The Stasi and the Berlin Wall | DW Documentary

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  • čas přidán 10. 08. 2021
  • For one group, at least, the erection of the Berlin Wall on August 13, 1961 was a stroke of luck. Over the following decades, the Wall would be the lifeblood of the East German secret police, known as the Stasi. By the time the Wall fell, in 1989, thousands of Stasi agents were employed with a single goal: to make the Wall insurmountable.
    The film tells the story of this existentially symbiotic relationship from the perspective of the Stasi under its notorious leader Erich Mielke. It’s the first time this most sensitive chapter of East Germany's history has been told in such an exemplary and coherent way: including the deaths that took place at the Wall, and the cover-up and concealment of many of those murders.
    We learn about the arrests and imprisonment of tens of thousands of refugees, as well as the Stasi’s elaborate construction of tunnels and underground listening stations to track down tunnel diggers. From the billion-dollar business of selling GDR prisoners to West Germany, to the "filtering" of Western traffic at border crossings to recruit unofficial collaborators, Mielke's specialists were everywhere.
    We see how Mielke's power grew, as the Wall and the border system were perfected, and how the walling-in of the population created more and more work for the Stasi. The Wall became the Stasi’s main field of activity, and its daily bread.
    The fall of the Wall brought an abrupt end to both East Germany and its security apparatus. An irony of history is that, on November 9, 1989, it was a Stasi man who opened the first barrier on Bornholmer Strasse and thus initiated the fall of the Berlin Wall.
    #dwdocumentary #berlinwall #documentary
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Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @davidcronan4072
    @davidcronan4072 Před 2 lety +2839

    I visited Berlin in 1994 and our tour guide told us this joke - "many ex Stasi agents are now taxi drivers. This is good, because all you have to do is to tell them your name and they already know where you live"

  • @marksman314
    @marksman314 Před rokem +222

    The Stasi's behavior provides a solid example of what happens when you proceed logically and rationally from an insane premise

    • @johnbowman1076
      @johnbowman1076 Před rokem +16

      To ensure freedom... strict surveilance of the populace is always a necessity.

    • @destubae3271
      @destubae3271 Před rokem +34

      @@johnbowman1076 To ensure privacy, toilet cameras are always a necessity

    • @Dickusification
      @Dickusification Před 9 měsíci +1

      To ensure peace, mutually assured destruction is necessary

    • @victoriasmith815
      @victoriasmith815 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Brilliantly put-what you said is going into my favourite quotes book that I have. ❤

    • @bunk95
      @bunk95 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Are you attempting to market someone/some group with that material?

  • @CaptainRon1913
    @CaptainRon1913 Před rokem +318

    An old friend of ours was a Stasi border soldier when he was young. He told us when he saw someone attempting escape, he and some of his fellow soldiers would look the other way on purpose. The night when the wall came down, he burned his East German uniform and helped cut and clear barbed wire

    • @cd0u50c9
      @cd0u50c9 Před rokem +46

      This was the same with a fair few occupying Nazi soldiers in Eastern Europe, German and Italian. They would break into people's houses, shoot at the ceiling and pretend that they shot people, but would later secretly bring food. I got told this first hand...

    • @garymccreath2773
      @garymccreath2773 Před rokem +42

      Yeah, sure most of them would say that wouldn't they

    • @garymccreath2773
      @garymccreath2773 Před rokem +22

      @@iwillnoteatzebugs your grandad is a liar

    • @ShinyProspect
      @ShinyProspect Před rokem

      @@iwillnoteatzebugs are you trying to sound funny? You lack attention? Cuz that was lame af dude.

    • @JamesBond-so1of
      @JamesBond-so1of Před rokem +16

      @@iwillnoteatzebugs do they taste the same as communist dogs? Asking for a friend.

  • @kchall5
    @kchall5 Před rokem +16

    I wonder if those ex-Stasi guys saw the irony in that they were able to speak freely and recount their nefarious deeds without fear of retribution, something they spent their careers denying their countrymen.

  • @kathyschreiber9947
    @kathyschreiber9947 Před 2 lety +1070

    This is chilling. Not one word of remorse or regret from the ex-Stasi officers for the horrors they inflicted on people. News flash....when people are fleeing your country in droves, something's seriously wrong.

    • @demonsaint1296
      @demonsaint1296 Před 2 lety +58

      That’s usually the case with people in power or were once in power.

    • @JesusChrist2000BC
      @JesusChrist2000BC Před 2 lety +255

      Communists, Marxists and leftists never admit their wrongdoing.

