A random walk more or less by the Berlin Wall (June-July 1989)

A slightly corrected and lengthened version of a video posted previously at: • A random walk more or ...
This is a somewhat tedious assemblage - the original footage is not good enough to edit well as it was a quick stab meant only as an initial exploration. It's still interesting, if you've been there it may bring some memories. If you are into silly optical effects, grab a pair of sunglasses (any slightly darkened piece of glass will do) and hold just ONE of the filters in front of your RIGHT eye. Keep looking through BOTH eyes and fast forward to 18:39 and wait for the mirrors to appear. You should see it now exactly as I saw it back then. More on that effect here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulfric...
It will work very well with any video scene showing a lateral camera movement as long as it's reasonably smooth (trains and river boats are best for that sort of thing).
On another odd note: at 16:28 there is this odd face(?)-like painting. I could never figure out what that was. And I found out only yesterday (22 Feb. 2022) when I was watching part 1 of a German 1986 documentary on the 25th year of the Wall. Watch: • Die Mauer 1986 I - 25 ... and fast-forward to 2:07. Cool, no? So this means the half-life of a graffito there was about 3 years (depending on the location, of course; this one got moderate steady traffic).

Пікірлер: 2 400

  • @bigredracingdog466
    @bigredracingdog466 Жыл бұрын

    Around 1987 my brother was taking a college course entitled something like "Contemporary Europe: Past, Present & Future." He had to write a paper that made a prediction about some aspect of European politics, economics or social movements. His paper was called "German Reunification: a 25-year Plan" in which he presented a timeline of events that would lead to eventual reunification. He got a C+. The prof wrote a comment at the end to the effect, "An overly optimistic premise. This won't happen in our lifetimes." I told him after the Wall fell that he should send the prof the paper with a big red circle around that quote.

  • @dimas5826

    @dimas5826

    Жыл бұрын

    Well did he??

  • @itsohaya4096

    @itsohaya4096

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dimas5826 my guy asking the real questions here

  • @bigredracingdog466

    @bigredracingdog466

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dimas5826 No, but he should've.

  • @jhonviel7381

    @jhonviel7381

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bigredracingdog466 why are you trying to take credit for what your brother did?

  • @bigredracingdog466

    @bigredracingdog466

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jhonviel7381 I did?

  • @eyesofisabelofficial
    @eyesofisabelofficial2 жыл бұрын

    I was here in May 1989, the audio really brings it back. One of the younger members of my student exchange group said "How long do you think the wall will be there for ?" to which I answered "Perhaps 70 years", It only lasted another 6 months !

  • @michelveraliot

    @michelveraliot

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's crazy when we say something isn't gonna last it usually last forever take the Eifel tower for example or covid And when we say it's gonna last it's actually not hahha Guess god love trolling us

  • @mt_gox

    @mt_gox

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely incredible.

  • @snowwhite7677

    @snowwhite7677

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, as long as you didn't have money in Long Term Capital Management, no big deal.

  • @mastr-sf1jv

    @mastr-sf1jv

    Жыл бұрын

    One of those times where you feel good missing the mark, cheers to hopefully more peace.

  • @adam346

    @adam346

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mastr-sf1jv I was thinking much the same... never so happy to be so wrong.

  • @johnerdam961
    @johnerdam961 Жыл бұрын

    Sometimes an amateur-shot without a big concept, text and cut, can be KZread gold! Thanks for the upload!

  • @thecandyman9308

    @thecandyman9308

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, "slice-of-life" has its own honesty that I love too.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    My plan was to shoot much more "next time" (spring 1990, say). This was just a test. Had I known the wall would be gone soon after, I'd force myself to film more places (I knew exactly where I wanted to go, including spots very rarely shown, like the Am Sandkrug "wedge") instead of goofing off. But carrying the largish camera bag and a tripod was a bit of a hassle. Who knew.

  • @Hiermoeteenusernamestaan

    @Hiermoeteenusernamestaan

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes to see just normal the day life is priceless

  • @budguy21
    @budguy21 Жыл бұрын

    I was an American soldier in West Germany the night the wall came down. Unbelievable. We went into town, it was the biggest party EVER: new years, christmas, 4th of july combined. People celebrating, and free beer everywhere.

  • @thecandyman9308

    @thecandyman9308

    Жыл бұрын

    Any concern in that moment that somebody from the other side's army would try something in your unit? I fear we won't ever get another Glasnost-era.

  • @aylinguluzade5962

    @aylinguluzade5962

    11 ай бұрын

    American from which country? America is a continent. From Brazil? From Peru?

  • @budguy21

    @budguy21

    11 ай бұрын

    @@aylinguluzade5962 There's only ONE America. The rest is South America.

  • @lijohnyoutube101

    @lijohnyoutube101

    11 ай бұрын

    @@aylinguluzade5962 That is not the typical usage. Its common speech to say American to refer to a US citizen. The geographic continent is something talked about in a geographic class in school but not in any way in common day language. You are simply referring to a word in a manner that it is never taught in the US.

  • @aylinguluzade5962

    @aylinguluzade5962

    11 ай бұрын

    @@lijohnyoutube101 Which is wrong. Being 'typical' doesn't mean being right. It's as if Russia was claiming "we are Europe, the rest is Western Europe". The US should finally start looking for a name, 'America' is more closely related to other countries on the continent.

  • @MrJannisman
    @MrJannisman2 жыл бұрын

    That is a funny Berlin conversation at 15:00: Older guy: That's smearing. It has nothing to do with art, it should be banned. Young guy: Well, try to imitate me. Older guy: Any toddler could do that, I don't need to show you.

  • @mernisch8307

    @mernisch8307

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol! I was wondering what they were talking about

  • @1994CivicGLi

    @1994CivicGLi

    Жыл бұрын

    This was Nikita Khrushchev’s opinion on modern art I can’t disagree

  • @alouisschafer7212

    @alouisschafer7212

    Жыл бұрын

    he aint all that wrong

  • @madthewirdo4236

    @madthewirdo4236

    Жыл бұрын

    I caught that too, funny

  • @moos5221

    @moos5221

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wfr1108 who was? not so long before? what are you talking about?

  • @thomasnygaard4514
    @thomasnygaard45142 жыл бұрын

    Incredibly cool footage. Went to both sides of the city in 1985. Bring back memories. Thank you so much for sharing! Greetings from Denmark.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most of those places are almost unrecognisable today.

  • @danstrayer111

    @danstrayer111

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes..I was there 1986, both sides. I remember photographing the East Berlin guards while they watched me with binoculars. I waved. They didn't. We took the train back at night from the east. I was by the window, and could look down to see two soldiers with weapons and dogs, searching under each carriage for escapees from that place, the world's biggest prison. I will never forget it.

  • @kapiton9985

    @kapiton9985

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@danstrayer111 самая большая тюрьма в мире это СССР!!

