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The Fall of the Berlin Wall

The Fall of the Berlin Wall

Posted on November 4, 2009 | 5 Comments

Berlin Wall Photo Gallery

Photographs ©Alexandra Avakian/Contact Press Images

Fall of Berlin Wall, 11/1989.

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West Germans at the wall. E. German border guards on top of wall, before the fall.

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West Germans attack the wall. East German border guards on other side.

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West Germans hitting the wall before it was decided to bring it down.

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West German and East German border guards try to control situation before fall of wall.

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Immediately after the official tearing-down of the first slabs of the wall.

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East Germans waiting to cross. Fall of Berlin Wall, 11/1989.

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West German border control processing East Germans on first day of fall of Berlin Wall.

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East Germans celebrate with champagne as they cross the border to West Germany.

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West German soup kitchen for East Germans who have come across.

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West German kids hit the wall after the official opening.

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East German border guard seen through a whole in the wall made by West Germans. Before the official opening of wall.

1989 was already a great year: I had covered the Palestinian Intifada, the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, Glasnost and Perestroika in Moscow, the death of Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran, among other stories for Time Magazine and the New York Times.

On the evening of November 5, I was sitting on a friend's couch in Paris glued to my shortwave radio. Hour by hour the story became more exciting: the Berlin Wall might be coming down. That morning at five a.m. I jumped on a plane headed to Berlin. By the time I landed I had an assignment for LIFE Magazine. I found a two-star hotel whose best features were close proximity to the Wall and a gossipy owner who passed on the latest whispers he'd heard about the Wall.

The next morning I awoke before dawn and walked along the Wall, looking for pictures. I found a group of young West German men slamming the Wall with a hammer. It looked as if they had been at it all night. Suddenly water cannon started blasting through the crack the young men had made in the Wall. East German border guards were trying to push us away with the hard freezing blast of water. I made lots of pictures but one frame would become famous.

At a certain point I got up on the top of the Wall with some protesters to photograph. The East German soldiers came up too and forced us back down. It was not at all clear that the Berlin Wall would actually open or that it would go peacefully.

That night I was walking along the Wall and what seemed like tens of thousands of people were standing near Brandenburg Gate at the Wall. I knew I could never fight my way through that crowd to the base of the Wall, so I let the crowd carry me along in the general direction I thought I needed to go. I ended up in front of the Wall where I stood all night long in a denim jacket and flimsy Keds, so freezing I thought I would break in two. It ended up being the best spot. Sometime before dawn border guards and workers came and started systematically dismantling the Wall right in front of us. I was handed one of the very first chunks of Wall to be officially broken--it still sits on my desk.

By dawn people were streaming through the break in the wall. The next three days Berlin was joyful and it seemed nobody slept--the fall of the Berlin Wall was a rare peaceful resolution to a potentially dangerous event. Within days I was off to Prague to photograph the Velvet Revolution.

Avakian's Berlin Wall slide show is being projected continuously on the Newseum's 40 ft Atrium screen as part of Foto Week DC and the Newseum's exhibit Berlin Wall.

>> www.newseum.org/news/news.aspx?item=nh_BERL091103&style=f
>> www.fotoweekdc.org/events/listing.aspx?id=374

What Others Had to Say

Added by Terry Wrong on November 10, 2009

Been remembering those days. Your work is and has always been so iconic. The anniversary caused a sleepless night and online I found this and other things that caught me up. Your book is so exciting! Best to you and your family.

Added by steve bolder on July 6, 2010

At a certain point I got up on the top of the Wall with some protesters to photograph. The East German soldiers came up too and forced us back down. It was not at all clear that the Berlin Wall would actually open or that it would go peacefully.
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Added by krobinson on October 19, 2010

when I have visited to Berlin, was very keen to see Berlin wall. I found Bits of the wall was throughout the city in chunks.I know why some don't want reminder of the wall but I think we should always remember mans' inhumanity to man.
http://www.europevoyage.net/top-attractions-in-berlin.html

Added by JoeD2 on November 15, 2010

This was the same year I got married to my sweetheart. It was an historic event that I will never forget. I watched on T.V. with my father as they tore down that wall. You captured the historic moments so vividly in the photos. Thank You for glimpse back into the past... Well done..

Added by Amy Davenport on November 14, 2011

Certainly one of the most iconic moments of the last centuty.
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About This Blog

Alexandra Avakian
As a young photojournalist Alexandra Avakian was fascinated with revolution and the fight for freedom—even dreaming, many times, that she worked in a strife-torn city. She has braved bullets and hostility to photograph stories of searing conflict and bring them to the world. Going far beyond the brief news reports that most of us see, Avakian shares a richer, wider view of the Muslim world through her extraordinary storytelling and photographs—all beautifully showcased in Windows of the Soul, and highlighted here in this blog.
Read Alexandra's Bio
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