Pelican Parts Forums

Pelican Parts Forums (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/)
-   Off Topic Discussions (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/)
-   -   Checkpoint Charlie (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/549502-checkpoint-charlie.html)

kevin993 06-23-2010 06:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rick Lee (Post 5420423)
I have a photo of the Frauenkirche I took in 1989. It was a pile of rubble then and unrecognizeable as anything else.

Please dig it out and post if you can - would love to see.

Rick Lee 06-23-2010 06:45 PM

Until I can find this batch of photos and scan them, here's someone else's photo of it. That's how it looked for about 60 years. Only difference when I was first there was that the sun didn't shine too much in E. Germany.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277347514.jpg

masraum 06-23-2010 06:50 PM

Cool, thx, I'll look for the first movie first. It sounds interesting. As long as there are subtitles, I'll be good with a version in German. I don't know why, but I've never seen a dubbed movie that had the same feel after the dubbing. Even when you don't understand the langauge.

Dottore 06-23-2010 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dd74 (Post 5418775)
Could any Americans get into the East before the wall came down? That's what I'm interested in. What was life like then, and if anyone witnessed it?

I keep thinking of burning oil drums for warmth, or some old fat German butcher, carving meat with a cleaver instead of a modern, electric tool.

I was born in East Berlin, and my mother's side of the family pretty well remained there. My father had the foresight to move us to West Berlin, when I was just a few years old, just before the wall went up.

I was a frequent visitor to the former East Berlin from wherever we happened to be living later on.

As others have said, it was a drab and sad place in many respects. Inefficient. Paranoid. Low tech.

But it did have a few saving graces. Life was simple. And because the state looked after you from cradle to grave—it was a relatively stress free place. Everyone had enough to live on modestly. No one worried about job security or their pension. You couldn't buy much, but the staples of daily life were incredibly cheap.

And they had a beautiful publishing industry. People would come from West Germany to buy beautifully hard-bound volumes of the classics for pennies.

And classical music was everywhere.

Whenever I visited my relatives people from the block would be over playing chess and table tennis, and listening to good music. People were very close and looked after one another. There was a very strong sense of community. Because you couldn't leave, you made the best of what you had, and tried to be content,

In a way it was as though the clock had been turned back 100 years in East Germany, to a time when people lived life without the stress and distractions of television and the information age and modern times.

These few things I've just mentioned were the positives as I saw them then. Whenever I had to leave East Berlin in those days it was genuinely with mixed feelings: mixed, because it was obviously a completely failed society and yet... and yet...on some simple human level life there was very rich and simple.

dd74 06-23-2010 06:55 PM

Great photos! The one of the rubbled building is awesome. One day, I'd definitely would like to tour Germany and Austria. Maybe start West and go East, end up in Prague.

Oh, and please forgive my ignorance, but was Austria part of the Soviet Bloc countries before The Fall in 1989? I can't remember if it was or not.

dd74 06-23-2010 07:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dottore (Post 5420542)
...because it was obviously a completely failed society and yet... and yet...on some simple human level life there was very rich and simple.

Good stuff, Dot. See, I grew up hearing the place was just hell. But in the '60s and '70s, you believed the propaganda you're fed as a child from school to home and Walter Cronkite in the evening.

You say "failed." Was it really because everywhere else was advancing. I think how the Amish forge on in their world without any real concern about the "English" world, and how the same attitude might have sufficed for E. Germany.

I know I'm oversimplifying this by not bringing in all the social-political strata of the country, just stuff on the surface as an American kid saw it.

Rick Lee 06-23-2010 07:22 PM

No, Austria was not part of the bloc. They were neutral, but very pro-western. I think it's the most beautiful place in the world.

Dottore, you surely know that E. Berliners had it a lot better than the rest of the country. Since the city was right next to W. Berlin, it made much more of an effort to show its good side, was kept clean and it was pretty much a privilege to live there. Someone from the countryside couldn't just decide to move to E. Berlin.

Dottore 06-23-2010 07:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dd74 (Post 5420582)
Good stuff, Dot. See, I grew up hearing the place was just hell. But in the '60s and '70s, you believed the propaganda you're fed as a child from school to home and Walter Cronkite in the evening.