  • @alielabdimarras7965

    @alielabdimarras7965

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest Haha, even for the ones born here it gets difficult. Cheers from Neukölln ;-)

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@alielabdimarras7965 That's where I stayed at the time (Emser Straße).

  • @michaelwoodhead3577
    @michaelwoodhead3577 Жыл бұрын

    I visited East Berlin from the UK about a year before the Wall came down. At the time I thought it would be a permanent feature in my lifetime. What a strange place Berlin was. I had to change about $30 into DDR Marks for the day and couldn't find anything to spend it on. Before I returned to West Berlin I tried to give the remainder away to a young assistant working in an art gallery but he panicked and chased after me and made me take it back. Some time later when in China after the fall of the wall I met a guy from East Germany who'd been sent there as a technical adviser. He was a loyal Party member and told me he had no country to go back to!

  • @ranjittyagi9354

    @ranjittyagi9354

    Жыл бұрын

    Were you in the secret service or some diplomatic mission? You've seen a lot!

  • @vertebralis-fw3gb

    @vertebralis-fw3gb

    Жыл бұрын

    That's how socialism mess a brain.

  • @altt-check1-2

    @altt-check1-2

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ranjittyagi9354troll

  • @bubba842

    @bubba842

    6 ай бұрын

    Easy Germany stil existed for nearly another year after the wall came down.

  • @Nikki_Holland
    @Nikki_Holland Жыл бұрын

    Interesting film. I visited the DDR three time back in the early 1980s and stayed at the Palast Hotel in East Berlin (opposite the Dom). I went each time on my motorbike and everywhere I stopped, big crowds of people gathered around it to look and admire it. On my DDR visits I saw Leipzig and Dresden. It was a very fascinating period which I’ll never forget. Thanks for posting.

  • @BaldProfessor
    @BaldProfessor2 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating. I was living in West Berlin when this footage was shot. Hard to imagine that in less than six months the wall would be down.

  • @ytrew9717

    @ytrew9717

    2 жыл бұрын

    was it easy to go for a walk in the east part? Was the permit/visa difficult to get?

  • @flopunkt3665

    @flopunkt3665

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ytrew9717 depends what decade you're talking about

  • @stephanesimon6667

    @stephanesimon6667

    2 жыл бұрын

    Mehr als sechs Monaten! Im Januar 90 stand die Mauer immer noch und war nur für Ost- und Westdeutsche links und rechts vom Brandenburger Tor durchgängig !

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ytrew9717 After 1971 the crossing was possible by showing your passport and paying a fee. There were several checkpoints, some of them only for West Berliners, others for West Germans, other for foreigners, some of them combined those categories. It was quite a system :-)

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@stephanesimon6667 I have videos of that too, need to post it soon.

  • @mchlbk
    @mchlbk2 жыл бұрын

    Being a guard in on of those towers must have been incredibly boring.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    I heard somewhere they changed almost every day and the two would not have known one another beforehand. If this is true, then from their perspective a one day sit-down at the border was probably somewhat interesting and different than the routine? I don't know what it was about the binoculars, they seemed surgically attached to them all day.

  • @oddctioum

    @oddctioum

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest every Border Guard post was given a Sector. most of the Sectors were overlapping as well. inbetween you had control Stations and Sections that monitored the Guard posts. the repercussions if someone fled in your Sector and you did not shoot at them were bad, but if you didnt even see it... lets say your loyalty was questioned and you dont want that to happen in the DDR.

  • @touraneindanke

    @touraneindanke

    2 жыл бұрын

    Standing in line for almost everything you need DAILY tops that! The socialists wachteslange💔💔💔

  • @oddctioum

    @oddctioum

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Vandole i agree with 1 exception: "in the worst case you ended up in Jail": your Dad left out some bits then. i 100% agree with everything else you said.

  • @cehaem2

    @cehaem2

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest They were from the same unit,

  • @englishbob2898
    @englishbob2898 Жыл бұрын

    This is absolutely brilliant. Thank You so much for sharing. Just amazing.

  • @bardo0007
    @bardo0007 Жыл бұрын

    In 1991 I was driving through Europe and from Berlin I just went into East Germany and I had this strange feeling, that I went into a time machine. Everything was different, the buildings, the cars, the people. Even if the wall went down only 2 years earlier it was still so different from the West..

  • @mcpartridgeboy

    @mcpartridgeboy

    9 ай бұрын

    no it wasnt

  • @molasses1257

    @molasses1257

    9 ай бұрын

    DDR was pure poverty, still there are people crazy enough wanting this back🤦🏽‍♂️

  • @DaChaGee

    @DaChaGee

    8 ай бұрын

    @@mcpartridgeboy Many people have said it was like going back 30 years

  • @bubba842

    @bubba842

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@molasses1257poverty?? Funny how there was no homeless people and every one had a roof over their heads and food was plenty. You're just parroting western propaganda. It wasn't a utopia, but it wasn't anywhere near as bad as the western media made it out to be.

  • @MHG1023

    @MHG1023

    4 ай бұрын

    It still is different and remnants of the DDR/GDR times are still to be found in many places (and unfortunately in some heads, too) 34 yrs later ... Yes, East and West Berlin have grown together again but the former border line is still visible. Building design was very different between East and West.

  • @m.moolhuysen5456
    @m.moolhuysen54562 жыл бұрын

    That man berating the graffiti dude, pure gold. 😄

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Alles klar" :-)

  • @JennHolt

    @JennHolt

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hauptsache was zu meckern. Don't know what he thought he was achieving. Hope the kid kept painting.

  • @caj1119

    @caj1119

    2 жыл бұрын

    What was he saying to him? If he was berating him, given all the graffiti there already and the injustice of the wall in the first place it makes no sense unless he was a DDR border guard or Stasi in disguise. Great footage in any case.

  • @JennHolt

    @JennHolt

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caj1119 It was ridiculous. He was saying to him that he should stop, that it was the property of the GDR. He must’ve had nothing better to do.

  • @caj1119

    @caj1119

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JennHolt Thanks. Yeah, he truly must have had nothing better to do, and that "property" of the GDR was so heavily painted all over already anyway, why should he really care?

