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Protest against Egon Krenz being installed as chairman of the State Council outside the State Council building in East Berlin, 24 October 1989.
Quelle: picture-alliance/dpa/Wolfgang Kumm
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РЕВОЛЮЦИЯ
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WE are the People!
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Leipzig on the move
More and more east germans want out
Escape route via Hungary
Escape via Prague
Welcome
Grassroots organisations shoot up
New forum
Social Democratic Party
Democratic Awakening
United left
Democracy now
Joint Action
Revolts along the line
The “20 Group”
Anniversary protests. 7. October 1989
Forty years of the GDR
Protests in Plauen
Demonstrations in East Berlin
East Berlin’s Gethsemane Church
WE are the People!
Leipzig on the move
The decisive day in Leipzig
The SED’s new tactic
Dialogue with the State
The "Turnaround" with Krenz at the helm
The crumbling system
Artists protest
SED pillars in crisis
Student protests
Berlin – Alexanderplatz on 4 November 1989
Demonstrations across the country
9 November 1989 - The Fall of the Wall
The wall
A new travel law
Press conferences
The wall falls
The battle for power
Foundation Fever
The people on strike
The SED saves its skin
The Stasi must go!
The Round Table and the government
Leipzig Awakens
Эта статья еще не переведена русский.
In September 1988, a superintendent of the Protestant Church in Leipzig, Friedrich Magirius, called a stop to Leipzig opposition groups holding the Monday peace prayer in St. Nicholas’s Church. In reaction, on 24 October 1988, Udo Hartmann, Frank Sellentin, Rainer Müller, Anita Unger and Uwe Schwabe (l. to r.) presented their opinion to churchgoers on banners. They had to read out their demands in front of the church. These were the initial steps leading towards the subsequent Monday demonstrations.
Quelle: Archiv Bürgerbewegung Leipzig/Christoph Motzer
Fred Kowasch, a representative of the Leipzig opposition groups, spoke to the participants of the unauthorised Luxemburg-Liebknecht demonstration in Leipzig at the marketplace on 15 January 1989.
Quelle: Archiv Bürgerbewegung Leipzig
On 15 January 1989, around 500 protesters managed to march several hundred metres through the city centre en masse. Then the security forces intervened and dispersed the demonstrators. There were numerous arrests.
Quelle: Archiv Bürgerbewegung Leipzig
[Translate to Russisch:] Mitglieder der oppositionellen Szene in Leipzig versuchen Anfang Juni 1989, ein Straßenmusikfestival zu organisieren. Die Veranstaltung wird nicht genehmigt. Trotzdem kommen 15 Musik- und Theatergruppen aus der ganzen DDR am 10. Juni 1989 nach Leipzig, um in der Innenstadt zu spielen.
Quelle: Archiv-Bürgerbewegung-Leipzig/Rainer Kühn
On 4 September 1989, Katrin Hattenhauer and Gesine Oltmanns unfurled this banner in Leipzig city centre, which was then forcibly torn down by state security service employees. Katrin Hattenhauer was arrested by the secret police a week later.
Quelle: Robert-Havemann-Gesellschaft/Bernd Wiech
During the peace prayer at the entrance of Leipzig’s St. Nicholas Church on 25 September 1989.
Quelle: Johannes Beleites
On Monday, 25 September 1989, 5,000 people demonstrated on the inner city ring road in Leipzig for the first time. The police did not intervene since they were not prepared for such a situation.
Quelle: Johannes Beleites
On 7 October 1989, the 40th anniversary of the foundation of the GDR, 4,000 people protested in Leipzig city centre. The security forces used truncheons, dogs and water cannons, resulting in numerous injuries and arrests.
Quelle: Gerhard Gäbler/Leipzig
On 7 October 1989, the 40th anniversary of the foundation of the GDR, 4,000 people protested in Leipzig city centre. The security forces used truncheons, dogs and water cannons, resulting in numerous injuries and arrests.
Quelle: Martin Jehnichen
On 7 October 1989, the 40th anniversary of the foundation of the GDR, 4,000 people protested in Leipzig city centre. The security forces used truncheons, dogs and water cannons, resulting in numerous injuries and arrests.
Quelle: Martin Jehnichen
On 12 January 1989, the Action Group for Democratic Revival of our Society called upon citizens to participate in the Luxemburg-Liebknecht demonstration. The initiators distributed leafl ets by night. The state security service arrested some of the authors in the run-up to the protest rally but could not prevent it from taking place.
Quelle: Archiv Bürgerbewegung Leipzig
The information group for the release of the prisoners, active in Leipzig and Berlin, drew international attention immediately after the arrests of 15 January 1989. This resulted in far-reaching solidarity for those detained. Collection of signatures by the Green Party in Hanover, West Germany.
Quelle: Archiv Bürgerbewegung Leipzig
In East Berlin, there were special prayers for those detained in Leipzig on 11 September 1989. Throughout the country, many similar actions were organised in solidarity. A vigil was held in the Gethsemane Church in East Berlin from the beginning of October 1989 in support of all political prisoners.
Quelle: Robert-Havemann-Gesellschaft
Collection of signatures from Rostock dated 12 October 1989 for demonstrators arrested on 11 September 1989 after the peace prayers in Leipzig, who had not yet been released around a month later.
Quelle: Archiv Bürgerbewegung Leipzig
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