You say "failed." Was it really because everywhere else was advancing. I think how the Amish forge on in their world without any real concern about the "English" world, and how the same attitude might have sufficed for E. Germany.

I know I'm oversimplifying this by not bringing in all the social-political strata of the country, just stuff on the surface as an American kid saw it.


It could of course be hell if you got on the wrong side of the authorities. It was a totalitarian state, and didn't tolerate dissent. So dissidents and churchgoers for example had a fairly rough ride.

But if you just minded your own business, your life could be quite comfortable.

I say failed state because nothing worked. Food production was dodgy. There were hardly and consumer goods to be had (apart from books and records). You couldn't leave the place and lived behind a wall. The apparatchiks all drove western cars—while you had to wait 11 years for a Trabant. Moreover, you were constantly confronted with the prosperity of the west (sometimes just blocks away) when you turned on the television. The state really failed its citizens on every level.

The positive aspects I describe in my previous post were really accidental—and a consequence of the adversity and alienation people felt from the society in which they lived. It brought people together and made them immensely human. The same was true in communist Russia. People compensated for their limited external possibilities by cultivating rich internal lives and rich social lives—much richer on average (in my experience) than those of their western counterparts.

This fact of course also accounts for the "nostalgia" for the "good old days" that is widespread throughout the former communist bloc today. Much of this "feel-good" camaraderie, the long evenings spent in the company of friends—all this was lost once capitalism reared its ugly head. Costs skyrocketed, job security disappeared, the explosion of the consumer society and the media completely overthrew the old values. Most importantly, people just didn't have time for one another any more.

This is a long topic—but the transition has certainly not been easy for many in the east.

Rick Lee 06-23-2010 07:43 PM

Ok, some photos. First the car content.

Here I am in in 1989 my friends' Trabbi in Obhausen, near Querfurt. Remember, it was about a 13 year wait to get one of these.

http://fototime.com/036E264A864F312/standard.jpg

And here's a real 959 in West Berlin in 1988. I was a fan then too.

http://fototime.com/55C9D3AAC5942E9/standard.jpg

Now for the Wall stuff. The most popular viewing spot was right behind the Reichstag. Memorial to some of the Wall's victims.

http://fototime.com/6645DB747AE47E8/standard.jpg

The rest of the guard tower from the photo above.

http://fototime.com/2109F38159E14A6/standard.jpg

E. German patrol boat on the Spree River.

http://fototime.com/505FF30F5E55340/standard.jpg

A few months after I took that photo above, there was a daring escape right there and the woman made it. Tourists pulled her out of the water as the boat approached. There's actual footage of it on Youtube.

What a job these border guards had. No matter what they did, they were watched by everyone - their minders in the east and tourists in the west.

http://fototime.com/6B6E5C6ECB98FD3/standard.jpg

The Brandeburg Gate, just behind the Reichstag.

http://fototime.com/5EC02B71CE5F87F/standard.jpg

Years later I ran the Berlin Marathon and the route went right between those columns. When I took this photo, that was unimagineable.

And Checkpoint Charlie while still in operation. It's actually pretty far from the other photos above.

http://fototime.com/6D04F37957A7531/standard.jpg

Dottore 06-23-2010 07:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rick Lee (Post 5420593)

Dottore, you surely know that E. Berliners had it a lot better than the rest of the country.

Yes. That's true.

Rick Lee 06-23-2010 07:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dottore (Post 5420616)
The positive aspects I describe in my previous post were really accidental—and a consequence of the adversity and alienation people felt from the society in which they lived. It brought people together and made them immensely human. The same was true in communist Russia. People compensated for their limited external possibilities by cultivating rich internal lives and rich social lives—much richer on average (in my experience) than those of their western counterparts.

Truer words were never written. You'll never meet a better bunch of folks than E. Germans or Russians IF you really get to know them and they know you understand them.

slodave 06-23-2010 08:23 PM

I'll have to look through the photo albums at my parents house for any pix from our Czech trip and the trip my mom and I took to Berlin in '89. There have to be a few more photos around.