    • @cedriceric9730
      @cedriceric9730 Před 2 lety +30

      RT crowd will have you believe it's the reverse

    • @cedriceric9730
      @cedriceric9730 Před 2 lety +9

      RT crowd will have you believe it's the reverse

    • @stormywindmill
      @stormywindmill Před 2 lety +23

      I visited the wall again in 2004 My buddy chatted to a guy in a VOPO captain's uniform, the guy was smiling and friendly showing his history album, He was concentrating on my buddy avoiding eye contact with me. , guess he was put off by the cynical sneer on my lip

  • @flitsertheo
    @flitsertheo Před 2 lety +257

    The Stasi HQ in Berlin has become a museum and can be visited, it still looks as when they left it, back in 1990. You see some of the offices in this video.

    • @visjenl
      @visjenl Před 2 lety +14

      Yeah, its a great museum

    • @bananaempijama
      @bananaempijama Před 2 lety +4

      Been to the museum years ago.
      Very impressive

    • @hypercomms2001
      @hypercomms2001 Před 2 lety +5

      I went there in 2006... but I had a hard time finding it, as everyone who lived near it, did not want to point it out ...

    • @valerija.legasov548
      @valerija.legasov548 Před 2 lety +3

      Hope, I will visit Berlin and this museum. Greetings from Prague, stay healthy and be safe! 😊😷

    • @hypercomms2001
      @hypercomms2001 Před 2 lety +6

      @@valerija.legasov548 Yes do, but do think what this place meant and did not so long ago, when your country was under the same repressive rule...value what you have now, and the freedom that you have in the European Union, and ensure the Far Right and Far Left never succeed... as democracy and freedom can so easily be lost ... look at what is happening in Hungry and Poland right now.. their politics is a cancer and ultimately a tragedy as it can lead back like this existing again in the future.....

  • @sgsmozart
    @sgsmozart Před rokem +71

    As a college student, I crossed into East Berlin in August of 1971. It was mandatory to exchange 5 West German marks into East German currency. After spending the day in East Berlin ..visiting museums..seeing sites...I had dinner in a restaurant and when I crossed back into West Berlin at Checkpoint Charlie...I still had 2 East German marks left !

    • @garethaethwy
      @garethaethwy Před rokem +3

      Did they let you keep the 2M? I'm told everyone was forced to 'deposit' any Marks they have left against a future visit?

    • @kam2ma
      @kam2ma Před rokem +8

      I had a similar experience in the late 1980’s when my friend and I crossed into East Berlin for a day visit. By then the mandatory exchange rate was 25 West German Marks for 25 East German Marks. We found it impossible to spend that much money in East Berlin even after the cost of lunch and snacks. Because you were not permitted to exchange the worthless DDR currency into a convertible currency or take DDR currency out of East Berlin, we just left the extra money as a tip at a cafe on the Unter den Linden before returning to West Berlin.

    • @jasonwiley798
      @jasonwiley798 Před rokem

      What was the rate of exchange 100:1?

    • @garethaethwy
      @garethaethwy Před rokem +3

      @@jasonwiley798 I’m reliably informed that the enforced exchange was 1:1, but Ostmarks could be found easy enough on the black market for 1:10…

  • @spivackl
    @spivackl Před 2 lety +417

    What I find fascinating is that this happened just a few years after WWII. All of the adults could remember the nazi era. And certainly everyone was told how bad that era was. But they couldn't comprehend that they were doing the same thing for a different master.

    • @kitten-inside
      @kitten-inside Před rokem +55

      Oh, they knew. But the orders or "suggestions" from Moscow were clear. To this day, various customs and even language parts remain as traces of the Soviet influence in the entire bloc. It's difficult to imagine how deep the oppression ran at the height of USSR power.

    • @raijinenel3116
      @raijinenel3116 Před rokem

      same with anyone who supports blm, lgbtq, Ukraine today..

    • @jrmckim
      @jrmckim Před rokem +19

      A lot of people back then believed the Germans deserved that fate in East Germany.

    • @daffodil9075
      @daffodil9075 Před rokem +11

      No!--The Berlin Wall went up in 1961, sixteen years after the end of WWII in Europe.

    • @JJA_88
      @JJA_88 Před rokem +1

      Precisely

  • @SchutzeAmon
    @SchutzeAmon Před 2 lety +332

    'The Lives of Others' is a great depiction of life in East Germany and how the Stasi went about their business.