  • @dl8cy
    @dl8cy2 жыл бұрын

    In the early 80s we made a school trip to Berlin(West) for a week including a day trip to East Berlin. I made friends there this day in GDR and stay in loose contact over these years with them. 1987 I moved to Berlin(West) and gave the other part of the city at least once a month a visit. I did use many times the Invalidenstr. Checkpoint (11:13) as pedestrian and later as car driver. Still have some stories in mind, some obscure and some not so funny, crossing the boarder. Today i life in the eastern part and my work place is in the west, my duty stroke is bypassing me still at Invalidenstr. Checkpoint and now and then i remember there the stories back in the days, Thank you for uploading the video and refreshing my memories, 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    When you moved to Berlin, did you have to change your passport? Because IIRC the West German passport was slightly different than the West Berlin one (the former stated the bearer of this passport is German, and the latter said "German national" ("Angehöriger"? I forget)). And you had to pay every time you crossed, yes? This was apparently a decent source of extra income for East Germany :-)

  • @dl8cy

    @dl8cy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest I am not sure about passport i think i kept my federal republic of Germany passport - because it was still valid or because i didn't need it (Berlin(West) id card was sufficient for traveling in east and west Europe)- but i remember exactly about ID card, at first i got a "temporary provisional ID card" (vorläufiger behelfsmäßiger Personalausbweis) till my "provisional ID card" (Behelfsmäßiger Personalausbweis) was ready printed. all inhabitants of Berlin(West) have a "provisional ID card" and yes you are right there was only "the bearer of this document is German" (or similar) written and nothing about "federal republic of Germany" Also yes to the forced minimum exchange of 25DM to 25M for a single day. Bought books about electrical engineering or computer science and have nice dinners-if i have left over some money, i deposit it at state bank ("Staatsbank") and use it at my next visit (it was forbidden to export M (Mark der DDR) to the West.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Can you post some of those stories? Anything unusual?

  • @albertalberto9988

    @albertalberto9988

    Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating and interesting.

  • @beijingpete
    @beijingpete Жыл бұрын

    What a wonderful video archive. Thank you for uploading this.

  • @nickythebat
    @nickythebat Жыл бұрын

    This footage is absolutely incredible. Being a kid born at the end of the Cold War I never got to experience any of it. This is like a portal into time and I thank whoever for it !

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    You're welcome! I believe this is the first time I was called "Whoever", haha! It was a bit of luck that few months earlier (in April 1989) Canon put the first Hi8 Hi-Fi stereo-sound video camera on the market which I used here (the Canon A1). I think the sound greatly improves the "presence".

  • @martinrutley-wk5ds

    @martinrutley-wk5ds

    3 ай бұрын

    Holy shit, it's a dude with a camcorder in the 80s - relax 😅

  • @vincentadams9569
    @vincentadams95692 жыл бұрын

    Missed you by a month I just turned 27 I actually recognized and remember the girl on the Bike around 14:45 I spray painting my name with a friend of mine in the same exact location I took my photos and looked the girl on the Bike her name was Marina she worked at a Club of the Kudam Tostelfenz!!! Amazing!! I was staying on Moomsen Straße in SAVINGYPLATZ!!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Haha, small world! I like her smile at the camera. I wonder what the wall sprayer does today, perhaps owns a modern art gallery :-)

  • @nativeafroeurasian

    @nativeafroeurasian

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest I think he went on to study something completely different than art and either stopped doing it or does it as a hobby (I don't think he does it illigally though since they usually stop doing it at the age of 30years)

  • @knerduno5942

    @knerduno5942

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for letting us know. The Stasi will be giving you a visit

  • @vincentadams9569

    @vincentadams9569

    Жыл бұрын

    @@knerduno5942 HA HA!! It would be a PLEASURE IN 2022 because I remember you could just tell you were being watched when I was in the Old East!!

  • @winkekatze5593

    @winkekatze5593

    Жыл бұрын

    There is no girl at 14:45 or at this time.

  • @johnschneider355
    @johnschneider3552 жыл бұрын

    I was stationed in Berlin 72/73 and this is one of th best films from that time. I was fortunate enough to see most of those. Sites. It really brings back memories

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    My plan was to also film oddities like the Eiskeller exclave or the "wire" (portions of the Wall on the southern (mostly) border which consisted of high fence and no concrete), or the Am Sandkrug "wedge" near Frohnau. But I was too busy partying and just resting (running around with a camera can be surprisingly tedious and a seeming "waste of time"). I had simply assumed I'd come back to do it "properly" next year. Nobody at the time, including all my German friends in Berlin, had the slightest clue the situation will change completely within months.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Charlene Olson Did you keep contact with them?

  • @mistl
    @mistl Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for posting this video. I was in Berlin in April/May 1989. I have not been back since and hope to return next year.

  • @martindoskocil9377
    @martindoskocil93779 ай бұрын

    An excellent video 😊 thank you to be kept and watched. Remembering that view from easternside when I was 10yrs old and couldnt understand that....

  • @kleemes
    @kleemes2 жыл бұрын

    The old man at 15:00 is like: "That has nothing to do with art, it's a smear. This is a superficial stupid design and nothing more. Every child can do that. The Allies should prohibit such a thing. Someone from the other side should come out of the door and say you are already on DDR territory." 🤣

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    I always suspected he was an East German (retirees were allowed to go West), probably a former bureaucrat of some kind. Of course the concept that the wall itself was awful-looking did not occur to him.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Leonid Lemburg Most graffiti to me looks bad. But in this case it was just a weird thing to say :-)

  • @heinrichalthausen7522

    @heinrichalthausen7522

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest That's possible in general. But from his dialect he sounds more Southern German.

  • @hd_inmemoriam

    @hd_inmemoriam

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest I nearly lost it when he said the graffiti were defacing the wall. No sir, the wall itself was the defacement.

  • @YorkvM

    @YorkvM

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@heinrichalthausen7522I Thought the same first. But the way he pronunced the "R" and "verboten", I would say that it's some kind of northwestern Plattdeutsch dialect. It's definetly not a Berlin or any kind of Eastern German dialect.

  • @andreyzhavoronkov6746
    @andreyzhavoronkov67462 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! We just travelled to Berlin for the first time and I was very curious to see how it was back then. Some familiar places, but from a very different angle. Thank you for this work.

  • @BernhardD995
    @BernhardD995 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for uploading, Great footage

  • @__Aurora__
    @__Aurora__ Жыл бұрын

    Amazing footage. We moved to Berlin 15 years after these scenes were filmed due to work. We even bought an apartment in Friedrichshain, near Boxhagener Platz and the East Side Gallery. By then it was already a completely different city, vibrant and youthful. Brings back a lot of memories. Regards from Stockholm.

  • @StephenKershaw1

    @StephenKershaw1

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah, I was living in Berlin during your tenure... I was there from 1999 to 2011... great memories and great times during that transition... even during my time, Berlin transformed and became a different city.

  • @vladimiradoshev5310

    @vladimiradoshev5310

    6 ай бұрын

    it was the best decision to buy an apartment in the former east... now it costs tenfold...

  • @Larrypint
    @Larrypint2 жыл бұрын

    The time that shaped me the most in my childhood was between 1988-1993 in East Berlin (Friedrichshain and Mitte) . So many memories about the differences between east and west Berlin on a daily base and that wasn't a good VS bad. It was just so different

  • @bathwars
    @bathwars2 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating stuff, a time before mine. I've been to modern Berlin many times for work so very strange to see it like this. Thanks for posting!