I mentioned it before, but my mom was born and lived in Sankt Andreasberg, in the Harz mountains, pretty much on what was to become the East/West border in central Germany. My bed time stories were her war stories. My grand parents owned two hotels at the time. One was destroyed from bombing and the other was "remodeled". The one that survived continued to operate during the war - unless everyone had to hide in the bomb raid tunnels (old silver mines). There were period of times where the Hitler Youth stayed at the hotel. Not much you can do but put them up. Mom says they were all very nice and very helpful with the daily chores.. I believe they actually had women from the "East" side that were forced to work as well. They were not forced by my grandparents.

My mom was also captured by the Russians during the war as well a number of times, trying to sneak across the dividing line (Yet to be called the East/West border) to deliver food and clothes to our family on the other side. Nothing much came of the captures, other than being detained for a number of hours, yelled at and the food taken and either eaten by the Russians or the food was destroyed in front of them.

Towards the end of the war, when the Americans rolled through their town, they would toss the Germans, chocolate (American made, not as good :) ), toothpaste, which the kids ate, because it had the minty flavor and they had never experienced something like that. The whole town lined the main street as the tanks, carriers, solders came through and cheered them on.

These days, I don't think any of our family from the East has really moved from their towns. A few of my cousins do go to university in Bremen and other "Western" cities.

dd74 06-23-2010 11:01 PM

Two questions:

Rick: all those photos were taken from the Eastern side of Berlin, right?

Dave: so there was a dividing line even before there was a wall? Like an imaginary border or something?

slodave 06-23-2010 11:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dd74 (Post 5420876)
Dave: so there was a dividing line even before there was a wall? Like an imaginary border or something?

There were two things going on. Berlin was in, what was to become East Germany and Berlin itself was split in two. The Wall was put up in 1961. My mom was crossing what was to become the actual border for West and East Germany. During the war, there were no fences, mine fields.... I am guessing, if anything, there may have been guard posts and signs at the main roads going from town to town. The rest of the dividing line was patrolled primarily by Russians during the war. The line was fenced and mined after the war and became part of the Iron Curtain.

dd74 06-23-2010 11:32 PM

Fascinating. Man, I would have liked to have seen that. When I was a kid, I was very close to the DMZ zone between N and S. Korea. To think you're that close to what could be a flash point toward the end of civilization is stunning.

slodave 06-23-2010 11:49 PM

David, these links to Wiki give a better idea of what was going on with borders at that time..

The whole article is good, but check out "Erection of the inner German border"
Berlin Wall - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Inner German border - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dottore 06-24-2010 05:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by slodave (Post 5420886)
During the war, there were no fences, mine fields.... I am guessing, if anything, there may have been guard posts and signs at the main roads going from town to town. The rest of the dividing line was patrolled primarily by Russians during the war. The line was fenced and mined after the war and became part of the Iron Curtain.

Correction.

There was no east/west german border during the war. The border came about after the war as a consequence of the way Germany was partitioned by the allies (including Russia). Everything east of the border was the soviet sector after the war.

Rick Lee 06-24-2010 05:38 AM

Yes, the fortifications didn't start for a couple of years after the war and the border was very porous anyway until the Wall went up. It got a lot better as technology improved.

Something I didn't know until I first went to the DDR was that everything west of the Elbe, which is still a good chunk of what became E. Germany, was actually part of the American Sector. We ended up later trading it to the Russkies for a slice of Berlin, which they controlled totally. Folk living in the American Sector of what became the DDR obviously didn't like this, as Soviet occupation was a lot less pleasant than US, British and French occupation. But the place I stayed near Halle, which was well inside E. Germany, was actually taken by the Americans on their way to meet the Russkies at the Elbe.

I think W. Berlin also contracted out a lot of serves to E. Berlin, like garbage and some road maint. It's not like there was a lot of space for W. Berlin to have their own landfills. And of course, the DDR regime charged handsomely for everything the west needed from them.

Those photos of Berlin are all taken from the west side. On the east side, you couldn't even get close to the Wall.

Joeaksa 06-24-2010 06:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peterfrans (Post 5418691)
I crossed checkpoint charlie, and it actually was a much more civilized experience than the one you are getting coming into the US at JFK nowadays.

We should get together someday. I have some very interesting stories about CC, and the other Berlin checkpoints.

Rick is right, its a good museum and I try to get there everytime I make it to Berlin. They update it from time to time...

masraum 06-24-2010 06:53 AM

lots of interesting stuff guys...

