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Peaceful Revolution
1989–1990 process disestablishing East Germany
1989–1990 process disestablishing East Germany
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | Peaceful Revolution |
| subtitle | Die Wende |
| partof | the Revolutions of 1989, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Reunification of Germany |
| image | BerlinWall-BrandenburgGate.jpg |
| caption | Berlin wall falls, Brandenburg Gate, 10 November 1989 |
| date | 19 August 1989 – 3 October 1990 ()Main phase: 9 October – 9 November 1989(1 month) |
| place | East Germany |
| causes | * Authoritarianism |
| goals | * Democratization |
| methods | Civil disobedience, Civil resistance, Demonstration, Negotiations, Elections |
| result | Fall of the Berlin Wall (9 November 1989)Reunification of Germany (3 October 1990) |
| side1 | |
| side2 | |
| leadfigures1 | Main dissident leaders:{{ubl |
| leadfigures2 | Hardliners:{{ubl |
the revolution in East Germany
- Political repression
- Economic failure
- Anti-Communist discontent
- Removal of Hungary's border fence with Austria
- Economic reform
- German reunification
- East German Round Table
- 1990 East German general election
- Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany
- Flag of East Germany with cut out emblem.svg Opposition
- Anti-government demonstrators
- [[File:NEUES FORUM Logo.jpg|20px]] New Forum
- [[File:Initiative für Frieden und Menschenrechte.svg|20px]] Initiative for Peace and Human Rights
- [[File:DemokratischerAufbruch.svg|20px]] Democratic Awakening
- [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1990-0209-022, Logo Demokratie jetzt.jpg|20px]] Democracy Now
- East Germany Government
- Flagge der SED.svg Socialist Unity Party
- [[File:Emblem of the Stasi.svg|20px]] Stasi
- [[File:VollWappen Volkpolizei DDR.svg|20px]] Volkspolizei
- [[File:Volkspolizei Bereitschaft roundel.svg|20px]] Volkspolizei-Bereitschaft
- [[File:Emblem of the Border Troops of East Germany.svg|20px]] Border Troops |Jens Reich |Ulrike Poppe |Stefan Heym |Bärbel Bohley |Martin Böttger |Wolfgang Templin |Ibrahim Böhme |Ulrich Mühe |Christa Wolf |Kurt Masur |Peter Zimmermann |Bernd-Lutz Lange |Kurt Meyer |Jochen Pommert |Roland Wötzel |Erich Honecker |Egon Krenz |Heinz Keßler |Erich Mielke |Willi Stoph |Hans Modrow |Günter Schabowski |Gregor Gysi |Christa Luft
The Peaceful Revolution () – also, in German called Die Wende (, "the turning point") – was one of the peaceful revolutions of 1989 at the peak of the collapse of the Eastern Bloc in the late 1980s. It was a process of sociopolitical change that led to, among other openings, the opening of East Germany's borders to the Western world.
These events were precipitated by Solidarity's peaceful revolution in Poland and enabled by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's decision to abandon intervention in the Soviet sphere of influence and other shifts to the Soviet Union's foreign policy.
In East Germany—the former German Democratic Republic (GDR or DDR)—the peaceful revolution marks the end of the ruling by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) in 1989 and the transition to a parliamentary system. This peaceful transition later enabled the German reunification in October 1990. The peaceful revolution was marked by nonviolent initiatives and demonstrations.
The GDR's lack of competitiveness in the global market economy, as well as its sharply rising national debt, hastened the destabilization of the SED's one-party state, similar to destabilization of such regimes in other Eastern Bloc countries.
Reunification
Because of its hostile response to the reforms implemented within its "socialist brother lands", the SED leadership was already increasingly isolated within the Eastern Bloc when it permitted the opening of the border at the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989. Through a change in leadership and a willingness to negotiate, the SED attempted to win back the political initiative, but control of the situation increasingly lay with the West German government under Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
From December 1989, the GDR government of Prime Minister Hans Modrow was influenced by the Central Round Table, which put into action the dissolution of the Stasi and prepared free elections. After an election win for a coalition of parties that supported German reunification, the political path within the GDR was clear.
Despite previously hoping to rehabilitate their nation, East German activists eventually supported reunification. East German citizens welcomed the German reunification following 40 years of repression and inaction by the East German elites.
Timeline
Significant events:
- Late 1980s – The period of Soviet bloc liberalisation (Glasnost) and reform (Perestroika).
- 27 June 1989 – The opening of Hungary's border fence with Austria.
- 19 August 1989 – The Pan-European Picnic at the Hungarian-Austrian border, when hundreds of East Germans, who were allowed to travel to Hungary but not to the west, escaped to West Germany via Austria.
- From 4 September 1989 – Monday demonstrations in East Germany calling for the opening of the border with West Germany and greater human rights protections.
- 7 October 1989, the day of the 40th anniversary of the GDR, about 15,000 residents of the Saxon city of Plauen were the first to take to the streets en masse to express their dissatisfaction with the conditions in the GDR.