  • @michaelcordingley-heinze5648
    @michaelcordingley-heinze5648Ай бұрын

    I have really enjoyed this footage thank you so much for posting

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for the note! The images look odd today, as in "how on earth was such a thing even possible in the middle of Europe??" But I remember very well that in 1980s one could not imagine Berlin _without_ the wall, it was just a part of "normal life". A weird relativity.

  • @raoulduke881
    @raoulduke881 Жыл бұрын

    I love to watch this kind of everyday insight on both west and east side.

  • @mateuszmattias
    @mateuszmattias2 жыл бұрын

    Das Kreuz von Chris Gueffroy (9:13), der letzte der bei der Mauer erschossen wurde, war als dieser Film gedreht wurde erst 4 Monate alt. (Die Kreuze sind zum Gedächtnis immer noch heute da.)

  • @tomt8923

    @tomt8923

    Жыл бұрын

    hab ich sich grad beim Ansehen gedacht, ein brutaler Mord

  • @berliner965
    @berliner9652 жыл бұрын

    This is fascinating. As a toddler I was in Berlin in June 1989 and I have so many photos of me and my parents in front of the wall and Checkpoint Charlie. To see this video of how it all looked exactly at that time is brilliant. Some of the graffiti in this video is in my photos too.

  • @duncanedwards7840

    @duncanedwards7840

    2 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant ✌

  • @Larrypint

    @Larrypint

    2 жыл бұрын

    The time that shaped me the most in my childhood was between 1988-1993 in East Berlin (Friedrichshain and Mitte) . So many memories about the differences between east and west Berlin on a daily base and that wasn't a good VS bad. It was just so different

  • @moos5221

    @moos5221

    Жыл бұрын

    You were there as a toddler? Are you responsible for all the graffitti on the wall by any chance?

  • @kurikokaleidoscope

    @kurikokaleidoscope

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a very interesting comment. Very interesting. Good on you.

  • @albertalberto9988

    @albertalberto9988

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice!

  • @buckholdboy967
    @buckholdboy9679 ай бұрын

    What a great video of a unique time in history.

  • @RoyRogerer
    @RoyRogerer Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Berlin for 15 years, and pretty much all the places filmed were places I started to walk intensively during the corona time, because it was finally less crowded without the tourists. I now had to leave Berlin for some obligation, but I miss the city every day. Even though I lived in more modern times, I notice some things never changed. Some scenes and especially the sound from the street immediately took me back. Thanks for the great footage!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    If you like the sound, maybe this one would bring some memories :-) kzread.info/dash/bejne/fWl7rtpqYtXAoto.html

  • @veeo987
    @veeo9872 жыл бұрын

    Wow! That is a very nice footage. I've been looking so long for actual footage in the Eastern Bloc with no commentary.

  • @tdoran616
    @tdoran6162 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely amazing footage, thanks for sharing

  • @christinawatkinsyoutube
    @christinawatkinsyoutube Жыл бұрын

    This is so cool. Knowing that just a couple months later everything would change. My dad tells me about what it was like there but to actually see this footage is amazing. I’ll never take for granted being allowed to live in berlin so freely today

  • @McRocket
    @McRocket6 ай бұрын

    Fascinating. Thanks for posting this. ☮

  • @tomduggan51
    @tomduggan512 жыл бұрын

    Jan, Thanks very much for sharing what is a very valuable film on the closing days of the Wall. You did very good work and have captured the essence of the city at that time!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    I would have done much more, I knew exactly what I wanted to shoot but I pushed to off to my next visit which was... late November 1989. Walking around with a (largish) camera and sometimes a tripod was a bit of work. I went to some places without the camera out of laziness (like the Prinzenstr. checkpoint or Oberbaumbrücke), who knew, right? The city was in general slightly surreal because it had a look and feel of a major capital city yet it was quiet, no signs of the usual government buildings, few tourists. I remember walking one day past an abandoned villa in an equally abandoned garden, behind an unexpectedly expensive-looking but a bit unattended iron fencing. Like signs of former glory but the current owner, living somewhere far way, simply keeps the place and does nothing with it. Turned out this was the Japanese embassy building, before the war. (All the government for the West was in Bonn.) When you took the S-Bahn from East Berlin and crossed to the West, you suddenly rode along the super-opulent Tiergarten and a couple of times you'd catch a glimpse of the Siegessäule at the end of a very long wide avenue lined with trees, just a magnificent perspective, and... the avenue is practically empty. There were no such grand perspectives in any city in West Germany. This odd dislocation between the look-and-feel of the place and its "non-function" was always there. OTOH one never felt enclosed by the wall. Seems strange but the place was so huge anyway.

  • @Bellasie1

    @Bellasie1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest You've described the feeling so well! I went through Berlin, coming from the East on a transsiberian trip from Beijing to Paris, and crossed the border at Friedrichstraße station like you seem to have done, too. That was in 1986. I wasn't supposed to stay, just change trains and more importantly cross the border, but a last minute change of mind from some of my group of fellow students had some of us stay longer in West Berlin. We stayed at a YMCA near the then center of West Berlin, the Zoo station area. We were on a high school trip, had stayed in (very) communist China for nearly 2 months at a university, and when we arrived at Zoo station and heard pop music for the first time in 8 weeks (at the Burger King in front of the station, which I believe is a Dunkin Donuts nowadays), we felt like lions out of a cage. We didn't see much of East Berlin outside of the insane line where we waited for about an hour before being let to cross the border to the West. However, since we arrived in East Berlin from Poland and traveled by S train to the checkpoint, we still got to see what East Germany looked like from the train, upon arrival in East Berlin, and from the S-bahn while traveling to the border. I was impressed by the historic buildings in Mitte and soon realized that was where most were (still) standing. The streets had a very drab and grey, desolated, sort of dusty, eerie look, as if out of some weird dream. That was also visible from the other side of the wall, from the viewing platforms. But like in Poland and contrary to China, Mongolia and the USSR, people were often clad in clothes that wouldn't have looked out of place in the West. Once we passed the bridge into West Berlin, everything looked rich and modern. Being used to lots of old buildings in my own country, the modern side of West Berlin was also quite enticing. I was impressed by the dynamic, friendly and open-minded atmosphere of West Berlin, and by the size of Berlin as well as its green spaces, specifically Tiergarten. To this date, these times spent in that incredible city are precious memories. I love to watch these videos that take me back to this fabulous trip. Thank you for sharing!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Bellasie1 Great memories! Do you remember what you saw when you stepped out of the Zoo train station? As soon as you started walking along Joachimstaler Strasse there was this giant shop with giant glass windows across the street: TEPPICH KIBEK. Every time I went to visit West Berlin, that sign would be the first thing to greet me there, it was like: "Oh, it's you again". This was only possible, I think, because of the relative lack of market pressure on what would in a "normal" city be considered a prime location! And that place was _huge,_ with _huge_ carpets hanging in the _huge_ display windows.

  • @tarkinweber799
    @tarkinweber799 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this footage impressions ! A very valuable work, because of getting a feeling of reality without any disturbing speech or music. GREAT ! Double Like, if it were possible.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks, cool!

