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. After World War Two Germany was in great defeat by allies. While reading “Berlin is divided (history.com)” I found out that Germany was than divided up into four sections. These four sections were under the control of Britain, France, United States, and former Soviet Union according to scmp.com. The Soviet Union also known as the Russians are the ones who wanted West Berlin all to themselves. So they decided to closed the railways, highways, and canals from the western-occupied Germany into western-occupied Berlin. The Russians than believed that this will make it impossible for the people of West Berlin to get some food and other cargo they need. Russia thought that if they didn’t get supplies they needed they thought that United States, France, and Britain will eventually drive out of the city of Berlin for
On the night of August 13 th , 1961, police officers strung barbed wire across the border of
Germany was split in two by the Berlin Wall from 1961 to 1989. This wall had many reasons to be torn down but one reason it was up was to separate Eastern Germany from Western Germany. This separation would cause many issues at the tearing down of the wall in 1989. The reason Eastern Germany was separated from Western Germany was because Eastern Germany was controlled by the Soviet Union, due to the Cold War. This wall was built to stop the communist Eastern Germans from seeking refuge in non-communistic Western Germany.
The berlin wall was a big aspect of the cold war that greatly impacted on the everyday lives of german citizen and also caused immense inconvenience to them in many ways but, by the wall being up a potential world war three was avoided, so many could
After World War II, Germany and Berlin were controlled by four major powers, US, Britain, France and Russia. Many people fled from the east side, which Russia controlled, because they did not like being under the rule of the Soviet Union and communism. Over 2 million people fled over the course of the years 1949-1959. Russia did not like how people were leaving their side of Berlin, so they built a wall. This wall started out as a barbed wire fence that later was made into a 15 feet high and 4 feet wide wall made of concrete blocks.
On November 9, 1989 the Berlin wall came crumbling down. For 28 years the wall did nothing but make everyone's life worse. However, when the wall fell everyone’s lives were about to be impacted for the better. Families were reunited, friends saw each other again, and peace was restored. The fall of the wall marked the winding down of the Cold War, and started a new age where communism would cease to exist. Much of the credit was being given to Ronald Reagan, who had visited the wall just a few years earlier. When Reagan gave his “Tear down this wall” speech, no one could’ve predicted, that it would lead to the tearing down of the Berlin Wall, and the eventual end of the cold war. Although as a result all communist governments in Eastern Europe had come to an end, would be replaced by “democratically elected governments”. With all this, there was a glimpse of peace and a time of rejoicing for all of the world. ("Fall of
During this time East Germany was under the Soviet Union, which was communist; the Soviet Union during the cold war era had many European countries in their union. Germany was split with eastern Germany being communist and western Germany being a federal republic of Germany. Many families were split when the boundaries between the two states were drawn so people typically immigrated out of Eastern Germany into Western Germany. Eastern Germany tried to stop their people from leaving by imposing the “iron Curtain”. The Berlin wall was heavily guarded so America could not barge in and destroy the wall; America did make it known they were not pleased by the
The eastern and western parts of the city were divided ideologically. Symbolizing the differences between the western democrats and the eastern communists and the way they thought Germany should be lead. It also meant the inner conflict of Germany and the division between “free” or democratic. Some historians believe that another reason the Berlin Wall was raised was in an attempt to foment relationships between the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. The Berlin Wall’s fall enforced the ideology of the Western countries (capitalism) and symbolized the failure of what was supposed to be a government which brought equality for all.
Following the fall of the Third Reich at the end of WWII Germany was split between east and west into two different countries. In the east the German Democratic Republic was under communist rule and was supported by the Soviet Union. The Federal German Republic was a democracy that was part of NATO. As part of the division of Germany following WWII, Berlin, the capital of Germany was divided evenly between the two nations. However, the entire city of Berlin was deep inside of the GDR, so the Western half of the city was democratic but it was surrounded by communist territory. This made West Berlin a place where many East Germans would try to escape to. As a result of this the German Democratic Republic built a wall surrounding West Berlin to stop its own people from escaping to freedom.
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.
On August 15, 1961 the Berlin Wall was built. I was only ten years old at the time. I was separated from my family, so all I had was my life long friend, Leo. I've always wished the wall to be destroyed, so I could see my family again, but my wish has never came true.
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.
On August 12, 1961, the Berlin Wall was built to separate East Berlin (German Democratic Republic) from West Berlin (The Federal Republic of Germany). The Wall has a “ 66 mile concrete section that was 3.6 metres high, with a further 41 miles of barbed wire fencing and more than 300 manned lookout towers”6 and was meant to separate superpowers Britain, France, and the United States from the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). It lead to countless problems such as social separations, family breakages, starvation, deaths due to low living standards, hatred among politicians within a country, among others. The Berlin Wall perhaps helped the American policy of containment winning people's support.
The Berlin Wall remained for almost 30 years, part the city of Berlin into comrade East Berlin and majority principle West Berlin. Conceived of the fragmenting of Germany by the Allies toward the terminal of Humanity War II, the splitter was an image of socialist tyranny, the most obvious component of the Iron Curtain. It isolated families, cut people off from their employments and left due East Germans peering into the energetic Western United States from their boring socialist condominium.
I remember when the Berlin Wall was built during that bleak, brutal winter of 1961. I was woken up with a start in the middle of night by the rumbling of the trucks and the deafening cacophony of construction work outside my window like the blast of Gabriel’s horn. My mother, ever the pragmatist, said that it was simply a power play between the Russians and the Americans and that it would surely be gone by the summer. I believed her, too, until one evening when I put my ear against the paper-thin walls of my bedroom and heard her muffled sobs and the low, reassuring murmurings of my father as summer came and went.
1989 was a very important year for Europe and the world. Leading up to this time, many countries were involved in the Cold War, a time of military and political tension between western and eastern powers. People were glum, economies were weak, and political competition was at its peak. But this was the year the Berlin Wall was opened; this year ultimately led to the ending of the Cold War (Erlanger). On November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall was ordered to be taken down. Within a year, West Germany and East Germany (formally known as the German Democratic Republic) became unified, and within two, the Cold War had completely ended (Schmemann). The dismantling of the Berlin Wall in 1989 triggered an extraordinary transformation of Europe. The