- 18 October 1989 – Erich Honecker removed as General Secretary of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany.
- 9 November 1989 – The fall of the Berlin Wall, enabling East Germans to travel freely to the west.
- 1 December 1989 – The Volkskammer removes section of the East German Constitution granting the SED a monopoly of power, thus ending Communist rule in East Germany.
- 3 December 1989 – The Socialist Unity Party's stepping down.
- 4 December 1989 – Citizens' occupations of Stasi buildings across the country, starting in Erfurt. The Stasi headquarters in Berlin were occupied on 15 January 1990.
- 13 January 1990 – The dissolution of the Stasi.
- 18 March 1990 - The 1990 East German general election, which was also a quasi-referendum on reunification, in which the Alliance for Germany, which supported reunification, got the highest proportion of votes.

- 1 July 1990 – The Währungs-, Wirtschafts- und Sozialunion (Monetary, Economy and Social Union) accord between East and West Germany, came into effect. East Germany adopted the West German currency on this day.
- 31 August 1990 – The signing of the Einigungsvertrag (Treaty of Unification) between the GDR and the Federal Republic of Germany on 31 August 1990 and the Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany on 12 September 1990.
- 3 October 1990 – German reunification achieved with the five re-established East German states integrated into the Federal Republic of Germany.
Soviet policy toward the Eastern Bloc
A fundamental shift in Soviet policy toward the Eastern Bloc nations under Mikhail Gorbachev in the late 1980s was the prelude to widespread demonstrations against the Socialist Unity Party, which had ruled East Germany since the country was founded on 7 October 1949. The Soviet reaction to the Polish crisis of 1980–1981 was already one of non-intervention.
Having initiated a policy of glasnost (openness) and emphasized the need for perestroika (economic restructuring), in July 1989, Gorbachev permitted the Warsaw Pact nations to initiate their own political and economic reforms within the terms of the treaty.
The policy of non-interference in Soviet Bloc countries' internal affairs was made official with Gorbachev's statement on 26 October 1989 that the "Soviet Union has no moral or political right to interfere in the affairs of its East European neighbors". This was dubbed the Sinatra Doctrine, by Gorbachev's spokesman Gennadi Gerasimov who joked "You know the Frank Sinatra song, 'I Did It My Way'? Hungary and Poland are doing it their way."
East German reaction to Soviet reforms
Following the reforms, by 1988 relations had soured between Gorbachev and Honecker, although the relationship of KGB and the Stasi was still close.
In November 1988, the distribution of the Soviet monthly magazine Sputnik, was prohibited in East Germany because its new open political criticisms annoyed upper circles of the GDR leadership. This caused a lot of resentment and helped to activate the opposition movement. After a year, the sale of the magazine was reinstated, and censored editions of the issues from the preceding year were made available in a special edition for East Germans.
Economy of East Germany
East Germany's economy was stronger than other Eastern Bloc countries and it was the most successful of the CMEA countries. It was the Soviet Union's most important trading partner, although it was very much subordinate. It was a net exporter of technology. Its shared language, cultural and personal connections with West Germany helped to boost its economy. Its trade with West Germany was 50 to 60 percent of its total trade with Western nations.
Although it was hailed as a communist success story, by the late 1980s its economic growth had slowed to less than 1% per year and the government's economic goals were not reached. It had to deal with increasing global competition with run-down industrial infrastructure, and shortages of labour and raw materials. From 1986, its products were often seen as inferior and orders delivered to the Soviet Union were increasingly rejected due to poor quality control standards. Other communist countries were pursuing market-led reforms, but the government of Erich Honecker rejected such changes, claiming they contradicted Marxist ideology. More than one-fifth of the government's income was spent on subsidising the costs of housing, food and basic goods.
Poor sewerage and industrial infrastructure led to major environmental problems. Half the country's domestic sewage was untreated, as was most industrial waste. Over a third of all East Germany's rivers, and almost a third of its reservoirs and half of its lakes were severely polluted. Its forests were damaged by sulphur dioxide and air pollution in cities was a problem. Protests about these environmental problems played a large part in the Peaceful Revolution.
Workers in East Germany earned more than those in other communist countries and they had better housing than most of them. But East German workers compared themselves with West Germans, who were much better off, which was another cause of dissatisfaction.
Electoral fraud in the GDR
Main article: 1989 East German local elections
In practice, there was no real choice in GDR elections, which consisted of citizens voting to approve a pre-selected list of National Front candidates. The National Front was, in theory, an alliance of political parties, but they were all controlled by the SED party, which controlled the Volkskammer, the East German parliament. The results of elections were generally about 99% "Yes" in favour of the list. However, before the 7 May 1989 election there were open signs of citizens' dissatisfaction with the government and the SED was concerned that there could be a significant number of "No" votes. The number of applications for an Ausreiseantrag (permission to leave the country) had increased and there was discontent about housing conditions and shortages of basic products.