  • @daveacbickford
    @daveacbickford8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this, fascinating look from a real life perspective, instead of just at a high level as a lot of Cold War era history footage can be sometimes

  • @kevinoconnor9582
    @kevinoconnor958223 күн бұрын

    What an amazing and incredibly valuable video this is.

  • @marioroth2987
    @marioroth2987 Жыл бұрын

    Danke danke... for this historical time document! ♥️

  • @joythought
    @joythought Жыл бұрын

    I have really appreciated the comments. So many intersecting stories and so much good will in the comments. I lived in Koln in 99/2000 and travelled sometimes on weekends to Berlin to hang out with a friend. I remember partying in one of the military/guard houses within the wall area that had become a club and was completely off my head. I always loved both sides of Berlin and remember how wonderful it was to see people on the wall in 89. The human spirit is resilient. Much love!

  • @hcb9450
    @hcb9450 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this marvelous nostalgia. I truly got goose pimples (in German: Gänsehaut) watching this footage. I lived in West Berlin in my 20s just before and at the time that the wall fell.. None of us ever thought it would come down that soon. It was a surprise to everyone.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, it was a total surprise.

  • @AugustusRex-nk8ze
    @AugustusRex-nk8ze28 күн бұрын

    Fascinating stuff. Thanks for the upload. I have lived in Berlin and the city remains a mystery to me.

  • @johnmaryn4497
    @johnmaryn44972 жыл бұрын

    In the summer of 1972, I traveled from Poland (to see relatives) through East Berlin train checkpoint going to West Berlin for a music event. I was shocked that the train stopped and armed soldiers with a dog came through the train checking papers and all luggage. I looked out the window and saw that the train was surrounded by soldiers. They could have just taken people off the train if they wanted. Later, I walked through Checkpoint Charlie from West to East Berlin. I had my nice camera around my neck and a telephoto lens on my hip. In East Berlin, I started walking towards the center (the tall needle thing) and then went off on a side street. What was I thinking? At the East Berlin center, two guys asked me if I had a car. I still don’t know why. Thanks for this video. It is a bit of history that we need to remember.

  • @cowsmuggler1646

    @cowsmuggler1646

    Жыл бұрын

    They wanted you to hide them in the trunk.

  • @johnmaryn4497

    @johnmaryn4497

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cowsmuggler1646 Good thing I didn’t have a car !!!!!! I didn’t need to be tortured by the East German military. In reality, this year was one of my first experiences with actual communism, the iron curtain, and armed soldiers. I was a “book-learned” but rather naive young student and the real world had some shocks for me. Thanks for your reply Cow Smuggler.

  • @foty8679

    @foty8679

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnmaryn4497 I mean, yea, the DDR sucked, but that situation? The Berlin wall thing isnt that different from the Mexican American border..the only thing different is that Mexico and USA are not mortal enemys.

  • @gunwalls007

    @gunwalls007

    Жыл бұрын

    @@foty8679 It was different though. The Berlin Wall had a killing zone where people were shot and killed trying to escape to West Berlin. For myself, seeing the Wall and the East German border guards showed me that “freedom” with all of its benefits (a more prosperous life) was something people were willing to risk their lives, often usually losing their lives. Thankfully, those days passed. The US border with Mexico has no one shooting at each other, though people do die in the deserts and river trying to get into the US. No one wants to see people or families lose their lives.

  • @netuserist

    @netuserist

    Жыл бұрын

    @@foty8679 Oh it is very different, except you want to talk about the structure itself. ;)

  • @williamwood5310
    @williamwood5310 Жыл бұрын

    That brings back a lot of memories. I spent about 6 months there from Dec 1983 to May 1984 studying German at the Geothe Institute. What different times they were.

  • @gobshite
    @gobshite8 ай бұрын

    Great footage!

  • @mrpeel3239
    @mrpeel3239 Жыл бұрын

    THANK YOU! I visited there in '93, and visited the Cafe Adler to try to imagine what a divided Berlin looked and felt like. Your terrific video fills-in many historical gaps.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    In 1993 those areas were just a sea of cranes, one huge construction zone, with little improvised shacks selling Glühwein!

  • @mrpeel3239

    @mrpeel3239

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest Yes, cranes, cranes and... more cranes! Only thing else visible from old Checkpoint Charlie was a Benetton sign.

  • @vangestelwijnen
    @vangestelwijnen2 жыл бұрын

    First time there was in 1986. Last time was 2012. It was hard to recognise the same city. So much has changed. Thanks for this excellent upload!

  • @93KAPLAN

    @93KAPLAN

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exact. Militaire dans l'armée française en 1980, j'y suis retourné en 1996. Tous mes repères étaient par rapport au mur et j'ai eu beaucoup de mal à m'y retrouver dans ces forêts de grues de reconstruction, j'étais perdu, ne sachant plus si j'étais dans la partie Est ou dans la partie Ouest...

  • @Bellasie1

    @Bellasie1

    Жыл бұрын

    First time in 1986, second and last in 2017. I was prepared for a slap in the face, and I got one. My mind was constantly looking for the wall.

  • 2 жыл бұрын

    Amazing footage..in 1988 i spent 9 days in DDR..almost 1 year before the fall of the wall..even though we were scrutinized as tourists some discontentedness was slightly evident..the state control was appalling..watching this film bring many memories to me..a world that no longer exists...

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    The border passport control guys never smiled and never reacted to any attempt at small talk, it was probably their training. I was very surprised when I got back home that day to see the guard waving to me (I hadn't noticed it while filming because of doodling with some camera controls). The camera had a very noticeable red flashing LED in front which tended to attract attention sometimes.

  • @E_O_S_

    @E_O_S_

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its like today

  • @Ugh800

    @Ugh800

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was in the GDR in summer 1988 as well - as a west German 13yo "tourist" my father and me visited our relatives in the east for 2 weeks. We had to spend a certain amount of "Ostmark" everyday. My father had to check "Volkspolizei", the local police, to tell them at which relatives we stayed. We were driving an Audi80 coloured in "flamingo metallic" and everybody knew, those guys are "westerners". I'm glad I had this experience as a teenage boy, but I'm even more glad that teenagers in present Germany don't have to make this experience.

  • @Poshypaws

    @Poshypaws

    2 жыл бұрын

    discontentedness...make it easy...discontent

  • @ottodrolkar6989

    @ottodrolkar6989

    2 жыл бұрын

    ;) 9 days ? ;) ... I spend 33 years in East Germany.. and I escaped.. 3 months before the border was opened.. Greetings out of the spring

  • @hockeyguy9974
    @hockeyguy9974 Жыл бұрын

    More or less an incredible video. Mostly thankful for your generally strong effort at videotaping this with a relatively good camera.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! People don't normally pay attention to such things, and cameras in those days were much bigger and heavier. I also carried a tripod for some scenes, it can be seen e.g. at 11:24 (very fuzzy) and I still have it and it still works(!) But the effort in general would have been _much_ heavier had I known this was really the last chance to film it. My plan was to continue filming in the summer of 1990, the footage you see here was really "just a test".

