Berlin Wall Essay

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    The section of the Berlin Wall here on campus at UVA is presented in front of Alderman Library. Students walk by this piece of art multiple times a day but rarely stop to talk a closer look. I caught a glimpse of this eccentric piece of art during summer orientation. I could not help but wonder what the significance was. I was intrigued by the meaning of the two faces boldly painted on the wall. The wall is tall, a little more than two times my height of 5’8’’. The wall is long enough where I have

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    On August 12, 1961, the Berlin Wall was built to separate East Berlin (German Democratic Republic) from West Berlin (The Federal Republic of Germany). The Wall has a “ 66 mile concrete section that was 3.6 metres high, with a further 41 miles of barbed wire fencing and more than 300 manned lookout towers”6 and was meant to separate superpowers Britain, France, and the United States from the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). It lead to countless problems such as social separations, family

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    The Berlin Wall was a very devastating time in history. This wall separated East and West Berlin from 1961 to 1989. The wall was so large that it took two years to take down. They would have guards, around three hundred watchtowers, over two hundred and fifty guard dogs, twenty bunkers and sixty five miles of anti-vehicle trenches. If you tried to pass/go over the wall you would be shot on sight. Although that was the case sill over five thousand people made it to freedom, but over hundreds of people

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    when the Berlin Wall was built during that bleak, brutal winter of 1961. I was woken up with a start in the middle of night by the rumbling of the trucks and the deafening cacophony of construction work outside my window like the blast of Gabriel’s horn. My mother, ever the pragmatist, said that it was simply a power play between the Russians and the Americans and that it would surely be gone by the summer. I believed her, too, until one evening when I put my ear against the paper-thin walls of my bedroom

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    The Berlin Wall

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    Before the creation of the Berlin Wall, West Berlin presented an escape route for thousands of East Germans, which worsened conditions in the East and put pressure on the West. When East Germany lost civilians, its economy and social institutions weakened without skilled workers, causing more civilians to flee in a vicious cycle. The West was also unprepared for the influx of immigrants, due to the Western Leaders’ mistaken beliefs that reunification was imminent and economic fragility. East Germans

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    Perhaps the most visual reference to the Cold War was the Berlin Wall. Although this wall only existed to divide Berlin into two sides, it became a physical representation of the Cold war for many and its fall in 1989 has been regarded to many as the end of the Cold War. I have always been interested in the background history behind the Berlin Wall. Since I started school in the 80s and was in High School while the Cold War was winding down, I don’t have a great personal understanding of many

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    the Berlin Wall “…Indeed, under certain conditions, our obligations are to resist unjust and unfair schemes, and this can include a duty to disobey a law” (Richard Dagger). An example for this quote would be The Berlin Wall in Berlin, Germany from 1961-1989. The Wall was set up to keep the fascist West Berlin away from Communist East Berlin. However, the wall was fuel to the fire of civil disobedience in Berlin, Germany. Most of the civilians undertook civil disobedience to fight the Berlin Wall

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    fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 can be seen as the main catalyst of communist domination in Eastern Europe and later the world can be regarded as accurate. In this essay the reasons for the building of the Berlin wall such as the fact that the USSR desired to secure domination in Eastern Europe after the events of the Berlin airlift and later the sense of victory and power that the wall brought among the communists, will be discussed. Secondly the events leading up to the fall of the Berlin will be viewed

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    Fall of the Berlin Wall A symbol of ideological division Menacing and formidable, the Wall twisted through the city of Berlin like a coiling snake slowly strangling its prey. Tears had been wept there, brothers and sisters had been lost, and blood had been spilled. On August 13, 1961, the German Democratic Republic began to build a wall made out of barbed wire and concrete and guarded with watchtowers, machine gun emplacements, and mines. The main purpose of this wall was to keep Western “fascists”

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    In the year 1987, June 12th at Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin Germany, President Ronald Reagan gave one of the most memorable speeches (Berlin Wall) a president has given. The Berlin Wall speech changed Berlin completely, it reunited east and west berlin back together. The speech itself was intended for the people but most importantly it was meant for the soviet union leader Mikhail Gorbachev, President Ronald Reagan was an American Politician and also was an actor that appeared in over 50 films

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