In the weeks before the election, opposition activists called for it to be boycotted, and distributed a leaflet criticising Erich Honecker's regime. Nevertheless, the result of the election was proclaimed as 98.5 percent "Yes". Clear evidence of electoral fraud was smuggled to the West German media. When this information was broadcast, it was picked up in East Germany, instigating protests.
Citizens demanded their legal right to observe the vote count. Election monitors from churches and other groups showed the figures had been falsified. About 10 percent of voters had put a line through every name on the list, indicating a "No" vote, and about 10 percent of the electorate had not voted at all. After the initial protests on 7 May, there were demonstrations on the seventh of every month in Alexanderplatz in Berlin.Bryant, Chris and Stefan Wagstyl, Stefan (9 May 2009) Outrage at poll that breached Berlin Wall in Financial Times. Retrieved 23 August 2019
Gaps in the Iron Curtain
Enemies of the state
The Soviet Union and the Eastern bloc states had strongly isolationist policies and they developed complex systems and infrastructure to restrict their citizens travel beyond the Iron Curtain. About 3.5 million people left the GDR for West Germany before the building of the Berlin Wall and the Inner German border in August 1961. After that it was still possible to leave legally, by applying for and receiving an (permission to leave). Between 1961 and 1988 about 383,000 people left this way.
The government also forcibly exiled people, and political prisoners and their families could be ransomed to the West German government, although those involved had no choice in the matter. Between 1964 and 1989 a recorded 33,755 political prisoners and about 250,000 of their relatives and others were "sold" to West Germany.
Most of those who tried to escape illegally after 1961 travelled to other Eastern Bloc countries, as they believed their western borders were easier to breach than East Germany's. Around 7,000–8,000 East Germans escaped through Bulgaria, Hungary and Czechoslovakia between 1961 and 1988. However, the majority of attempts were thwarted and those caught were arrested and sent back to face the East German legal system. Some were also shot and killed by border guards.
Opening of the Hungarian and Czechoslovak borders
The Hungarian leader, János Kádár, retired on 22 May 1988 and other political parties were formed which challenged the old socialist order in Hungary, leading to a period of liberalisation. Almost a year later, on 2 May 1989, the Hungarian government began dismantling its border fence with Austria. This encouraged East German citizens to start travelling to Hungary in the hope of being able to get to the west more easily, not only over the border, but also by going to the West German embassy in Budapest and seeking asylum. On 27 June 1989 the Hungarian foreign minister Gyula Horn and his Austrian counterpart Alois Mock symbolically cut the border fence just outside Sopron.
On 10 August 1989, Hungary announced it would be further relaxing its handling of first-time East German border offenders, which had already become lenient. It stamped the passports of people caught trying to illegally cross the border, rather than arresting them or reporting them to the East German authorities; first-time offenders would just get a warning, and no stamp. It also announced a proposal to downgrade illegal border crossing from a crime to a misdemeanour.
The Pan-European Picnic at the Austro-Hungarian border followed on 19 August 1989. This was a celebration of more open relationships between east and west, near Sopron, but on the Austrian side of the border. The opening of the border gate then set in motion a peaceful chain reaction, at the end of which there was no longer a GDR or an Iron Curtain, and the Eastern Bloc had disintegrated. The idea of opening the border at a ceremony came from Otto von Habsburg and was brought up by him to Miklós Németh, the then Hungarian Prime Minister, who promoted the idea. The border was temporarily opened at 3 p.m., and 700–900 East Germans, who had travelled there after being tipped off, rushed across, without intervention from Hungarian border guards. It was the largest escape movement from East Germany since the Berlin Wall was built in 1961. The local organization in Sopron took over the Hungarian Democratic Forum, the other contacts were made via Habsburg and the Hungarian Minister of State Imre Pozsgay. Extensive advertising for the planned picnic was made by posters and flyers among the GDR holidaymakers in Hungary. The Austrian branch of the Paneuropean Union, which was then headed by Karl von Habsburg, distributed thousands of brochures inviting them to a picnic near the border at Sopron. Habsburg and Imre Pozsgay saw the event also as an opportunity to test Mikhail Gorbachev's reaction to an opening of the border on the Iron Curtain. In particular, it was examined whether Moscow would give the Soviet troops stationed in Hungary the command to intervene. The West German government was already prepared for the mass escape, and trains and coaches were ready to take the escapees from Vienna to Giessen, near Frankfurt, where a refugee reception centre was waiting for the new arrivals.

About 100,000 East Germans then travelled to Hungary, hoping to also get across the border. Many people camped in the garden of the West German embassy in Budapest, in parks and around the border areas. Although the East German government asked for these people to be deported back to the GDR, Hungary, which had signed the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees on 14 March 1989, refused.
From 10 September 1989, the Hungarian government allowed all East Germans to cross the Austro-Hungarian border without hindrance. Tens of thousands left and many also travelled to Czechoslovakia, whose government also gave in to demands to open its western border.