  • @EJS0100
    @EJS0100 Жыл бұрын

    I was in Berlin in December 1987, and saw many of these scenes. I remember having a sense that the city was still in ruins. Much was still empty. Thanks for posting.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    West Berlin itself was just fine, it was the areas near the wall that were left undeveloped, for various reasons. I should post a video showing the city at that time.

  • @andya6461
    @andya6461 Жыл бұрын

    Very cool profesional footage dude, It feels like I'm there wondering around in 1989.

  • @6linx9
    @6linx92 жыл бұрын

    2 months later my friends and I also took to the streets to demonstrate against the GDR system. They then came with clubs and dogs. We didn't know whether they would also shoot. Many were arrested. And in November 1989 the dictatorship was over. I stood on the wall in front of the Brandenburg Gate. I was 20 years old!

  • @internetcensure5849

    @internetcensure5849

    Жыл бұрын

    "And in November 1989 the dictatorship was over." If it was true, you would have been shot on the spot. Proof it wasn't a dictatorship is you are alive to tell your story.

  • @6linx9

    @6linx9

    Жыл бұрын

    @@internetcensure5849 Such nonsense what they say! We were chased by dogs and beaten up with rubber clubs and arrested. The fact that there were no orders to shoot was just a coincidence and great luck for the people who were on the streets. You should look into the history of the GDR before you tell such stupid crap! At the border there was an order to shoot. Anyone trying to flee East Germany could be shot. Many died trying to escape. These murdered people who only wanted to live in freedom can no longer tell their story. Others who were fasted alive went to jail.

  • @Trashvenus
    @Trashvenus Жыл бұрын

    Thank You for awakening my Childhood memories!

  • @stephanarizona9094
    @stephanarizona9094 Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Berlin from 1988-1992 about 100-yards from the wall, I remember when it opened and being able to speak to East German soldiers and them selling tons of military stuff, hats, uniforms, medals. I was also able to collect lots of pieces of the wall and bring them home. I have them in a display case in my office.

  • @ihremaskesitztnichtrichtig3913

    @ihremaskesitztnichtrichtig3913

    Жыл бұрын

    Na siehste

  • @daddybeagleaz907

    @daddybeagleaz907

    8 ай бұрын

    You should post pictures of this stuff

  • @AnonAnonAnon
    @AnonAnonAnon2 жыл бұрын

    Blast from the past. I lived in West Berlin 1987 to 1990. Best three years of my life!

  • @phillheimann1864
    @phillheimann1864 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this incredible footage. I visited West Berlin only a few weeks before the wall came down. Walked along that wall that seemed like it would be there for ever. Wish I’d stayed a little longer to see people breaking it down, what a shining piece of history.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    I have some footage from late November/December and January, crazy times! I'll post some soon.

  • @MMSaabChannel
    @MMSaabChannel Жыл бұрын

    Wow you really captured great shoots in this movie thanks 😍

  • @More-than-ladyboys
    @More-than-ladyboys2 жыл бұрын

    Pure gold this! West Berlin was fantastic in the 80s! Great times. Thanks for the upload.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Relatively few people went there. Berlin got popular after 1989.

  • @More-than-ladyboys

    @More-than-ladyboys

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest that’s why it was good 👍🏼 Plenty going on without the tourists. I hardly recognize Berlin these days.

  • @guidostahl2139

    @guidostahl2139

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@More-than-ladyboys i agree. I consider moving to West Berlin in 1988 for job reason. Eventually did not move. Berlin was genuine (East and West). Thesedays too artificial. Too many green fascists.

  • @More-than-ladyboys

    @More-than-ladyboys

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@guidostahl2139 I was lucky to have experienced 80’s West Berlin on numerous occasions. Such a thrilling city. Went for the last time in 91 but the vibe and the raw possibility that anything could happen was gone. Seems plagued by talentless graffiti now.

  • @fellspoint9364

    @fellspoint9364

    2 жыл бұрын

    Go Wally go!

  • @iamthestig1
    @iamthestig1 Жыл бұрын

    A few weeks ago, I was in (East) Berlin. I recognised some of the places in your video. Invalidenstrasse (Invalid St.), where the hotel was, Zimmerstrasse, and Checkpoint Charlie. There's a good museum there, the Black Box Cold War Museum. I didn't get to go to the Berlin Wall Museum, as one of our party wasn't interested. Bit weird, but yeah. The river/canal is quite a nice area now, by the main station (Hauptbahnhof). They've turned it into a park area, and it's a nice place to have lunch, or go for a walk. I'd happily go back for a longer break.

  • @darkWorkOne
    @darkWorkOne Жыл бұрын

    Great footage! I lived in Germany in the late 1980s as a child and hope to revisit in the next couple years. I got to experience the Fall of the Berlin Wall in person...an experience I'll never forget! My family lived near Giessen (Langgöns) and we just happened to be visiting Berlin when the Wall fell, a very lucky coincidence. My Father had a camcorder at the time and recorded our experience with many of the same sites as your video!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, it was something else! I came back in late November 1989 and remember _walking across_ the Brandenburg Gate, it was unbelievable. An advertising poster was on the wall's eastern side already, it said (IIRC): "Saatchi & Saatchi, first over the wall".

  • @cRobbone88
    @cRobbone88 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Pure, pure gold!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! As I mentioned in other posts, this was meant as a "test" for making a "proper" video "next year" (1990). And then November happened 🙂

  • @gustavogoncalves3083
    @gustavogoncalves30832 жыл бұрын

    Something in this video reminds me of how things were in Brazil at the same time. The video shows almost nothing on the eastern side, and what little you see is a quiet and poor town 17:23, but even on the western side you see simple cars and poorly paved streets. Funny how it gives a feeling of nostalgia for a time that was good, people had little and I venture to suggest that they were happier. Thank you very much for these footage.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Views from the eastern side are shown until 4:46. As for the look of the western side, remember that the area near the wall (several metres typically) was in fact legally in the eastern sector, that's why it was so run down (it could not be developed by the western government).

  • @internetcensure5849

    @internetcensure5849

    Жыл бұрын

    "is a quiet and poor town"? The western part looks no different. And now, Germany has turned to semi-third-world.🤣

  • @internetcensure5849

    @internetcensure5849

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest Yes, the western part is better, by definition, but not based on the video.

  • @ramen4386

    @ramen4386

    Жыл бұрын

    @@internetcensure5849 semi-third-world? Do you even live in germany?

  • @funny3scene

    @funny3scene

    Жыл бұрын

    @@internetcensure5849 Germany is probably the most first world nation in all of Europe, far better than any neighboring countries or France or England. You sound very American

  • @texaswunderkind
    @texaswunderkind2 жыл бұрын

    Hard to believe four years later I spent the summer in Germany and walked all around there with no wall.

