The situation in the GDR
Parade to mark the 25th anniversary of the construction of the Berlin Wall (Berlin, 13 August 1986)
ImageOn 13 August 1986, military troops parade in front of the VIP stand on the 25th anniversary of the building of the Berlin Wall. The photo shows a number of prominent East German leaders: Hermann Axen, Günter Schabowski, Heinz Keßler, Egon Krenz, Willi Stoph, Erich Honecker and Margot Honecker.
Cartoon by Haitzinger on the Berlin Wall (August 1986)
Image‘Happy Birthday.’ In August 1986, the German cartoonist, Horst Haitzinger, takes an ironic look at the 25 years of the Berlin Wall and criticises the crimes of the East German Communist regime led by Erich Honecker.
Interview with Erich Honecker published by La Libre Belgique (13 October 1987)
TexteOn 13 October 1987, in an interview given to the daily newspaper La Libre Belgique, Erich Honecker, Chairman of the Council of State of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), discusses the role of the GDR in the international arena and his Government's position on the introduction of democratic reforms.
Cartoon by Lang on GDR and perestroika (3 December 1988)
Image‘Temptation — Governess Honecker: ‘Don’t look! That’s a porn shop …’ In 1988, in response to Gorbachev’s reforms in the Soviet Union (USSR, or ‘UDSSR’ in German), the cartoonist Ernst Maria Lang portrays the refusal of the East German leadership to reform the German Democratic Republic (GDR).
Cartoon by Behrendt on the protest movements in the GDR (10 July 1989)
Image‘GDR’. On 10 July 1989, Fritz Behrendt, a Dutch cartoonist originally from Berlin, paints an ironic picture of the reaction of Erich Honecker, General Secretary of the Socialist Unity Party of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), to the proliferation of protest movements sweeping across several countries in Central and Eastern Europe. Behrendt particularly emphasises the East German authorities’ refusal to change and to introduce democratic reforms. In the centre of the cartoon, Erich Honecker is sat in his military bunker surrounded by barbed wire, symbolising the GDR, with his hands over his ears so that he cannot hear the calls for freedom and democracy.
‘GDR: a refusal to change’ from Le Monde (15 August 1989)
TexteOn 15 August 1989, in an article for the French daily newspaper Le Monde, Henri de Bresson analyses the economic situation in the German Democratic Republic (GDR) and emphasises the East German authorities’ refusal to change and to consider democratic reforms.
Statement by the Politburo of the Central Committee of Germany's Socialist Unity Party (SED) (Berlin, 8 October 1989)
TexteOn 8 October 1989, the day after the 40th anniversary of the founding of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), the Politburo of the Central Committee of Germany's Socialist Unity Party (SED) reaffirms its desire to continue to steer the country along the path of Socialism and condemns the Federal Republic of Germany for interfering in the GDR's domestic affairs.
Letter of resignation from Erich Honecker (Berlin, 18 October 1989)
TexteOn 18 October 1989, Erich Honecker, Secretary-General of the East German Socialist Unity Party (SED), resigns from office and asks to be replaced by Egon Krenz.
Cartoon by Behrendt on the German Democratic Republic and perestroika (1989)
Image‘Bar the door!’ In 1989, the German cartoonist, Fritz Behrendt, portrays the Communist leaders of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) seeking to oppose, as far as possible, the measures to democratise the country along the lines of the Soviet ‘perestroika’ model.
Interview with Richard von Weizsäcker on East German television (13 December 1989)
TexteOn 13 December 1989, Richard von Weizsäcker, West German Foreign Minister, discusses on East German television the question of the reunification of Germany and gives his opinion on the implementation of democratic reforms in the German Democratic Republic (GDR).
Cartoon by Hanel on the collapse of the Communist regime in the GDR (1989)
ImageIn 1989, the German cartoonist, Walter Hanel, illustrates the gradual dissolution of the Communist regime of Erich Honecker in the German Democratic Republic (GDR).