The East German government gave in to pressure to allow special trains carrying East German refugees from Prague to West Germany, to travel via East Germany. Between the first and eighth of October 1989, 14 so-called "Freedom Trains" (German: ) carried a total of 12,000 people to Hof, in Bavaria. Large crowds gathered to cheer the trains as they passed.
Newly formed opposition
As a result of new hopes inspired by the mass exodus of East Germans via Hungary, several opposition groups formed in Autumn 1989, with the aim of bringing about the same sorts of reforms in the GDR that had been instituted in Poland and Hungary.
The largest of these was the New Forum (German: Neues Forum). It was founded by the artist Bärbel Bohley along with Jens Reich and Jutta Seidel. It had over 200,000 members within a few weeks of being set up. On 20 September 1989 it applied to field candidates in the March 1990 general election.
Decisive events of 1989
Tiananmen Square protests
East Germans could see news about the Tiananmen Square democracy demonstration between April and June 1989 on West German television broadcasts. When the Chinese regime brutally crushed the demonstration on 3–4 June, several hundred and possibly several thousand protesters were killed. This caused concern for the nascent East German protest movement, that had demonstrated against electoral fraud in May. "We too feared the possibility of a 'Chinese solution,'" said Pastor Christian Fuehrer of the Nikolaikirche in Leipzig.
The Neues Deutschland, the official newspaper of the SED, supported the crackdown by the Chinese authorities. The German People's Congress proclaimed it was "a defeat for counter-revolutionary forces." Sixteen civil rights activists in East Berlin were arrested for protesting against the actions of the Chinese government.
However, growing political agitation in East Germany was part of wider liberalisation within the Soviet bloc resulting from Gorbachev's reforms – the country was not as isolated as China. Although Gorbachev visited Beijing in May 1989 to normalize Sino-Soviet relations, and the Chinese people were enthusiastic about his ideas, he had no influence with the Chinese government. Rather than stifle the East Germans' protests, the Tiananmen Square demonstration was further inspiration for their desire to instigate change.
40th anniversary of GDR
Celebrations for Republic Day on 7 October 1989, the 40th anniversary of the founding of the GDR, were marred by demonstrations. There had been protests in the preceding weeks, and Hungary and Czechoslovakia now allowed East Germans to travel freely across their borders to the west. From 1 to 8 October, 14 "Freedom Trains" took 12,000 East German refugees from Prague across GDR territory to West Germany, with cheers from East Germans as they passed. All were signs that the anniversary, which Mikhail Gorbachev attended, would not run smoothly.
Although there were almost 500,000 Soviet troops stationed in the GDR, they were not going to help suppress any demonstrations. It later emerged that Gorbachev had ordered that the troops were to stay in their barracks during the commemorations. As the reformist Gorbachev was paraded along Unter den Linden, cheering crowds lining the street called out "Gorbi, Gorbi," and "Gorbi, help us." However, there were still fears of a Tiananmen Square-style crackdown, as on 2 October, the SED party official Egon Krenz was in Beijing, at the anniversary of the founding of People's Republic of China. There, he said, "In the struggles of our time, the GDR and China stand side by side."
On 7 October, a candelight demonstration with 1,500 protesters around Gethsemane Church in Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin was crushed by security forces,Gethsemanekirche: The Gentle Trouble Spot. In: Sites of Unity (Haus der Geschichte), 2022. who beat and hurt people up and made around 500 arrests. Other protests outside the Palace of the Republic were also brutally repressed.
There were protests throughout the country, the most organised being three consecutive demonstrations in Saxony on 7, 8 and 9 October in Plauen, Dresden and Leipzig respectively. In Leipzig, there was no violence, as the 70,000 participants were too many for the 8,000 armed security forces present to tackle. "The message from Leipzig soared over the entire country: The masses had the power to topple the regime peacefully".
When numerous East Germans were arrested for protesting the 40th-anniversary celebrations, many of them sang "The Internationale" in police custody to imply that they, rather than their captors, were the real revolutionaries.
On 18 October, only eleven days after these events, Honecker was removed as head of the party and the state and was replaced by Egon Krenz.
Weekly demonstrations
Main article: Monday demonstrations in East Germany, Alexanderplatz demonstration

In addition to the GDR 40th anniversary demonstrations and the protests against electoral fraud, from September 1989 there were regular weekly pro-democracy demonstrations in towns and cities across the country. They are referred to as "Monday demonstrations" as that was the day they occurred in Leipzig, where they started, but they were staged on several days of the week. In Erfurt, for example, they happened on Thursdays. The first wave of these was from 4 September 1989 to March 1990. They continued sporadically until 1991.
The protesters called for an open border with West Germany, genuine democracy, and greater human rights and environmental protections.
Churches were often pivotal in the demonstrations. The Leipzig "Monday demonstrations" stemmed from Monday prayer meetings at the Nikolaikirche (Church of St Nicholas). Prayers were said for people who had been mistreated by the state authorities, so the meetings took on a political character. The numbers attending grew and on 4 September 1989, it became a demonstration of over 1000 people in front of the church. The Stasi arrived to break it up, taking some demonstrators away in trucks.