  • @thomascasey1044
    @thomascasey1044 Жыл бұрын

    thanks for sharing this!

  • @active85858585
    @active85858585Ай бұрын

    Amazing footage - thank you.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks! I had bigger plans with many more bizarre wall places to film but got a bit lazy, going out with friends, etc., with plans to continue the following spring or summer. Of course nobody had a clue about the November! Which I also filmed but never posted (the Vivian Maier laziness phenomenon 🙂)

  • @Ecthelion1967
    @Ecthelion1967 Жыл бұрын

    When i was younger in the early 80:s my family took a trip to Berlin. For some reason our bus took the wrong way and missed the designated lunch place and we ended up in a normal east german village. The Kneipe were more than happy to sell for D-Mark. Basically no one spoke english but they were super nice people even if maybe a bit wary. Luckily for us and them the village was to small to have a Stasi office. But i also remember Berlin and even when entering east Berlin at Check point Charlie they used the low mirrors.

  • @ed_1092
    @ed_1092 Жыл бұрын

    This is amazing. There's this similar video on KZread of berlin in July of 1945. And one location I saw here is 4:07 it stayed almost the same but so different. The damage are still there and there was a middle strip of burned out cars looking like Swiss cheese leading up to it in 1945. It's so eerie

  • @DmPmRr1959
    @DmPmRr1959 Жыл бұрын

    Some of the BEST footage I've watched.👍

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! This footage was meant as a test for the "proper" documentation to be done next year (1990). I had a list of places I wanted to film "next year". Nobody knew the situation would change. I mean, look at North Korea, it's the same as it was in 1989.

  • @s.w.ausm.4039
    @s.w.ausm.4039 Жыл бұрын

    Großartiges Zeitdokument!! Vielen Dank dafür!!

  • @boomtish4520
    @boomtish45202 жыл бұрын

    I was working in the east in July 1989 as a guest of the state as part of the Scotland gdr friendship society. Fantastic to see, thanks!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Must have been interesting!

  • @JoinMeInDeathBaby

    @JoinMeInDeathBaby

    2 жыл бұрын

    Commie?

  • @RurbanWalker
    @RurbanWalker2 жыл бұрын

    Very cool footage. Having seen only the gentrified 2010s version of Berlin, it's cool to get to see the rougher wall era version I was told about.

  • @turbine1974
    @turbine19748 ай бұрын

    this is an awesome video mate. So rare to have views from both East and Western side in one video. And I love the fact that there is not music or annoying talking but just the original noise/sounds. That guy complaining about people spraypainting the wall is hilarious.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks! Needless to say, I'd have filmed _much_ more had I known the Wall would disappear within months. It was actually more difficult to film the wall from the eastern side because the police or the military would likely approach you. It happened to me once (two young guys with machine guns) and... I sort of _yelled:_ "What? Is this forbidden?!" I was very surprised that they just looked and walked away. When Wim Wenders was making his film _Wings of Desire_ (highly recommended), he approached the East Berlin authorities for a permit to film the wall from the eastern side. The way Wenders tells this story is that the eastern official just looked at him and started laughing. Wenders ended up filming a very short scene in East Berlin (in Prenzlauer Berg) in secret, and then smuggling the unprocessed film through Friedrichstrasse, half-expecting it to be confiscated. So these were the conniptions partially expected while doing this. I visited Ukraine (Lviv) about a year ago and in some ways it was less intimidating 🙂(if you didn't mind air raid sirens every day that is).

  • @purberri
    @purberri8 ай бұрын

    Brings back memories I visited east Berlin before the wall came down. I remember how drab everything was lines for stores.

  • @Zorglub1966
    @Zorglub1966 Жыл бұрын

    I did my national military service in Berlin between December 1987 and September 1989, and when I got on the train home, I had no idea that a few weeks later the wall would be gone.

  • @kevinivers
    @kevinivers Жыл бұрын

    Wow. I was on both sides in June 1989 and was hunting the footage for a glimpse of myself and my friends but didn’t find us. We went to many of the same locations. It’s amazing to think of how much time has passed and I’m so glad that despite how insane the world is now that, at least, Berlin is one again and all of Germany is free.

  • @amiausUSA
    @amiausUSA8 ай бұрын

    On Saturday 11th July 1998, the Love Parade by Dr. Motte and others took place. "One world, One future" was the theme that year. Also on that day, I happened to walk along this road, past the Palast der Republik to Brandenburger Tor and back when the parade was winding down. It is interesting to see the same road as it looked like during the GDR times.

  • @axeldewater9491
    @axeldewater9491 Жыл бұрын

    I've never experienced the Berlin wall... looking at this video at the berlin wall, gives me a weird dystopian, eerie feeling... something straight out of George Orwell's books... I see some comments here from people that did experience the wall, thinking it would be there still for decennia to come... What a weird, dark future must have been expected...

  • @lynth

    @lynth

    Жыл бұрын

    The East Germans expected a brighter, more democratic more free future. Communists have always been optimists. They built the wall against fascism to prevent the society we live in today. Unfortunately, fascism won and we are now living in a dystopian, capitalist world that's being rapidly destroyed by the US empire. Even war returned to Europe and we are sacrificing our economy at the behest of our American masters. Our media and politicians are controlled by the US, people have been brainwashed to hate socialism and defend capitalism even as it collapses. We are totally enslaved while our children are brainwashed to falsely believe to be free. And due to the inevitable and increasing failure of capitalism, things are getting worse and overt fascism - not just fascism disguised as liberalism - is returning. The same propaganda the Nazis used against the Soviets and Jews is now being used against China, the US is even trying to start a world conflict against China. We live in a far worse place than Eastern Europeans imagined... communists thought we would colonize other planets by now, instead of still serving our billionaire masters. :(

  • @Dan-kr9bm
    @Dan-kr9bm2 жыл бұрын

    very valuable footage

  • @honestguy7764

    @honestguy7764

    2 жыл бұрын

    mad props to the uploader

  • @antikoerper256
    @antikoerper2569 ай бұрын

    That Ikarus bus at the beginning hit close to home really hard. Here in Bulgaria we used to have them still until soon enough!... Anyways, as a country which was very much influenced by Germany pre-1945 (and which still is), Bulgaria has so much similarities with what East germany was, even today that if you take a walk in Sofia or other major towns, you'll notice them right away. Me myself - I live near a school which was formerly named after Wilhelm Pieck. As a result Ive always been interested and fascinated by how the whole transition happened in Germany and the reunification, as well as the Treuhand, the way of life, the life itself and History. Thanks for uploading this - KZread and the Internet have been the closest thing we have to a time machine!

  • @olebienkop627
    @olebienkop627 Жыл бұрын

    Danke fürs hochladen.