    • @jaikumarjadhav6575
      @jaikumarjadhav6575 Před 2 lety +34

      Absolutely brilliant movie

    • @mjstbnsn6294
      @mjstbnsn6294 Před 2 lety +28

      I like the joke about Erich Honnacker and the sun.

    • @PeterMayer
      @PeterMayer Před 2 lety +9

      That movie nailed these pricks.

    • @tomfrazier1103
      @tomfrazier1103 Před 2 lety +3

      I saw that movie about ten years ago for some reason, or one similar, with people being wistfully nostalgic for the DDR. Yeah, whatever.

    • @Brusselsniels
      @Brusselsniels Před 2 lety +13

      Life in GDR was depicted pretty accurate, but there was one big mistake: a Stasi agent could never change sides. They were ingeniously controlling eachother as well to prevent this happening.

  • @georgejob7544
    @georgejob7544 Před 2 lety +156

    I,m 75 years old, I still remember this like it were yesterday,Vopos shooting escaping teenage kids!
    I never expected to see it's demise!!

    • @cedriceric9730
      @cedriceric9730 Před 2 lety +2

      That's truly great

    • @jleeblackmon5340
      @jleeblackmon5340 Před 2 lety +14

      You are history my friend and you have seen alot of it, share your knowledge and experiences with ur loved ones to show what happens when we don't learn from our mistakes.

    • @tyrssen1
      @tyrssen1 Před 2 lety +4

      Likewise. (I'm 70.)

    • @brahmburgers
      @brahmburgers Před 2 lety +9

      Two weeks before the fall of the wall, big shot Kissinger was asked, "do you think the wall will fall in the next 10 to 20 years?" He answered with a grin, "No, that's not possible, ha ha ha." At the time, Kissinger was getting $60/hr for consultations - equivalent to about $400/hr nowadays. Macnamara, Westmorland, ....all those top officials were off base when it came to doing what was right. I resided in Thailand from 1998 to 2019, and one day, while I was working with lovely locals on a building, singing songs together, ....it struck me: 30 years earlier, my elder brothers and their buddies were shooting these same sorts of folks in jungles, a few hundred miles away. Insane. And right after we pulled out of VN, the Viet Cong drove into Cambodia in tanks to cut the balls off the Khmer Rouge who were killing their own people in droves. If humans are made "in God's image" ....then God is some f*cked up mother f*cker.

    • @thomasthomas2418
      @thomasthomas2418 Před 2 lety +4

      But the chaos that resulted from the "integration" of East German citizens into West German society has not abated and will not for generations to come. Some of my friends in West Germany referred to all of this as, "eine Katastrophe", a catastrophe.

  • @andrewmastrandonas5123
    @andrewmastrandonas5123 Před 2 lety +34

    At his sentencing, Mielke started to cry. In pronouncing sentence, Judge Theodor Seidel, told Mielke that he "will go down in history as one of the most fearsome dictators and police ministers of the 20th century."

  • @SR-pr2xz
    @SR-pr2xz Před 2 lety +46

    The best escape, I liked, were the 2 Czech guys in the 70s who used wooden chairs and climbed up the high tension power lines, hanging the chairs with rubber belts, and then pulled themselves across to Austria. Now that took balls !

    • @johnscanlon2598
      @johnscanlon2598 Před 2 lety +16

      There was an even better one a guy built an ultra light airplane flew into east Germany landed at a park or something picked up his brother and flew back to the west

    • @cbailey2376
      @cbailey2376 Před 2 lety +14

      How abt the east Germans that flew over the wall in a hot air balloon!! 🎈

    • @TylerTheObserver
      @TylerTheObserver Před rokem +7

      My favorite is a person who drove under the barriers.
      He had a small convertible lowered And had the windscreen taken off then drove straight at the barrier and just ducked.
      He had his luggage and his mother in law in the trunk. The narrator even said: "the trunk was big enough for more than one old bag." 🤣🤣

    • @GaZonk100
      @GaZonk100 Před 5 měsíci

      lol@@TylerTheObserver

  • @reddrabbit5056
    @reddrabbit5056 Před 2 lety +504

    Those old Stasi dudes really drank the koolaid. Years later - they still view their perverse mission in a positive manner.

    • @mrrolandlawrence
      @mrrolandlawrence Před 2 lety +44

      indeed. just like the dudes in the 30s.

    • @minhducnguyen9276
      @minhducnguyen9276 Před 2 lety +46

      @@guyfaux5010 Ho ironic. In the quest to destroy authoritarianism, they created their own authoritarians

    • @normamimosa5991
      @normamimosa5991 Před 2 lety +9

      @@guyfaux5010 What garbage!

