.
Uwe Kross, a 65-year old retiree, recalled seeing the start of
the drama from his home, a block away from the bridge.
"That night, you couldn't stop people," Kross said. "They lifted
the barrier and everyone poured through.
"We saw it first on TV, normally it was very quiet up here, but
that night we could hear the footsteps of those crossing, tap, tap,
tap."
Kross was among those who crossed early on — so early that
nobody was yet waiting on the other side when they reached the
West. He recalled hopping on the first subway to then-West Berlin's
main boulevard, the Kurfuerstendamm.
"All hell was breaking loose there," Kross said.
By the Brandenburg Gate, the symbol of Germany's division and
then of its reunification, which for nearly three decades stood
just behind the wall in no man's land, Dieter Mohnka, 74, and his
wife Helga, 71, shared a bowl of French fries on Monday afternoon
and recalled the night the wall was opened.
"We were shocked when we heard that announced, simply
astounded," said Helga. "The next morning we went straight to visit
my aunt in the West."
Dieter, a high school teacher at the time, said he had long been
fascinated with West Germany.
"I was born in East Germany, I went to school in East Germany. I
was supposed to teach the kids about the wonderfulness of the East,
when I was secretly watching TV from the West," he said.
"This is not just a day of celebration for Germans," Merkel
said. "This is a day of celebration for the whole of Europe; this
is a day of celebration for all those people who have more
freedom."