  • @Lemarcqgaming
    @Lemarcqgaming Жыл бұрын

    crazy how u can see somehouses still having like Bullet holes and scratches from the battle for Berlin 1945. 19:10 for example

  • @traceynorcross5666
    @traceynorcross56662 жыл бұрын

    Visited east Berlin in 1982 as a member of the British military we were in uniform and would get the evil eye of the East German troops like 2 opposing teams of boxers but the population were just the same as ours. It was like visiting another planet which was a replica of earth, felt the same but something was different.

  • @Bellasie1

    @Bellasie1

    Жыл бұрын

    So true. Like traveling to the past in some other communist countries, too...

  • @techElephant

    @techElephant

    Жыл бұрын

    Great description!

  • @billybigballs5776

    @billybigballs5776

    Жыл бұрын

    Was it actual Germans guarding border or Soviets.As far as I know were half million Soviet troops stationed in East Germany?

  • @cehaem2

    @cehaem2

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@billybigballs5776Allied Statutes prevented GDR authorities from dealing with Allied soldiers in Berlin. Each checkpoint had a small detachment of Soviet MPs. No GDR Border officer or VoPo was allowed to check or ID uniformed allied troops entering the Soviet sector or on the transit roads from and to Berlin or the Allied Military Missions. Allied soldiers on duty could travel pretty much all of the GDR with the exception of some regions where access was restricted by the Soviets. There's that legendary story where British Military Intelligence obtained info on the calibre of a new tank-mounted gun by sticking an apple at the end of the barrel and then simply measuring the dent it made....

  • @jaapkiev
    @jaapkiev Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this!!

  • @amyricfilms
    @amyricfilms Жыл бұрын

    Great footage. The grittiness brings it all back. Thanks for sharing this valuable resource

  • @fearandloathing4711
    @fearandloathing4711 Жыл бұрын

    Wow!!! Absolut beeindruckend. Ich habe damals von 1985 -1990 in Berlin-Hohenschönhausen gelebt. Für mich ist dieses Video eine Reise in meine Vergangenheit 🥹. Vielen Dank fürs Teilen ❤️

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    So much has changed!

  • @tyasbank
    @tyasbank Жыл бұрын

    History is crazy man, like a dream at times. I was 2 years old at the times of this footage. And the world has both changed so much, and in another way very little. You can recognize they are different people then you, but at the same time I remember the exact spots where this footage was taken as I was there when I was an adult. I have a weird sense of nostalgia (not for the USSR) but for the time before internet and mobile phones. Weird as in I prefer our technology now, but some things do get lost.

  • @myvictory8294
    @myvictory8294 Жыл бұрын

    Lived in East Berlin in 1990-1994, best childhood memories, witnessed all the changes.

  • @colinvespa4709
    @colinvespa4709 Жыл бұрын

    Went there in 1989 and 1990, a lot has changed in between those dates, returned in 2015 and its completely different now with very little trace of the wall.

  • @elliottg.1954
    @elliottg.1954 Жыл бұрын

    Christ that brings back memories. From Berlin Brooke Bks, 1989, we'd take the kids down to the Wall of an evening, past the Russian memorial and go up onto the viewing platform. The ossies would be waving at us from the other side. You could get opera tickets for next to nothing and go over Charlie in uniform for a night out. When the Wall was coming down we took the kids for a walk along the inside, and two border guards came towards us; they just ignored us. We've photos of border guards looking through the wall to the west. Many a time the east German police would be stood on top of the Brandenburg Gate.

  • @foolishwatcher
    @foolishwatcher2 жыл бұрын

    The border patrol boat at 9:50 was a GSB 075. It was not electric, but powered by 2 Russian V8 gasoline engines. The enines were inside the boats body. The "electric" sound is probably the whining of the special gearboxes that were used to transmit the power to the steerable propellers.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Interesting, thanks!

  • @foolishwatcher

    @foolishwatcher

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JanPBtest You're welcome. :-)

  • @jijzer3284
    @jijzer32845 ай бұрын

    thanks for sharing

  • @davidpan5176
    @davidpan517610 ай бұрын

    Nice piece of history. I was there the previous year. I haven't been back to Berlin since. Would love to go back and see all the changes.

  • @joedellinger9437
    @joedellinger94375 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU so much! I was there in June 1989 and took a roll of slide photos of the wall. Motion and sound really brings back memories so much better! I had an interesting conversation with graffiti artists painting on the wall. They were all convinced East Germany was near collapse. I thought they were crazy optimistic but they were right!

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    5 ай бұрын

    You are not in the video, are you? (haha) One of the posters here recognised the girl on the bicycle at 15:49, she was a waitress at a bar at Europa Center, so one never knows... I have panoramic shots of the wall taken from Reichstag Ufer (180-degree) but haven't even scanned those negatives yet. I guess I'm as bad as Vivian Meier at this.

  • @joedellinger9437

    @joedellinger9437

    5 ай бұрын

    @@JanPBtest Alas, no, that would have been so cool though. I was there for the European Association of Geoscientists and Engineers convention.

  • @daktarioskarvannederhosen2568
    @daktarioskarvannederhosen2568 Жыл бұрын

    i wisited both east and west in march/1981 and this certainly brings back many memories. i had no predisposed view to either "side" as does the videographer having made this video. my only starkly outstanding memories of interactions with border patrols were with a west berlin guard that advised me to come down from the for-public viewing stand (some of which are seen in video) because, as he claimed, an east berlin border guard might shoot me. the other memorable interaction was the studious manner in which an east german guard compared the image in my passport to my actual face (as i was leaving west berlin en route to rural east germany). i found east berlin to be quite rather pleasant and i especially enjoyed alexanderplatz and the restaurant/view inside that ball that is atop that communications tower.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    9 ай бұрын

    Ah yes, the passport control was interesting, very deliberate and always done without any trace of smile.

  • @azshooter348
    @azshooter348 Жыл бұрын

    I lived and worked in Munich for several years and had opportunity to visit Berlin. I was there about 6 months before the wall was torn down. It was a sad sight to see the near-ruins of the once majestic Brandenburg Gate. The stone was overgrown with crud and schmutz, and the Quadriga atop was badly corroded and broken. It makes me happy to see the sandstone pillars cleaned, and the Quadriga restored to its' former glory.

  • @mfbfreak
    @mfbfreak Жыл бұрын

    Great camera quality for 1980s home video! Also, good choices on when to use stabilisation and when not to.

  • @JanPBtest

    @JanPBtest

    Жыл бұрын

    The camera was a Canon A1 (Hi8, with stereo sound) using metal-evaporated tape.

  • @573998
    @5739988 ай бұрын

    Wow does this bring back memories. I was first in Berlin in the 80s And back many times in the 2000s

  • @FlexxenRandomPlaces
    @FlexxenRandomPlaces2 жыл бұрын

    This is what some of us walking channels drives. Capturing moments in time and certain places to display and watch them a long time later - cheers!