This is my third and last post about Hanburg's Miniatur Wunderland. If you missed part 1 and 2, you can find them here and here.
After having thoroughly enjoyed Patagonia and Antarctica, we climbed the stairs to the third floor to find out what we can discover there. It was very different from all the theme worlds we had experienced so far. First I need to tell you that this is a post heavy with historical information that not everybody might be interested in. I am not offended if you prefer to skip this post.
There were several dioramas depicting one street corner in Berlin and following its development throughout recent history, starting with the end of World War II in 1945. The first diorama covers the years 1945 to 1949.
There is so much to see in these dioramas - I took photos from only one side, so not everything that is actually "happening" is visible.
Berlin was in ruins at the end of the war. Four powers - UK, France, USA, and Soviet Union - occupied the city. Women worked in the ruins, the so-called Trümmerfrauen (rubble women). They were the first to clean up the rubble and by doing so they received a bigger food ration. It was also mainly women who searched the missing persons wall for their loved ones. There was no water since plumbing was destroyed and water had to be brought in by harnessed horse teams. In 1948 the Soviet Union blocked all access routes to Berlin, so the US initiated an airlift to ensure the supply of the population.
In 1949, the two independent states of West Germany (BRD) and East Germany (DDR) were founded, cementing the division of Germany.
1950 - 1954
Look closely: Do you see a man painting a white line on the street at the left side of the intersection? In 1952 the GDR started to draw lines of demarcation between East and West Berlin. This was their first try to curtail human movement between the sectors (there were four sectors in Berlin according to the occupying powers). In the background you can see that the S-Bahn (suburban railway) was still running between East and West. While many buildings were rebuilt, there was still a lot of destruction to see. On June 17, 1953 a popular uprising took place in East Germany, fueled by an increase in prices for food and consumer goods while increasing the work norm. The uprising was brutally suppresed. In West Germany, June 17 had been a national holiday, our "Day of German Unity" (Tag der deutschen Einheit) until 1990 when October 3, the official date of the re-unification of Germany, became Tag der deutschen Einheit.
1955 - 1960
During these years, West and East Germany drifted further and further apart. Concerning economic growth in particular, West Germany was leaving East Germany behind. Since the borders were still open, people were able to see for themselves the differences in development between the two systems. More and more people were leaving the GDR which prompted the East German government to seal off the sector borders with a barrier - unfortunately you can't see the barrier in this picture since it is on the left side of the intersection, behind the tall building. The group of people you can see in the street represents the student protests that popped up all over West Germany and West Berlin after the establishment of the Bundeswehr (German Federal Armed Forces) in 1955. Left to the lower end of the protest march you see a white figure at the wall of the cemetery - he was helping academics escaping from the GDR. In particular, many doctors were leaving the country which led to bottlenecks in the East German healthcare system.
1961
Right after midnight, East German construction workers - under the supervision of Nationale Volksarmee ("National People's Army") and Volkspolizei (East German National Police) started to seal off the Eastern sector of Berlin with barbed wire and roadblocks. The windows and entrances to buildings on Bernauer Straße, near the border, were bricked up. Look at the top section of the upper of the two photos, close to the tracks - do you see people holding a rescue net? Desperate people were jumping out of the windows before they were bricked up. Three of them died. The subway and S-Bahn services between the two parts of the city were suspended. Two days later the first concrete elements and hollow blocks are erected and over the following month a wall was constructed, dividing the city with the first generation of the Berlin Wall.
One of the most famous photos shot was of Conrad Schumann, leaping over the barbed wire. The photo was taken by Peter Leibing. This photo was later called Leap to Freedom.