    • @d.cypher2920
      @d.cypher2920 Před 2 lety +7

      @@normamimosa5991 can you elaborate, genuinely curious madamé.

    • @doublestrokeroll
      @doublestrokeroll Před 2 lety +54

      @@guyfaux5010 Propaganda works. Everywhere. Russia. China. The USA. The U.K. Australia. Canada. Germany. Spain. and on and on and on. The vast majority of people in every country thinks their shit doesn't stink. And they're all wrong.

  • @janeck.8695
    @janeck.8695 Před 2 lety +159

    My friend's uncle died at the wall trying to escape. What was it all for. A few politicians' egos and self-importance.

    • @richardhenderson3149
      @richardhenderson3149 Před 2 lety

      Hello Jane how are you doing hope you’re doing okay ✅

    • @DarkShroom
      @DarkShroom Před 2 lety +4

      you scapegoat politicians really when the division was the result of a war.... when we both invaded Germany, we couldn't have just given it all to Russia
      we couldn't also have declared war on Russia over the other half of Germany
      so what did politicians get wrong exacly? how where we supposed to deal with Nazi Germany? you could i guess blame Adolf Hitler

    • @stormywindmill
      @stormywindmill Před 2 lety

      Unbekant.

    • @brahmburgers
      @brahmburgers Před 2 lety +10

      The wall was one of the stupider things done at a time when many stupid things were done in the world. Khmer Rouge, Mao, Stalin, Nazi generals hiding in Argentina, McCarthyism, Bay of Pigs, on and on. Humans are a crafty species, ....but mentally, we're lower than wild dogs (and more prone to depression and cruelty).

    • @xancypillosi9497
      @xancypillosi9497 Před 2 lety

      @@brahmburgers ur a fool

  • @Tina06019
    @Tina06019 Před 2 lety +49

    I visited Berlin with my parents, in the 1960s. The Berlin Wall, which we only saw from the west side, was terrifying.

    • @geoffgane7550
      @geoffgane7550 Před rokem +10

      Erich Mielke was one sick individual.
      For those poor people it was a case of "Meet the new Boss, same as the old Boss".

    • @factchecker1980
      @factchecker1980 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Today this still goes on in NORTH KOREA and in the RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

    • @asullivan4047
      @asullivan4047 Před 9 měsíci

      What was so terrifying about it??? You were on the west side of it.

    • @nathanlewis42
      @nathanlewis42 Před 3 měsíci

      @@asullivan4047 I didn't see the Berlin Wall but I remember how scary the cold war was. You felt that a nuclear war could break out any day. I can imagine that the Berlin Wall was a very visual reminder of that the tense standoff between East and West.

  • @dtaylor10chuckufarle
    @dtaylor10chuckufarle Před rokem +14

    I'm a former Cold Warrior in the US, so believe me when I tell you that I never, ever thought I would go through the Brandenburg Gate. But I did in the mid 1990s and it was wonderful.

  • @margeryk000
    @margeryk000 Před 2 lety +648

    If you need to build a wall to keep your citizens from fleeing, then maybe you need to rethink your form of government.

    • @growingmelancholy8374
      @growingmelancholy8374 Před 2 lety +34

      some people just aren't grateful for what they are given.

    • @morzik12345
      @morzik12345 Před 2 lety +29

      maybe if the US and the UK allowed Germany to have neutral election like Stalin proposed along with removing all Allied Soldiers, the wall wouldn't have existed.
      BTW, what is democracy when it needs to be spread through terror, death squads, color revolutions, useful idiots and bombing campaigns

    • @flatoutt1
      @flatoutt1 Před 2 lety +18

      @@growingmelancholy8374 another classic comment from one of the gifted who can say so much with such elegant words . thanks

    • @growingmelancholy8374
      @growingmelancholy8374 Před 2 lety +14

      @@flatoutt1 Thank you my love. I am glad you appreciate trolling. With all my love, your mother.

    • @fattahk-hashi8260
      @fattahk-hashi8260 Před 2 lety +7

      @@morzik12345 🔦extremely intelligent individual😎

  • @229masterchief
    @229masterchief Před 2 lety +376

    DDR citizen: Dude, I think the Stasi is listening to us
    A voice from the attic: No we aren't >:(

  • @8rickey
    @8rickey Před rokem +14

    It's wild that all these ex-Stasi officers are basically like "Yeah we committed human rights violations and now are like 'whatever' about it."