The demonstrations became a regular weekly event in Leipzig and around the country, with tens of thousands joining in. There were mass arrests and beatings at the Leipzig demonstrations on 11 September and going through until 2 October. After the demonstration on 9 October, in which the security forces were completely outnumbered by the 70,000 protesters and unable to hinder them, the demonstrations in Leipzig and elsewhere remained relatively peaceful.
On the 28 October 1989, to try to calm the protests, an amnesty was issued for political prisoners being held for border crimes or for participation in the weekly demonstrations.
The first wave of demonstrations ended in March 1990 due to the forthcoming free parliamentary elections on 18 March.
Plan X
"Plan X" was an emergency scenario in case of war with West Germany, which would be used to reunify Germany under socialist leadership.
The GDR's last-ditch secret plan to avert bankruptcy
On October 31, 1989, the Politbüro of the Central Committee of the SED discussed a top-secret "Schürer-Paper", which proposed offering the opening of the Berlin Wall as a last bargaining chip to the Federal Republic of Germany to obtain urgently needed credits and expanded economic cooperation, thereby averting a looming decline in living standards and state bankruptcy. The MfS Department (National Economy/HA XVIII) also confirmed that this was the only way to prevent the collapse of the GDR.
Ruling party starts to lose power
On 18 October 1989, the 77-year-old Erich Honecker was replaced as the General Secretary of the Socialist Unity Party by Egon Krenz. After the vote to oust Honecker passed, Stasi chief Erich Mielke "got nasty," and accused Honecker of political corruption. Honecker responded that Mielke should not open his mouth so much. Mielke responded by putting the last nail in Honecker's coffin. He announced that the Stasi had a file on the now-ousted leader. It contained proof of Honecker's corrupt business practices, sexual activities, and how, as a member of the underground Communist Party of Germany during the Nazi years, he had been arrested by the Gestapo and had named names.
Officially Honecker resigned due to ill health, but he had been sharply criticized by the party. Although Krenz, 52, was the youngest member of the Politburo, he was a hardliner who had congratulated the Chinese regime on its brutal crushing of the Tiananmen Square demonstration. The New Forum were doubtful about his ability to bring about reform, saying that "he would have to undertake 'tremendous efforts' to dispel the mistrust of a great part of the population."
Günter Mittag, who was responsible for managing the economy, and , editor of the Neues Deutschland and head of propaganda, were also removed from office.
On 7 November 1989, the entire Cabinet of the East German government, the 44-member Council of Ministers, led by Prime Minister Willi Stoph, resigned as a consequence of the political upheaval caused by the mass exodus of citizens via the Hungarian and Czechoslovak borders and the ongoing protests. The Politburo of the SED remained the real holders of political power. Over 200,000 members of the SED had left the party during the previous two months. Hans Modrow became the prime minister and 17 November he formed a 28-member Council of Minister which included 11 non-SED ministers.
Krenz, the last SED leader of the GDR, was only in office for 46 days, resigning on 3 December, along with the rest of the SED Politburo and the Central Committee of the party. The country was then in practice run by Prime Minister Modrow. Krenz was succeeded as head of state by Manfred Gerlach.Orlow, Dietrich (2016) A History of Modern Germany: 1871 to Present. London: Routledge. Retrieved 30 August 2019
Fall of the Berlin Wall and border opening
Main article: Fall of the Berlin Wall, Fall of the inner German border
After Hungary and Czechoslovakia allowed East Germans to cross to the west via their borders, there was nothing the GDR government could to do to prevent people leaving. Between 4–5 November, the weekend before the Berlin Wall was opened, over 50,000 people left. Party official Günter Schabowski announced at a press conference on the evening of Thursday 9 November 1989 that East Germans were free to travel through the checkpoints of the Berlin Wall and the inner German border.
After some initial confusion, with 20,000 people arriving at the Bornholmer Straße border crossing by 11.30 p.m., chanting "Open the gate", Harald Jäger, a border official, allowed people to pass through into West Berlin. Over the next few days streams of cars queued at the checkpoints along the Berlin Wall and the inner German border to travel through to West Germany.
From 10 November, East Germans who had crossed the border queued outside West German banks to collect their Begrüßungsgeld ("Welcome Money"). This was a payment that the West German government had given to visiting East Germans since 1970. In 1989 the amount was 100 Deutsche Marks once per year. Because East Germans' travel to the west had been very restricted, until the middle of the 1980s only about 60,000 visitors had received "Welcome Money". However, between 9 and 22 November alone, over 11 million East Germans had crossed into West Berlin or West Germany. In November and December about 4 billion DM was paid out, and the system was stopped on 29 December 1989.
Die Wende
Die Wende translates into "the turn" or "the turning point". The term began to be used in reference to the Peaceful Revolution on 16 October 1989 in the magazine Der Spiegel. The term was first used publicly in East Germany on 18 October by the last communist leader Egon Krenz in a speech to the Volkskammer upon his election as General Secretary.