Joeaksa 06-24-2010 07:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dd74 (Post 5420876)
Two questions:

Rick: all those photos were taken from the Eastern side of Berlin, right?

The interesting thing is that once you got to know East Berlin, you could duck around corners in the less traveled parts and find buildings that had not been repaired from the war. Finding bullet holes and so on was a common thing in many parts of the town if you knew where to look.

Joe A

Joeaksa 06-24-2010 07:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rot 911 (Post 5418928)
I was in the Army in Germany in the late 70's. You had to get flag orders (so called because they had a U.S. Flag, in color, at the top of the orders) to go visit East Berlin. We would take a train through East Germany to Berlin. You could not get off the train anywhere along the way in East Berlin. Would cross over into East Berlin at Checkpoint Charlie. Was fun to trade Playboy and Penthouse magazines with the East German guards for military belt buckle or hat.

Active duty military were not allowed to drive the "transit road" to the West from Berlin. We were in the "grey zone" as we had full military ID cards but were not on active duty, so could drive to and from.

It was a lot of fun and even did it when going to Denmark heading through areas not normally driven by Westerners. You should have seen the looks I got on a brand new BMW bike when stopping in the rest stops. They had never seen the newer models, and at times it was hard to get going again as they all wanted to look and talk about something that they had only dreamed about. Same way driving the 911 but at least they had seen one of those before!

Joe A

Joeaksa 06-24-2010 07:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim727 (Post 5418747)
Amazing times - I was living in Berlin then and even though I knew history was in the making it took a while for the magnitude to sink in. Was at the Brandenburg Gate for both the first New Year (Silvester) and October Wiedervereinigung. Even today it seems surreal.

Right after the wall fell I went to Bauhaus to get a good chisel. Behind the Reichstag I was working doing my bit to dismantle the thing and locals would come up and ask for pieces. I finally got to where I would give them the hammer and chisel along with "selbst bedienung" (self-service). They would grin, take a few whacks of revenge and then get their pictures taken with the hammer and wall.

So many memories...

Did you fly for PanAm with the IGS? Know Rick Strand? Forget the other names...

Joeaksa 06-24-2010 07:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dd74 (Post 5418748)
I wonder if anyone here had been to E. Germany before the wall fell. I'd be fascinated to see the differences in technology and advancement between East and West Berlin.

I've heard E. Berlin was anything from idyllic to an all-out slum.

Lived in Berlin from 1986 to 1994. Flew the medivac bird off of Tempelhof Air Base, where the Berlin Air Lift was started. Was flying a mission the night the wall came down.

Was a large change in so many ways. East Germany had not had any advances in anything since the 1930's so the telephone, roads, trains and so on were still pre-war. Now they have been upgraded and are very good in most cases.

I still have friends and family living there, so try to visit every year or two. It will always be Berlin and really miss it...

Dottore 06-24-2010 07:55 AM

BTW I can endorse Rick's earlier film recommendations if you are interested in a glimpse of life in the former east Germany. Particularly The Lives of Others. (More dramtic and accessible for foreigners than Goodbye Lenin IMO)

It even won an Oscar a few years ago.

Dottore 06-24-2010 07:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Joeaksa (Post 5421302)
Lived in Berlin from 1986 to 1994. Flew the medivac bird off of Tempelhof Air Base, where the Berlin Air Lift was started. Was flying a mission the night the wall came down.

Was a large change in so many ways. East Germany had not had any advances in anything since the 1930's so the telephone, roads, trains and so on were still pre-war. Now they have been upgraded and are very good in most cases.

I still have friends and family living there, so try to visit every year or two. It will always be Berlin and really miss it...

So Joe, when we finally have that smack-down in Phoenix, we'll have lots to talk about!

Rick Lee 06-24-2010 09:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dottore (Post 5421346)
So Joe, when we finally have that smack-down in Phoenix, we'll have lots to talk about!

I have a case of Czechvar chilling at the moment. Really.

Joeaksa 06-24-2010 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dottore (Post 5421346)
So Joe, when we finally have that smack-down in Phoenix, we'll have lots to talk about!