  • @timetraveler2518
    @timetraveler2518 Před 2 lety +37

    I visited East Germany and both east and west Berlin in December 1978 for a week when I was twenty years old American traveler. I walked through the checkpoint Charlies freely until the East German security border guard with a submachine gun at the gate asked me for my passport and questioned me for visiting East Berlin. I was nervous and discomforted while I traveled in East Berlin. I was heavily surveillance in East Germany and a few guards and police asked me for my passport and questioned me again. I visited a cigarette-smoking pub for a drink - the Pepsi, and almost all East German patrons in the bar quickly stared at me, but they quickly ignored me when two undercovered police came into the pub. Several of them drank vodka and beer, and smoked cigarettes, and quietly talked to each other. They avoided contacting me. I walked and explored the city of East Berlin in the greying sky and it looked depressing until the end of the day. I walked back to West Berlin via Checkpoint Charlie and I felt relieved and I said "freedom." West Berlin was the oasis of freedom and capitalism. I took a train to West Germany from West Berlin via East Germany. East German guard on the train checked my passport twice. Security dogs walked through beneath the train and the corridor of the train on the East Germany border before proceeded to West Germany. After arrival in West Germany, the West German border guard smiled at me after he checked through my passport and he spoke English "Welcome!" There was a huge contrast between depressed joyless dark East Germany and vividly joy brighten West Germany on Christmas week. I never forget this unique era of Stasi rule in East Germany.

    • @MrHowzaa
      @MrHowzaa Před 2 lety +1

      are you still 20 years old. you call your self time traveler.

    • @timetraveler2518
      @timetraveler2518 Před 2 lety +4

      @@MrHowzaa no, today in the year 2021, I am over 60s. I never lie and even I abhor lies.

    • @mikeggg5671
      @mikeggg5671 Před 2 lety

      You mean you enjoy the Amerikaner occupation?

    • @cozy6308
      @cozy6308 Před 2 lety +2

      Didn't the soviets like Pepsi?
      They even traded navy vessels for pepsi

    • @timetraveler2518
      @timetraveler2518 Před 2 lety +3

      @@cozy6308 Soviets liked Pepsi, but they love Vodka more than other beverages. Vodka was much cheaper than Pepsi and even the availability of Vodka was plentiful in Soviet markets. I remembered I was on the train on the way to West Berlin in East Germany. While the train stopped for a few minute break, I looked out through the train window and saw one drunken older-middle East German man carrying a bottle of Vodka on the train platform in the heavy industrial town in East Germany.

  • @LoopHoleLeeRoy
    @LoopHoleLeeRoy Před 2 lety +190

    I always call the people checking my receipt at Costco the Stazi. After watching this documentary, I can confirm that I am an idiot.

    • @PeterMayer
      @PeterMayer Před 2 lety +2

      True! Lol

    • @zimbu_
      @zimbu_ Před 2 lety +12

      Yikes, hopefully didn't say that to anyone with German relatives.

    • @robmeekel9198
      @robmeekel9198 Před 2 lety +7

      You agree to it at membership businesses. Its others like Walmart where its bullshit

    • @rixille
      @rixille Před 2 lety +16

      Nah, we have the FBI, DHS and NSA; those could be called Stasi easily.

    • @robertandrews6915
      @robertandrews6915 Před 2 lety +4

      I'm really glad you see your mistake. It's really irritating when people blurt out names like that because they don't know how hardcore they really were. My father simply keeps walking like he never heard them. It's quite funny and embarrassing at the same time. I don't go to Walmart with him anymore, one of these days they'll call the police and I don't like dealing with cops.

  • @mikeoleksa
    @mikeoleksa Před 2 lety +27

    It confuses me how a government can't see anything wrong with the way they are doing things when they have to take such huge measures to keep tens of thousands of people from escaping its control and the people fleeing were even willing to die trying to do so.

    • @JesusChrist2000BC
      @JesusChrist2000BC Před 2 lety +1

      Because marxists and leftists think they are God. Thats why.

    • @cbailey2376
      @cbailey2376 Před 2 lety

      Oh the government in charge know what they're doing -- they orchestrated it after all. They only care abt their own agenda, not the people. 😔

  • @Igor-di6sy
    @Igor-di6sy Před rokem +42

    I's horrifying what Soviet union had done, nearly 40 years of unending horrors in Germany. I've visited the Stasi prison in Berlin in December and went to see the underground tunnels. Our tour guide was a former Stasi prisoner. What amazed me was the advanced level of technology used in security and torment. If only that engineering acumen had been used for peaceful and constructive purposes.... So glad that the Wall had fallen and the reign of terror had ended.

