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The Players
The men who were present as the seeds of the Cold War were planted – and those who presided over its conclusion

Timeline
From 1945 to the reunification of Germany

Across the Great Divide
Ten years ago the Wall fell and Germany began the process of reunification. But in many ways the city is still split
November 15, 1999

Essay: The Best of Both Worlds
Still straddling east and west, Berlin could become Central Europe's world-class city
November 15, 1999


Freedom!
TIME's 1989 cover story as the wall came down
November 20, 1989

Essay
The Berlin Wall: 1961-1989
November 20, 1989

The Presidency
Hugh Sidey remembers President Kennedy as the wall went up

November 20, 1989

Photo Essays
The Berlin Wall:
A Pictorial History

The Wall:
Where is it Now?








The Wall that Defined Us

Who are we without the wall? For decades, the ugly scar across the face of Berlin offered a navigational beacon to the governments of the world. It reminded them of who they were and who they were not, and differentiated friend from foe.

The wall gave them a purpose, too: Tearing it down became the Holy Grail of those to the West; keeping it standing became the life's work of those to the East. Both sides feared nothing as much as the prospect of the other side swarming over the wall, and they built nuclear arsenals capable of destroying the planet 300 times over to maintain its security. And those arsenals, in turn, gave them a good reason for averting war at all costs, and an incentive for policing the planet to keep regional conflicts from spinning out of control.

The tearing down of the wall was a dramatic, unplanned historical triumph that closed the book on an era. It redefined, mostly for the better, the way millions of people would live their lives, and it heralded the potential for a profound change in the way nations and communities resolved their conflicts.

But 10 years later, those who lived east of the wall are left wondering what its demise really meant. The citizens of what was once called Eastern Europe revel in freedoms unthinkable under communism. Yet for the most part they've found that capitalism's lavish banquet is laid before a favored few, just as communism's was the exclusive privilege of the party elite (often, ironically, the same individuals).

Those who fought against communism – such as Pope John Paul II and Czech president Vaclav Havel – now find themselves railing against the godless consumerism that capitalism has brought in the wake of godless communism. Even among the victors, the wall's collapse has posed a troubling challenge: It's a lot more difficult to define what we are, now that what we're not is history.

–TONY KARON

 

 

  Ten Years After: The Big Questions

Is Life Better or Worse for the People of the Soviet Bloc Since its Collapse?

Is the World a Safer Place Now That the Wall Has Gone?

How Has the Wall's Absence Affected Washington?

How Did the Collapse of the Wall Change the World?





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