Hoffentlich... If you survive! :)

Mark, the inside of my house is covered in Berlin stuff. Signs from the air base that I got when I helped close it down in 1992, things from my stay there and so on. Posters that were printed in mid 1989 warning all the spooks on the base to be careful of "the Bear" and of course Communism ended six months later. Far too much crap and some of it needs to be framed and put up still...


Rick,

I have some in the fridge here at the house and at the hangar. Its good stuff!

Really miss the real "Budvar" from Europe!

masraum 06-24-2010 09:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dottore (Post 5421342)
BTW I can endorse Rick's earlier film recommendations if you are interested in a glimpse of life in the former east Germany. Particularly The Lives of Others. (More dramtic and accessible for foreigners than Goodbye Lenin IMO)

It even won an Oscar a few years ago.

Not that I'm condoning this or saying that I've done it, but you can download Goodbye Lenin via bit torrent on the web. Apparently, it's in German, and there's another place where you can download the English subtitles.

The Lives of Others is also available, even in a blu-ray format.

Rick Lee 06-24-2010 09:43 AM

Even the Budvar cans in the train and gas stations were better than most other beers.

BTW, for those of you who like E. German beers, Radeberger has been popping up everywhere in the last two years. The local Total Wine sells it by the case. Haven't seen Wernesgruener yet, but I'm watching for it.

slodave 06-24-2010 10:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dottore (Post 5421087)
Correction.

There was no east/west german border during the war. The border came about after the war as a consequence of the way Germany was partitioned by the allies (including Russia). Everything east of the border was the soviet sector after the war.

Right, but there was a front line and when you crossed this line, you could end up captured by the patrolling Russians, which is what happened to my mom on several occasions. This line around my moms town eventually became the border.

Redcoat 06-24-2010 10:30 AM

Fascinating stuff fellas- thanks for the insight.

scottmandue 06-24-2010 11:17 AM

Question, did they tear all of the wall down? Is there any part of it still up?

masraum 06-24-2010 11:28 AM

I believe there are some sections that remain as memorials.

Yes, there are
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlin_Wall#Legacy
Quote:

Little is left of the Wall at its original site, which was destroyed almost everywhere. Three long sections are still standing: an 80-metre (263 ft) piece of the first (westernmost) wall at the Topography of Terror, site of the former Gestapo headquarters, half way between Checkpoint Charlie and Potsdamer Platz; a longer section of the second (easternmost) wall along the Spree River near the Oberbaumbrücke, nicknamed East Side Gallery; and a third section that is partly reconstructed, in the north at Bernauer Straße, which was turned into a memorial in 1999. Some other isolated fragments and a few watchtowers also remain in various parts of the city.

Here is a list of the various pieces of the wall that are around the world.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Berlin_Wall_segments

There are several pieces in CA.

Joeaksa 06-24-2010 01:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by scottmandue (Post 5421636)
Question, did they tear all of the wall down? Is there any part of it still up?

There are still several sections of it up. Or go to the CIA HQ and you can see some of it there! :)

slodave 06-24-2010 09:04 PM

The piece from the Reagan Library in Simi Valley.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1257763575.jpg

slodave 06-24-2010 09:08 PM

These are scans from our 1983 trip to Czechoslovakia. Please excuse the line, the scanner is on its way out.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442346.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442357.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442883.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442379.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442405.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442422.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442435.jpg

I know we took some currency out. I just have to find it.

slodave 06-24-2010 09:09 PM

Please excuse the line.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442579.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442591.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442600.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442614.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277442623.jpg

On to Berlin 1989...

slodave 06-24-2010 10:13 PM

Berlin 1989

Walking to Brandenburg Gate and the Wall.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446027.jpg

The Russian war memorial, commemorating the Battle of Berlin.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446047.jpg

Random section of the Wall.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446069.jpg

This sign originally read "Strasse des 17. Juni", to commemorate the bloody East German uprising in 1956.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446179.jpg

Hammer, hammer, hammer.... You couldn't keep me away from the Wall.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446333.jpg

slodave 06-24-2010 10:16 PM

The tickets that took us into East Berlin.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446487.jpg

Empty East Berlin street scenes.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446521.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446534.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1277446547.jpg

On to the B&W's from Berlin...


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:38 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website


DTO Garage Plus vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.