    • @workhorse7134
      @workhorse7134 Před rokem +1

      Guess you missed history class before east Germany was created.
      You know when it was just Germany and not part of the Soviet Union.

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky Před rokem +6

      People will never stop coming up with novel ways to scam or hurt others. It's incredible, really. Just a fraction of that brainpower toward positive pursuits would make the world a better place.

    • @don_senilo3313
      @don_senilo3313 Před rokem

      Sure and that is what Vladimir Vladimirovich wants to reestablish. Unfortunately the reign of terror is continuing, just ask the Ukrainians . BTW, Vlad was the KGB officer during that time and watched the Stasi be more thorough than the Russian KGB.

  • @w.allencaddell6421
    @w.allencaddell6421 Před 2 lety +358

    As a military brat who lived in West Germany, many of us took trips to the border of West Germany and East Germany. We saw the the walls, the machine gun towers, the areas where land mines were. The only thing that we could see from West Germany was how "black and white" it looked. There were colors, flowers and birds singing on the West German side, but dark, depressive sense you felt. We'd wonder how East German kids were being treated. Years later I returned, this time as a service member. I was there when the Berlin Wall opened and never closed again. There were so many people crying that you definitely felt it yourself, seeing so many families being reunited after years, decades of separation. Unfortunately the South Korean people will never see there kin on the North Korean side. One side has freedom whereas the other has been under 3 different Dictatorships of the same family. The only way for the Koreans to be reunited is for Communist China to end, just as the Soviet Union did to allow Germany to be reunited.

    • @ggsay1687
      @ggsay1687 Před 2 lety +19

      Actually Soviet Union was in severe economic crisis, and reforms were introduced by Gorbochev so called "perestroika" or "rebuilding", but Soviet Union collapsed 3 years after fall of Berlin Wall.

    • @218kq
      @218kq Před 2 lety +12

      Mainland China took much lesson from the soviet case, including the east germany problem and its dissolution. Soo, nope.

    • @yaboyflvckor456
      @yaboyflvckor456 Před 2 lety +2

      well ur hella right. who dafuck wanted soviets ? look every country now in Europe who was occupied by russians. grimy,dark, grey look on every one of those...

    • @wjs010ify
      @wjs010ify Před 2 lety +11

      It must have Been a site my dad was also in the army in Germany but in the early 70s , so wall was still up. I think your hypothesis about Korea is theoretical , but I think it could dissolve in a similar fashion . Maybe not as happy and party like as Berlin (partly due to the actual geography and width of the DMZ itself) , but I bet North Korea will not be around in the next 50 years. Why? We live in the Information Age. Too much info is being disseminated into the country in creative ways… that is fascinating.

    • @dejanmilovanovic2413
      @dejanmilovanovic2413 Před 2 lety +1

      They treeated like deserved.

  • @vauxpedia
    @vauxpedia Před 2 lety +156

    This period in Germany's history is really interesting & DW Documentaries are 1st class

    • @awakeandwatching953
      @awakeandwatching953 Před 2 lety +4

      Australia seems to be doing a fairly accurate re-enactment at the moment

    • @sutherlandA1
      @sutherlandA1 Před 2 lety

      @Celtic Snow Australia has been ruled by conservatives since 2013 🙄

    • @mikeggg5671
      @mikeggg5671 Před 2 lety

      NO - they are not. DW is an arm of the Amerikaner occupation of the Fatherland, and is doing nothing but trying to propogate anti-German sentiment.

    • @trishmccarthydavis3425
      @trishmccarthydavis3425 Před 2 lety

      @@awakeandwatching953 You mean the QR code?

    • @philiptownsend4026
      @philiptownsend4026 Před 2 lety +2

      Not just interesting but terrifying too in that one fascism was replaced by another.

  • @TheKositi
    @TheKositi Před 2 lety +244

    I love these documentaries!

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Před 2 lety +48

      We really appreciate your feedback. Thanks for watching and stay tuned for more :)

    • @timsummers870
      @timsummers870 Před 2 lety +12

      I love DW documentaries too!! It's always so informative.

    • @johndclegg38
      @johndclegg38 Před 2 lety +11

      DW produces top level educational videos!

    • @muchaim2275
      @muchaim2275 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DWDocumentary ❤️ from Kenya, more please.

    • @jamesnorseman4863
      @jamesnorseman4863 Před 2 lety +1

      Don't love, question it!