Notes
References
References
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- [https://www.lr-online.de/lausitz/cottbus/wahlfaelschung-1989-in-ddr-die-wahl-mit-der-die-wende-begann_aid-38601105 Wahlfälschung 1989 Die Angst der SED vor tausend Nein-Stimmen], 9 May 2019 in LR online. Retrieved 23 August 2019
- Hawley, Charles (7 May 2009) [https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/99-percent-for-the-communists-how-the-end-of-east-germany-began-a-623492.html 99 Percent for the Communists: How the End of East Germany Began ] in [[Spiegel Online International]]. Retrieved 23 August 2019
- Mark Keck-Szajbel, Mark; Stola, Dariusz (11 March 2015) [https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0888325414566073 "Crossing the Borders of Friendship: Mobility across Communist Borders"] in ''East European Politics and Societies and Cultures'', Vol. 29, issue 1, pp. 92–95. Retrieved 24 August 2015
- Wehr, Laura (14 December 2016) [https://www.bpb.de/geschichte/zeitgeschichte/deutschlandarchiv/238655/vergessene-migrationsgeschichte-n-die-ausreise-aus-der-ddr Vergessene Migrationsgeschichte/n? Die Ausreise aus der DDR in der Erinnerung von Übersiedler-Eltern und -Kindern] on [[Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung]] website. Retrieved 25 August 2019.
- Blask, Falk; Bindig, Belinda; Gelhausen, Franck (2009) ''Ich packe meinen Koffer. Eine ethnologische Spurensuche rund um OstWest-Ausreisende und Spätaussiedelnde'' Berlin: Ringbuch Verlag
- Haines, Gavin (6 November 2014) [https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-29889706 East Germany's trade in human beings] on [[BBC News Online]]. Retrieved 30 July 2019
- Iken, Katja (24 October 2011) [https://www.spiegel.de/einestages/haeftlingsdeals-mit-der-ddr-a-947357.html Häftlingsdeals mit der DDR Menschen gegen Maisladungen] in [[Spiegel Online]]. Retrieved 30 July 2019
- Sontheimer, Michael; Supp, Barbara (4 July 2008) [https://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/the-cold-war-s-forgotten-victims-avenging-east-germans-killed-in-bulgaria-a-563992.html "The Cold War's Forgotten Victims: Avenging East Germans Killed in Bulgaria"] in ''[[Spiegel Online International]]''. Retrieved 24 August 2019
- [[Géza Jeszenszky. Jeszenszky, Géza]] (7 December 2009) [https://www.rferl.org/a/Hungary_And_The_Reunification_Of_Germany_/1897164.html Hungary And The Reunification Of Germany]. [[Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty]] website. Retrieved 24 August 2019
- [http://ghdi.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=2876 The Hopes of East German Refugees (August 8, 1989)] on German History in Documents and Images (GHDI) website. Retrieved 25 August 2019
- Nelsson, Richard, et al. (12 June 2019) [https://www.theguardian.com/world/from-the-archive-blog/2019/jun/12/hungary-austria-open-border-june-1989 Snipping away at the Iron Curtain: when Hungary opened its Austrian border – archive, 1989 ] in [[Guardian Online]]. Retrieved 24 August 2019
- After the demolition of the border facilities, the patrols of the heavily armed Hungarian border guards were tightened and there was still a shooting order.Andreas Rödder: ''Deutschland einig Vaterland – Die Geschichte der Wiedervereinigung'' (2009), p 72.
- Miklós Németh in Interview with Peter Bognar, ''Grenzöffnung 1989: „Es gab keinen Protest aus Moskau“'' (German – Border opening in 1989: There was no protest from Moscow), in ''Die Presse'' 18 August 2014
- Miklós Németh in Interview, Austrian TV – ORF "Report", 25 June 2019
- Hilde Szabo: ''Die Berliner Mauer begann im Burgenland zu bröckeln'' (The Berlin Wall began to crumble in Burgenland – German), in Wiener Zeitung 16 August 1999; Otmar Lahodynsky: ''Paneuropäisches Picknick: Die Generalprobe für den Mauerfall'' (Pan-European picnic: the dress rehearsal for the fall of the Berlin Wall – German), in: ''Profil'' 9 August 2014.
- Ludwig Greven "Und dann ging das Tor auf", in Die Zeit, 19 August 2014.
- Thomas Roser: ''DDR-Massenflucht: Ein Picknick hebt die Welt aus den Angeln'' (German – Mass exodus of the GDR: A picnic clears the world) in: Die Presse 16 August 2018.
- „Der 19. August 1989 war ein Test für Gorbatschows“ (German – August 19, 1989 was a test for Gorbachev), in: FAZ 19 August 2009.
- (19 August 2009). "Mit dem Picknickkorb in die Freiheit". Süddeutsche Zeitung.
