The statement that ‘the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 can be seen as the main catalyst of communist domination in Eastern Europe and later the world can be regarded as accurate. In this essay the reasons for the building of the Berlin wall such as the fact that the USSR desired to secure domination in Eastern Europe after the events of the Berlin airlift and later the sense of victory and power that the wall brought among the communists, will be discussed. Secondly the events leading up to the fall of the Berlin will be viewed. These events included the economic decay of the communist state and the new policies that were brought about by Mikhail Gorbachev which replaced the old Brezhnev doctrine. Finally the events after the fall of the Berlin wall will be viewed. These events include the changes in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and the Baltic states. The rapid changes in the communists stated can be considered as the after effects of the fall of the Berlin wall. The Berlin wall was a symbolic boundary between communism and capitalism as well as a barrier and physical division between the East and the West. The fall of the wall can therefore be considered as an end in communism as the barrier had been removed. Using the specified sources it will therefore be viewed how
The years following the fall of the Berlin wall brought Germany closer together as one country. The east side of Berlin was communist, whereas the west side was socialist/democratic. The Berlin wall was often referred to as a symbol of the cold war and the inner conflict of Germany. It showed the different ideologies of the USA and USSR and their systems of government. Officially known as the “Anti-Fascist-Protective Wall” by the east, and the “Wall of Shame” by the West, it physically divided the city of Berlin from August 13, 1961 to November 9, 1989. The fall of the Berlin Wall was beneficial for the economies of Germany and the US.
The Berlin Wall is a historical symbol of the Cold War and the fall of the Berlin Wall is a symbol of the end of the Cold War. And also, the Berlin Wall played a great role in the life of millions of people and defined the fate of German people, which put them apart by the Wall for a long period of time. Sixteen years after the end of World War II, the communist government of East Germany began building a wall on (August 13, 1961), that would divide the city of Berlin into East Berlin and West Berlin. The purpose was to keep fascists from entering East Germany, but mostly to keep West German citizens, primarily people of valuable professions such as doctors, teachers and engineers, from Changing side to the West. People of Berlin Called the wall Schandmaur, which actually means " The wall of shame". Over the years of the wall being constructed it took at least 3x times to rebuild it, but each time bigger than the last one.
“…Indeed, under certain conditions, our obligations are to resist unjust and unfair schemes, and this can include a duty to disobey a law” (Richard Dagger). An example for this quote would be The Berlin Wall in Berlin, Germany from 1961-1989. The Wall was set up to keep the fascist West Berlin away from Communist East Berlin. However, the wall was fuel to the fire of civil disobedience in Berlin, Germany. Most of the civilians undertook civil disobedience to fight the Berlin Wall. They wanted to have more freedom in their lives and they did not want to be separated from their loved ones, so the civilians resisted their government and their
Succeeding twenty-eight years of oppression and involuntary separation, East and West Germany were finally reunited through a series of events that lead to the downfall of one of the most significant historic landmarks in German history. As time passed, there came a well-anticipated time in which citizens gained a glimpse of hope. The Berlin Wall was suddenly dismantled, and locals began to take a different view on life and culture after being reconciled with peers from the other side of Germany. The creation and eventual destruction, of the wall triggered enormous changes in economic views and culture, which lead to questions regarding global effects and the impact on Germany, the impact of governmental and citizen
Imagine a wall being built in your head, causing you from being separated from loved ones and friendships. That’s what it was like when the Berlin Wall was built in Germany separating East and West Germany in 1961. This happened from what happened during the Cold War. The Berlin Wall is one of the most powerful symbols of the Cold War. The Cold War was about a war of words and ideas between the USSR and the US. The Cold War has lasted between 1948-1991. In this paper you will read about this one event from the Cold War about how Germany was after the war. Also these events about the Berlin Wall, why the Berlin Wall was built, and what the Berlin was like.
The Berlin Wall had a major impact on humanity’s views on how society should be ruled. Berlin is the capital of Germany. After the ending of WWII, Berlin was split up into East Berlin, and West Berlin. East Berlin was communist, suffered from the repressions of the Communist Party. West Berlin had a better lifestyle, and had financial aid from the United States. From the years between nineteen forty-nine to nineteen sixty-one, approximately 2.5 million people from East Berlin escaped to West Berlin. This toll included skilled workers, professionals, and intellectuals. Because of the loss of these people, the economy in East Berlin was threatened. On August twelve-thirteen, nineteen sixty-one, the Berlin was built in order to stop the people of East Berlin from fleeing. The Berlin wall was a major point during the Cold War, and many opposed it. It gave another reason to detest communism.
The Berlin Wall was originally a source of division in Europe for the Cold War. The East Berlin region announced that citizens would be able to cross the border into Western Europe. The dismantling of the wall had major significance because it reinstalled the peace between West and East Europe that wasn’t there for over 40 years. Ronald Reagan even encouraged the Soviet Union leader, Gorbachev, to bring down the wall in 1987 and many Americans believed that his speech impacted the tearing down of wall. The dismantling signified the reinstallation of human rights for those that were stuck in the border for years.
Losing so many fresh, highly trained workers, East German leaders were upset. However how this “brain drain” could be stopped? Isolating East from West, circling West Berlin like a tight belt, they built a large wall through the heart of Berlin. The barrier would extend about 100 miles. The idea wasn’t to keep West Berliners in; it was to keep East Berliners, and other East Germans, out.
The fall of the Berlin Wall, the events in Eastern Europe and Russia in the 90’s, those were a time when the march of democracy and freedom in the world seemed inevitable. Every time you opened up a newspaper, you expected to see another country opening its arms to freedom.
The Berlin Wall was a very devastating time in history. This wall separated East and West Berlin from 1961 to 1989. The wall was so large that it took two years to take down. They would have guards, around three hundred watchtowers, over two hundred and fifty guard dogs, twenty bunkers and sixty five miles of anti-vehicle trenches. If you tried to pass/go over the wall you would be shot on sight. Although that was the case sill over five thousand people made it to freedom, but over hundreds of people died from attempting. How would life change if this event never took place?
Berlin wall was a barrier constructed in 1961 to separate East Berlin from West Berlin and East Germany. Mikhail Gorbahev, the soviet leader of Germany was frustrated because people in West Berlin were migrating to either East Germany or another country. West Berliners left because they were disgusted with the economic
Among the huge impact which resulted from Cold War was the fall of The Wall
At the pinnacle of hostility and ideological conflict between the Soviet Union and the West, the Berlin Wall closed the remaining gap in the Iron Curtain, confirming the GDR’s political stance and oppression. To the West, the Wall created influential propaganda evidencing East Germany as a disastrous state with citizens unwilling to live
The Berlin Wall was a structure built between East and West Berlin and around the Berlin area to prevent the people of Berlin from traveling away from their respective side of Berlin. The first time the Berlin Wall was built was on the twelfth of August in 1961, after the leader of the eastern German communist party commanded a wall to be placed to stop ‘West Germans from invading and polluting with their ideas’. According to Nikita Khrushchev, West Berlin, as a capitalist state deep within the communist East Berlin, ‘Stuck like a bone in the Soviet throat’. The Berlin Wall separated people from friends, family and workplaces alike.