  • @voxveritas333
    @voxveritas333 Před 2 lety +98

    The record-keeping activity of the German governments never ceases to amaze, whether for good or evil purposes.

    • @thinghammer
      @thinghammer Před rokem +13

      And still there are plenty of people who doubt or deny most or any of it ever happened.

    • @dm-gq5uj
      @dm-gq5uj Před rokem +9

      I've read the Stasi even had the unwashed underwear of suspected dissidents in their files - trained dogs would be used to find out who was distributing underground persistence literature and pamphlets. If you're going through someone's dirty laundry, digging around for briefs or panties, it has to occur to you that you're not in the right business.

    • @DmPmRr1959
      @DmPmRr1959 Před rokem +1

      Well put. Thank you.

    • @Varangian_af_Scaniae
      @Varangian_af_Scaniae Před 9 měsíci

      The Germans are fantastic record keepers. Everything was documented about WW2 except that which the natsees are most remembered for. It's almost like it never happened. Makes you wonder...

    • @marcellocolona4980
      @marcellocolona4980 Před 5 měsíci

      Germans are insane, obsessive record keepers, even if those records incriminate them for crimes against humanity.

  • @kennymacdonald5313
    @kennymacdonald5313 Před rokem +36

    It's like it just smoothly progressed from Gestapo to Stasi

    • @joiamed8544
      @joiamed8544 Před rokem +2

      It's almost the same thing. Stasi, Gestapo.

    • @dalegribble1560
      @dalegribble1560 Před rokem +5

      The Gestapo made you think they were everywhere but the STASI really WAS everywhere.

    • @Rich0305
      @Rich0305 Před 2 měsíci

      The Germans really seemed to have a screw loose from 1914 all the way up to 1989

  • @JohnTaylor-bf6ll
    @JohnTaylor-bf6ll Před 2 lety +41

    The commentator said it exactly -
    "Mielke's overriding priority was to keep himself and his party in power".
    Go it in one - tells you everything you need to know about ANY authoritarian regime on the world, communist or other.

    • @emjay2045
      @emjay2045 Před 2 lety

      the RepubliCON party

    • @mickeyh1961
      @mickeyh1961 Před 2 lety

      @@emjay2045 a little confused I would say , just look at the raft of draconian rules the Democrats introduced to America, its looking more and more like East Germany each day

    • @americafirst3738
      @americafirst3738 Před 2 lety

      Like the dems and installed biden

    • @terminator8334
      @terminator8334 Před rokem +2

      Today in South Africa

    • @MrBannystar
      @MrBannystar Před 4 měsíci

      @@emjay2045 They're not currently in power? At least, not at the time of you writing your ignorant comment.

  • @Duececoupe
    @Duececoupe Před 2 lety +16

    Another winner DW, as simple as that....just love your documentaries, pure quality! Haven't had much chance to watch them all due to the work load, need to make time because they're absolutely worth it!
    Having loved history since my school days (I'm 52 now), I need to read more about the Berlin Wall, Operation Danube, East Germany in 1953, Hungary in 1956....have you made any videos on those events in history, if not....do you have any planned?
    Much respect to you all at DW, keep up the phenomenal work! 👍🏻👌🏻👏🏻

  • @Speaktruthabsolutely2023
    @Speaktruthabsolutely2023 Před 9 měsíci +18

    The stasi’s being interviewed seem so proud of what they have done. They should have been punished for all the deaths they caused. Shame on them

    • @eliasbairamis6069
      @eliasbairamis6069 Před 5 měsíci +3

      this is communists

    • @MelanieAF
      @MelanieAF Před 5 měsíci +3

      So true. It could only be because they know that they’re safe from prosecution or any kind of justice for their victims, that they discuss their crimes with such impunity.

  • @daftphil9706
    @daftphil9706 Před 2 lety +22

    Another great and classic documentary from what's fast becoming my favourite channel! Insightful, informative and educational.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Před 2 lety +6

      Thanks for watching and for the positive feedback! We're glad you like our content. :-)

    • @richardsimms251
      @richardsimms251 Před 2 lety +3

      DW documentaries are absolutely top quality, extremely professional and always worth watching. RS. Canada

  • @Zeuskazoo
    @Zeuskazoo Před 2 lety +35

    YES! Been waiting for something about the Stasi

  • @DeVolksrepubliek
    @DeVolksrepubliek Před 2 lety +116

    DW has been producing some great documentaries lately. The one on Afghanistan that was released a week ago is probably my favourite DW documentary now. Thanks and keep up the good work!