- Thomas Roser: DDR-Massenflucht: Ein Picknick hebt die Welt aus den Angeln (German – Mass exodus of the GDR: A picnic clears the world) in: Die Presse 16 August 2018.
- [[Walter Momper]] (ruling mayor of Berlin in 1989) expected the Berlin Wall to open: "We expected that one day the storm would come across the border from behind, actually, since Otto von Habsburg and the Pan-Europa-Union had the pan-European picnic on the border between Hungary and Austria on August 19, 1989 in Sopron. Hundreds of them came. It was stupid that people from the GDR should cross the border via Hungary and Austria. if there was a border crossing directly with them." In: [https://www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/momper-ueber-schabowski-wir-sind-so-verblieben-dass-er-uns-rechtzeitig-bescheid-geben-wuerde/25190634.html Interview with Walter Momper, 9.11.2019]
- Schmemann, Serge (11 September 1989) [https://www.nytimes.com/1989/09/11/world/hungary-allows-7000-east-germans-to-emigrate-west.html Hungary allows 7000 East Germans to emigrate West] in ''[[New York Times]]''. Retrieved 24 August 2019
- [https://www.unhcr.org/protect/PROTECTION/3b73b0d63.pdf States Parties to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol] (PDF) on the ''UNHCR'' website, Retrieved 25 August 2019
- Wood, Tanya (2 October 2009) [https://www.dw.com/en/historic-east-german-refugee-train-rolls-again/a-4751164 Historic East German refugee train rolls again] on ''DW'' Retrieved 25 August 2019
- Schmemann, Serge (20 September 1989) [https://www.nytimes.com/1989/09/20/world/opposition-forms-in-east-germany.html Opposition forms in East Germany] in ''[[New York Times]]''. Retrieved 25 August 2019
- van der Vat, Dan (19 Sep 2010) [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/sep/19/barbel-bohley-obituary Bärbel Bohley Obituary] in [[Guardian Online]]. Retrieved 25 August 2019
- New Forum acted as an umbrella organisation for activist groups across the country. Other new political organisations including [[Democratic Awakening]], [[United Left (East Germany). United Left]], and the [[Social Democratic Party in the GDR
- Schaum, Marlis (7 January 2009) [https://www.dw.com/en/west-german-tv-the-class-enemy-in-the-front-room/a-3804892 West German TV: the class enemy in the front room] on [[DW.com]]. Retrieved 26 August 2019
- Fong, Diana (3 June 2009) [https://www.dw.com/en/chinas-pro-democracy-protests-struck-hope-and-fear-in-east-germany/a-4298731-1 China's pro-democracy protests struck hope and fear in East Germany] on ''DW'' Retrieved 26 August 2019
- [https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/oct-7-1989-how-gorbi-spoiled-east-germany-s-40th-birthday-party-a-653724.html How 'Gorbi' Spoiled East Germany's 40th Birthday Party] on ''Spiegel Online International'' 7 October 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2019
- Schmemann, Serge (9 October 1989) [https://www.nytimes.com/1989/10/09/world/security-forces-storm-protesters-in-east-germany.html Security Forces Storm Protester in East Germany] in ''New York Times'' Retrieved 27 August 2019
- Schlegel, Matthias (28 October 2009) [https://www.tagesspiegel.de/themen/in-english/20th-anniversary-the-beginning-of-the-end-of-east-germany/1624120.html The beginning of the end of East Germany] in ''[[Der Tagesspiegel]]''. Retrieved 26 August 2019
- Curry, Andrew (9 October 2009) [https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/we-are-the-people-a-peaceful-revolution-in-leipzig-a-654137.html We Are the People' A Peaceful Revolution in Leipzig] in ''Spiegel Online'' Retrieved 20 August 2019
- Tomforde, Anna (19 Oct 1989) [https://www.theguardian.com/world/1989/oct/19/germany.fromthearchive East Germans oust Honecker] in ''The Guardian'' Retrieved 27 August 2019
- Raßloff, Steffen (27 October 2012) [https://www.erfurt-web.de/Besetzung_MfS_Bezirksverwaltung_Erfurt_1989 Besetzung Stasi-Bezirksverwaltung 1989. Die Angst überwunden. Denkmale in Erfurt (69): Mit der Besetzung der ersten Stasi-Bezirksverwaltung gab Erfurt am 4. Dezember 1989 ein DDR-weites Signal.] Beitrag der Serie Denkmale in Erfurt aus der ''[[Thüringer Allgemeine]]'' on [http://www.efurt-web.de www.efurt-web.de]{{Dead link. (August 2025)
- Sator, Klaus (2 October 2014) [https://www.bundestag.de/resource/blob/333106/8ad3401f5216bbe1cf58c22d98a53fbb/Montagsdemonstrationen-data.pdf Die Montagsdemonstrationen in der DDR 1989/90]. Deutscher Bundestag. Wissenschaftliche Dienste. Retrieved 27 August 2019
