A selection of comments from ceremonies, remembrances of the
20th anniversary of the collapse of the Berlin Wall.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel:
"Sometimes people forget today how many could not leave (the
country) for years, how many sat in prisons ... before the joy of
freedom came, many people suffered."
Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at a news
conference:
"My clairvoyant skills and those of (then-Chancellor Helmut)
Kohl were up to nothing then. We did not think the wall would fall
so fast."
President Barack Obama, in a video message to the
anniversary event:
"Nov. 9, 1989 will always be remembered and cherished in the
United States. Like so many Americans, I'll never forget the images
of people tearing down the wall. There could be no clearer rebuke
of tyranny, there could be no stronger affirmation of freedom"
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton:
"Now, we have to turn our attention to the challenges of the
21st century. A wall, a physical wall, may have come down but there
are other walls that exist that we have to overcome and we will be
working together to accomplish that."
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, addressing the
people of Berlin:
"The whole world is proud of you. You tore down the wall and you
changed the world; you tore down the wall that for a third of a
century had imprisoned half a city, half a country, half a
continent and half the world; and because of your courage two
Berlins are one, two Germanies are one, and now two Europes are
one."
French President Nicolas Sarkozy:
"The fall of the Berlin Wall was a liberation. The fall of the
Berlin Wall rings today as an appeal to fight oppression"
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev:
"Naturally, we can't forget that the fall of the wall was
prepared by what happened in the Soviet Union. These changes
brought advantages to all of Europe ...The Iron Curtain was
overcome and the barriers were overcome."
German President Horst Koehler:
"The wall was an edifice of fear. On Nov. 9, 20 years ago, it
became a place of joy. For 28 years, East Germans could not even
approach it. On Nov. 9, 1989, people danced on it — and the
world looked different afterward"
Joachim Gauck, former East German pastor who later
oversaw the files of the former secret police, the
Stasi:
"We praise the strength, the patience and the longing of the
people who did not stop thinking of freedom and democracy in these
dark times"
Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, head of Germany's Bishop's
Conference:
"The remembrance of Nov. 9, 1989, not to mention the remembrance
of the horrific proceedings of the (Kristallnacht) pogrom on Nov.
9, 1938, unmistakably teaches us: Walls — whether real or in
the heads and hearts of people — walls do not solve any
problems."