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Exhibition theme: Protest and Flight: Demanding an independent press [17/56]

OBJECT INFORMATION

Info

November 4 1989
Berlin, Karl-Liebknecht-Straße
Created By: Jürgen Nagel

License: Not Creative Commons

Demonstrators at the Alexanderplatz demonstration, the "largest anti-government demonstration(s) in the history of the GDR" (retrieved and translated from Wikipedia: Alexanderplatz-Demonstration, on April 23, 2009)

Depicts

Alexanderplatz demonstration, banderole, child, child's pushchair, crowd

Places

Alexanderplatz, Karl-Liebknecht-Straße

Text in image

Unabhängig[e] / Presse

Other items in this set

Ultimately, it was the citizens of the GDR themselves who brought down the SED regime. From the summer of 1989 on, thousands of East Germans tried to flee to the West across the Hungarian-Austrian border and via the West German embassies in Budapest, Prague, and Warsaw. In East Germany itself, ever greater numbers of people supported the demands of the citizens' movements for free elections, freedom of the press, and freedom to travel, despite their fear of state repression. In October, mass protests, which now involved hundreds of thousands of demonstrators, spread across the entire country. Aware that their protest could no longer be stopped, people increasingly felt a desire to capture events on film.