Updated 12:58 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

World|Mon, Nov. 09 2009 10:51 AM EDT

Church Leaders Recall Faith, Courage on Berlin Wall Anniversary

By Jenna Lyle|Christian Today Reporter

Church leaders paid tribute Monday to the faith and courage of ordinary men and women who helped unify Germany and end the Cold War on the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.

  • Berlin Wall
    (Photo: AP Images / Fabian Bimmer)
    A woman places a rose into part of the former Berlin wall, Monday Nov. 9, 2009, following a commemoration ceremony for the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall on Nov. 9, 1989, at the wall memorial 'Bernauer Strasse' in Berlin, Germany.
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Germans Celebrate Fall of Berlin Wall

The newly elected head of the Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD), Bishop Margot Kaessmann, said dream became reality when the wall came down on Nov. 9, 1989.

“Brave women and men from the civil rights movement in the former German Democratic Republic laid the foundation for this day by opposing the regime and inspired many more people to do the same through their example,” she noted, expressing gratitude for the decisive role played by the EKD in the GDR at that time.

“The prayers for peace in overflowing churches will remain in the consciousness as a symbol of a movement that truly earned the name ‘peaceful revolution,’” she commented.

In a message delivered by the head of the World Council of Churches, the Rev. Dr. Samuel Kobia similarly noted how “Christian hope and perseverance contributed significantly to the fall of the Berlin Wall twenty years ago.”

“A movement that started with prayers and candlelight vigils in the Saint Nicholas Church in the center of Leipzig spread all over East Germany and inspired and encouraged people to confront the power of police and secret service in a very effective and peaceful way,” he recalled.

However, while Monday marks a time for celebration, Kobia noted that there are still many walls separating mankind today, such as the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea, the security wall in Palestine, as well as “the walls of injustice, racism and prejudice that separate rich and poor, stigmatize persons suffering from HIV and Aids and destroy the lives of many people”.

“When we celebrate today twenty years of the fall of the Berlin Wall, which marked the end of the cold war era, let us remember the faith and the courage of all those people who gathered in the churches and became the nucleus for the movement of change,” he said.

EKD leader Kaessmann similarly urged believers to remember the historic event, saying that doing so could help bring Europe closer together.

“These events can give us courage for the continuing journey to Europe’s future,” she said. “In spite of all the suffering that dominates our world, Nov. 9, 1989, and the weeks of peaceful mass demonstrations in the preceding autumn will always come to me as a miracle.”

In the Gethsemane Church in Berlin, meanwhile, the head of the German Bishops’ Conference Archbishop Robert Zollitsch called on “East and West to keep building bridges towards one another in patience and perseverance.”

“The memory of Nov. 9, 1989 and no less the memory of the terrible events of the Night of Broken Glass on Nov. 9 (1938, against the Jews), teach us unequivocally: walls – whether real or in people’s heads – do not solve any problems,” Zollitsch said Monday at an ecumenical service. “On the contrary, they create problems. They obstruct the future.”

But he also acknowledged the role they can play for present and future generations.

“They taught us that Christian faith can inspire a resistance movement against fatalism and despair – a lesson which is as important today as it was twenty years ago,” he stated.

Before it fell on Nov. 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall had completely encircled the city of West Berlin for 28 years, separating it from East Germany, including East Berlin. The fall of the Berlin Wall paved the way for German reunification, which was formally concluded on October 3, 1990.

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  • Tue Nov 10, 2009 2:03 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    Let's go back to the beginning. When the Jewish state was established, it was at the expense of the peoples already living there, people who had also been promised their own homeland as well. The Jews performed their own ethnic cleansing of the Arab population, dispossessing them and even limiting what they could take with them to their new life as refugees. These people have had legitimate grievances with the Jewish state from the first days. This conflict is far from a one way street.
    I have Arab relatives who lived in Haifa and Nablus and saw first hand what happened with non-Jews in the new Jewish state. They were among those forced from their historic homeland.

    As for terror, just count the numbers. How many Israelis killed by the pathetic "rockets" coming from Gaza compared to the thousands killed in each Israeli incursion. How many homes destroyed on each side of the border? Who's keeping out hum anitarian supplies, forbidding travel, trade and the like in the Palestinian territories? If you look back over the last 30 years, it is the Palestinians who are terrorized, not the Israelis. The only difference between the IDF and terrorists is that the IDF has uniforms and is considered legitimate. That doesn't exclude them from exercising the same level of barbarity, often in the name of God. Sound familiar?

  • Tue Nov 10, 2009 12:02 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    9/11 alone, if not more current events both at home as well as globally,should put the "rationalizations" in the face of terror/"extremism" in better perspective; terror that Israel has faced both before as well as throughout its Statehood.
    The un-Biblical, a-historical and defamatory content of the post could benefit from a history of "Palestine", one most commendable being "A History of Zionism" by Walter Laqueur, whose parents one day in June, 1942, had been law-abiding citizens of Berlin, then within the same month, murdered victims at that most hellish of camps, Izbica Lubelska in Poland. Then consult online JusticeNow4Israel: to discover the legal as opposed to the political truth of the matter. Your pew betrays your politics!
    "From Dan to Beersheva!"

  • Tue Nov 10, 2009 8:41 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    If Israel wasn't following in many ways in the footsteps of her former persecutors, maybe there wouldn't be a need for the churches to voice their concern. Their treatment of the Palestinians, despite their rationalizations about security,has been horrific. They would have been condemned for war crimes by now if not for the US veto.

    Israelis are entitled to a home, but so are the Palestinians. It was Palestine that was divided to give Israel that homeland, but they refuse to let Palestine become a viable state, continuing the longest ongoing occupation in recent history.

    Palestine has a historic, biblical place as well and there should be an end to the occupation, UN troops stationed in Gaza and the West Bank to address security so Israel can leave the Palestinians to fulfill their national aspirations. Only then will there be peace in the region, but I sense Israel doesn't want peace for it's own political reasons influenced by the radical orthodox who believe all of Palestine should be joined to the Jewish staqte as well.

  • Mon Nov 09, 2009 7:20 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    While the free world rightly rejoices on the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall,
    there is still something ironically and tragically amiss that the one People condemned to centuries of walls - ghettos, the Pale, and finally and fatally, the concentration camps - in order to preserve life and limb have been forced to build a security barrier in their own Land;
    only to receive the condemnation of many Churches for doing so.
    Would that ALL the Churches rejoiced in Israel's repatriation to her historical-Biblical Land, and thereby help her to live without any walls but those of Biblical ZIon * Psalm 48

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