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You are here: Home Leisure Arts & Culture East Germany comes alive for kids at Berlin show
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25/05/2009East Germany comes alive for kids at Berlin show

East Germany comes alive for kids at Berlin show Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, an exhibition seeks to explain what it was like living in defunct communist East Germany to children with no memory of their country's turbulent past.

Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Germany is spending much of 2009 looking backwards.

The latest in its series of reflections on its recent history is an exhibition that seeks to explain what it was like living in defunct communist East Germany to children with no memory of their country's turbulent past.

The exhibition entitled "So What Was The GDR?" – short for the German Democratic Republic as the state called itself – tries to present both the bitter and the sweet facets of life in the former state.

It mixes depictions of a socialist "dream," enthusiasm shown by its "Young Pioneer" youth organisation, and efforts to give women equal opportunities, alongside a dark background of travel restrictions and political repression.

The show traces the real-life experiences put down in diaries by children who grew up in the GDR and is meant to provide answers for "a generation which never had to deal with this issue," according to organiser Birgit Bruell.

Those visiting the exhibition, held in an East Berlin recreation centre that once served as "a Pioneer Palace" for children run by the communist-sponsored youth organisation, are gently introduced to the subject by Pia Grotsch.

AFP PHOTO / JOHN MACDOUGALL
A schoolgirl looks through East German publications at the interactive exhibition for children called "Say, What was the GDR? (German Democratic Republic)," in Berlin.

"We're going to talk about a country that no longer exists,” she tells a group of visiting Berlin school children. “A country that wanted all of its people to be happy -- the GDR. Do you know someone from your family who lived there?"

Several hands go up.

"My mummy grew up there," says a 10-year-old girl.

"My daddy and granny lived there," volunteers one of her friends.

Others don't really know. One young boy thinks his grandfather might have "run away to the West on a motorbike."

Personal histories


Visitors are then invited to trace the experiences of eight children who grew up in East Germany between 1976 and 1987.

Uwe, aged 13 in 1976, was a committed Young Pioneer. Katrin, aged 12 in 1984, expressed outrage at the fact that a relative had asked to leave the country to settle in the West.

But the exhibition also documents the case of Angela, a 16-year-old "punk" arrested in 1981 and who spent seven weeks in jail for circulating a poem in which she criticized the system, saying work was the only freedom allowed.

Visitors can read her Stasi secret police file and see a mock-up of the cell she was held in.

Children can also sit in a small mock plane and select would-be destinations at the touch of a button.

AFP PHOTO / JOHN MACDOUGALL
A schoolgirl assembles a puzzle depicting the former east German state at the exhibition "Say, What was the GDR? (German Democratic Republic)," in Berlin.

When Budapest or Moscow is selected, the loudspeaker simply says: "Please fasten your seatbelts." But if a child chooses to go to Dublin or Paris, a voice tells him: "You are not allowed to leave the country."

Large panels outline the regime's negative points.

A troubled dream

Socialism, one panel underscores, was "a broad promise" and a "dream" aimed at sharing wealth more equally, "but it didn't work."

Speaking of democracy, the children are taught that "in the GDR, people did not choose their government and they could not elect another."

The ruling party was also involved in deciding what should be printed in the newspapers and these were not allowed "to talk of problems faced by the country," the youngsters learned.
AFP PHOTO / JOHN MACDOUGALL
Schoolgirls sit in a booth at the interactive exhibition for children "Say, What was the GDR? (German Democratic Republic)," in Berlin.

After a 90-minute tour culminating in the story of the joyous collapse of the Berlin Wall in a peaceful revolution in 1989, Zacharie, aged nine, decided that the "GDR ended because people didn't want it to go on."

"But not everything was bad," he added.

For Bruell, who grew up in East Germany, it was important to point out the negative aspects of the state so that children "would understand why the country collapsed" and "the meaning of democracy."

"It is only by comparing things that they can understand how lucky we are today," she added.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, who grew up in East Germany, has on several occasions spoken out on the need to convey a sense of the past to today's youth.


On a visit this month to the main Stasi prison in Berlin, which has been turned into a museum, she underscored how important it was that "this chapter of the history of the East German dictatorship is not covered up or forgotten."

Arnaud Bouvier/AFP/Expatica


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