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"Wall peckers" in Berlin, 10 November 1989. People started tearing down the Berlin Wall on their own. Official demolition began at Potsdamer Platz in November 1989, and continued from 20 February 1990 between the Brandenburg Gate and the border post at Checkpoint Charlie.
Quelle: Bundesregierung/Uwe Rau
Anasayfa
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Free without borders
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Test the West
No experiments
Unification – yes or no? When and how?
The first free elections in the GDR
On the road to unification
Monetary, Economic and Social Union
The wrangle over the constitution
The battle for ”Public Property“
German Unification and World Politics
International reactions
Reasons for sceptcism
The Two Plus Four Agreement
Free without borders
Civil Rights activity and social self-organisation
Test the West
Berlin grows together
The completion of unification
The files are ours!
Unification Treaty and the day of German Unity
Elections in autumn 1990
Test the West
Bu menü için henüz İngilizce Türkçe çeviri maalesef mevcut değildir.
Unimaginable a few months previously – an improvised snack bar close to the border buildings at the former transit checkpoint Helmstedt/Marienborn, August 1990.
Quelle: Bundesregierung/Engelbert Reineke
Street café at Michaelismarkt in Erfurt, June 1990. The old was not yet past, but the new was already leaving its first traces. In this "interim realm" the East Germans developed a taste for new ways of living.
Quelle: Bundesregierung/Lehnartz
Employment office in Altenburg, August 1990. The feelings of people in the GDR at this time were marked by a curious hunger for everything, mingled with hopes and fears. Many were worried about their jobs. Unemployment rose to nearly 200,000 up until summer 1990.
Quelle: Gerhard Gäbler/Leipzig
At last – take a holiday wherever you want! Travel agency at Alexanderplatz, Berlin, 3 July 1990.
Quelle: ullstein bild/Peters
Signs on the flat door: travel postcards win out over the deposed state and party boss Erich Honecker and his wife Margot, GDR minister of national education.
Quelle: Robert-Havemann-Gesellschaft/Frank Ebert
Press freedom: The West German press in an East German environment. Newspaper seller in Wurzen, Saxony, October 1990.
Quelle: picture-alliance/akg-images/Cordia Schlegelmilch
[Translate to Türkisch:] ADAC-Prüfstand für Zweitakt-Pkws in Weimar, Juni 1990. Der Trabant, umgangssprachlich liebevoll „Trabi“ genannt, war das Volksauto in der DDR. Aufgrund von Produktionsengpässen mussten die Käufer mehr als zehn Jahre auf die Lieferung warten.
Quelle: Bundesregierung/Lehnartz
Future consumers: West German firms distributed free goods to East German citizens. Berlin, former checkpoint at Heinrich-Heine-Straße, November 1989.
Quelle: Hans-Peter Stiebing
[Translate to Türkisch:] Ostdeutsche Bauern können ihre Erzeugnisse nur noch schwer absetzen, nachdem im Frühjahr und Sommer 1990 die DDR-Landwirtschaft den Bedingungen in der Bundesrepublik und der Europäischen Gemeinschaft angepasst wurde. Die Preise sind gesunken, die Hälfte des Erlöses ist weggefallen. Bauern aus allen Teilen der DDR versammeln sich aus Angst um ihren Arbeitsplatz und ihre Existenz am 15. August auf dem Alexanderplatz. Ihr Zorn richtet sich gegen die Regierung, ganz besonders gegen Landwirtschaftsminister Peter Pollack.
Quelle: Robert-Havemann-Gesellschaft/Sandro Most
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