- Lohmann, Susanne (1994) [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/world-politics/article/dynamics-of-informational-cascades-the-monday-demonstrations-in-leipzig-east-germany-198991/2ED97676F689092E4DDD1F61418F20B9# "The Dynamics of Informational Cascades: The Monday Demonstrations in Leipzig, East Germany, 1989–91"] in ''World Politics'', Volume 47, Issue 1, October 1994, pp. 42–101
- The most noted slogan protesters shouted was ''"Wir sind das Volk"'' ("We are the people"), meaning that in a real democracy, the people determine how the country is governed. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, in demonstrations calling for German reunification, this morphed into ''"Wir sind ein Volk"'' ("We are one people").Kramsch, Claire (1993) – Foreign Language Study – 295 pages [https://books.google.com/books?id=73rFnM6qlrwC&dq=%22Wir+sind+das+Volk%22+%22We+are+the+people%22+East+Germany+meaning&pg=PA258 Context and Culture in Language Teaching], p 258. Oxford: Oxford University Press
- Torpey, John (1995) [https://www.jstor.org/stable/657921?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents "The Abortive Revolution Continues: East German Civil-Rights Activists since Unification"] in ''Theory and Society'' Vol. 24, No. 1 (February 1995), pp. 105–134
- Feffer, John (29 July 2014) [https://www.huffpost.com/entry/the-monday-demonstrations_b_5631922?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAADzQwewk8fQ5jrB6sQYdFaLCIfkIwv4t90ixV3In2sUS9nxfXA7aLS1gGWWyPQH_eUe1z_YnfurEm0WxzuwXY1qvv5QSOBU1-LfkRUXb4Rv4jqnkq6WpKeLTJCGsRAic_aNI_JvlkPNt6nBiSqMqHv9yoJrA7OaddfQSDXAv14bd The Monday Demonstrations] in ''HuffPost'' Retrieved 27 August 2019
- The largest gatherings were the [[Alexanderplatz demonstration]] in Berlin on 4 November 1989, and 11 November in Leipzig, each with an estimated 500,000 protesters, although there are claims that up to 750,000 were at the Berlin demonstration.Leber, Sebastian (4 November 2014) [https://www.tagesspiegel.de/themen/reportage/4-november-1989-aufstand-auf-dem-berliner-alexanderplatz/10927200.html Aufstand auf dem Berliner Alexanderplatz] in ''[[Der Tagesspiegel]]''. Retrieved 28 August 1990
- (2018). "Law, History, and Justice: Debating German State Crimes in the Long Twentieth Century". Berghahn Books.
- https://walled-in-berlin.com/j-elke-ertle/day-x-east-german-conquest-of-west-berlin/
- Hertle, Hans-Hermann. (2018-01-08). ""Totalschaden" - Das Finale Grande der DDR-Volkswirtschaft 1989. Paralyse und Untergang - Stasi-Analysen zum ökonomischen Niedergang der DDR".
- Starcevi, Nesha (8 November 1989) [https://www.apnews.com/0974bb9bc71486047ebd071567b120e0 East German Government Resigns, Pro-Reform Marches Continue] {{Webarchive. link. (2019-08-30 in [[AP News]]. Retrieved 30 August 2019.)
- Schmemann, Serge (8 November 1989) [https://www.nytimes.com/1989/11/08/world/east-germany-s-cabinet-resigns-bowing-to-protest-and-mass-flight.html East Germany's Cabinet Resigns, Bowing to Protest and Mass Flight] in ''[[New York Times]]''. Retrieved 29 August 2019
- [https://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/04/world/clamor-in-europe-egon-krenz-s-46-days-as-east-berlin-party-chief.html "Clamor in Europe; Egon Krenz's 46 Days as East Berlin Party Chief"] in ''New York Times'', 4 December 1989. Retrieved 28 August 2019
- Schmemann. Serge (10 November 1989) [https://www.nytimes.com/1989/11/10/world/clamor-east-east-germany-opens-frontier-west-for-migration-travel-thousands.html Clamor in the East; East Germany opens Frontier to the West for Migration or Travel; Thousands Cross] in ''[[New York Times]]''. Retrieved 31 August 2019
- [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-34693104 Berlin Wall blunderer Guenter Schabowski dies at 86] on [[BBC News]], 1 November 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2019
- Paterson, Tony (7 November 2014) [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/fall-of-the-berlin-wall-the-guard-who-opened-the-gate-and-made-history-9847750.html Fall of the Berlin Wall: The guard who opened the gate – and made history] in ''[[The Independent]]''. Retrieved 31 August 2019
- [https://www.ddr-museum.de/en/blog/archive/east-west-relationships-between-minimum-exchange-and-welcome-money East-West relationships between minimum exchange and welcome money] on [[DDR Museum]] website. Retrieved 31 August 2019
- "Der Spiegel 42/1989".
- ''Die 50 Tage des Egon Krenz'' (''The 50 Days of Egon Krenz'') broadcast by the ''ZDF'' 2016
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