    • @BlackRain_
      @BlackRain_ Před 2 lety +1

      DW will keep you on the liberal plantation... please stay at home.

    • @DeVolksrepubliek
      @DeVolksrepubliek Před 2 lety +2

      @@BlackRain_ Bestie I ain’t no liberal

    • @BlackRain_
      @BlackRain_ Před 2 lety

      @@DeVolksrepubliek I get it. You're an armchair commie!
      You should get out more - and get yourself a boyfriend or something.

    • @colinstewart1432
      @colinstewart1432 Před 6 měsíci

      They definitely make some good docs. Balanced and informative.

  • @jaimelima2420
    @jaimelima2420 Před 2 lety +7

    The furniture of East Germany and government buildings decoration of 1960 deservers a separate video telling its story.

  • @user-gt1uy9cj6g
    @user-gt1uy9cj6g Před 2 lety +35

    I heard that Stasi waited for people to go to work and then enter their home's and place bag of coffee (for example) on their table...they played serious mind games!

    • @Gartenpalme1
      @Gartenpalme1 Před 2 lety +17

      They moved stuff around to make you think you go crazy. They also installed listening devices and heard everything you said in your own home.

    • @CaptainHoratioPugwash
      @CaptainHoratioPugwash Před 2 lety +11

      It's true. The scenes of the empty offices in this documentary are in the former Stasi HQ, now the Stasi Museum, and they have quite a few examples of their covert spying in one of the rooms. The bastards hid devices in damn near everything. One family found a listening device in the top of an interior door when redecorating something like 12 years after the wall fell.

    • @johntriplett3188
      @johntriplett3188 Před 2 lety +9

      Yes or say open your mail while you were out. Brazen shit to let you know you were being watched.

    • @MrHowzaa
      @MrHowzaa Před 2 lety +2

      @@Gartenpalme1 imagine what they could do today if they were still around.

    • @jamesalexander3530
      @jamesalexander3530 Před 2 lety +2

      Read once Stadia would leave used condoms under the beds of marriage couples.

  • @ricardosuarez8023
    @ricardosuarez8023 Před 2 lety +151

    Thank you DW.
    It's disgusting the way politicians have manipulated us.

    • @Zukalski
      @Zukalski Před 2 lety +31

      AND STILL ARE

    • @shotforshot5983
      @shotforshot5983 Před 2 lety

      They are human.. these behaviors are a part of human nature. Denying that by simply labeling them as "politicians" does not change facts. It only lets people naively believe they are different. Above human nature.

    • @ohgosh5892
      @ohgosh5892 Před 2 lety +16

      And still do, Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Bolsonaro, Erdogan, Putin... fascists do not change their spots.

    • @robertandrews6915
      @robertandrews6915 Před 2 lety +6

      People want power and authority so badly they'll anything to get or keep it. Imagine if they acted for the good of the people

    • @andrewm79615
      @andrewm79615 Před rokem

      @@ohgosh5892 nationalism + authoritarianism = fascism. If anything, leftist democrats today are the authoritarians. Which party is pushing for greater and greater control of society, so that things they deem correct become mandated? That’s authoritarianism.

  • @soulflower8687
    @soulflower8687 Před rokem +17

    Listen to all these elderly Stasi agents, effectively engaged in a form of psychopathy, never faced any justice whatsoever for what they did and so proud of getting benefit for themselves by being super loyal and destroying so many lives and so many families.

  • @vintageseattle
    @vintageseattle Před rokem +7

    As an exchangee with ICJA I lived in West Berlin in 1983 with the family Bohley (Baerbel) who had been exiled out of the GDR years before. They still had a very large family left in the East which I was able to visit many time over Friedrichstrasse & Checkpoint Charlie. I got into lots of trouble trying to smuggle things to the East and was for awhile banned from entry. As a Young American this was like a living classroom at the heart of the Cold War and very educational. Great years there.

  • @jonwarland272
    @jonwarland272 Před 2 lety +84

    Great documentary. I love the ones on modern history and politics.

  • @chilesauce7248
    @chilesauce7248 Před 2 lety +55

    A pity you did not mention MARGOT Honecker and her role as the Purple Witch in all of that! She never faced justice, living peacefully in Chile, until her death in May 2016. What an awful woman!

    • @margritpiepes8242
      @margritpiepes8242 Před 2 lety +5

      And then she went to Hell where she belongs

    • @luisibarra5993
      @luisibarra5993 Před 2 lety +14

      yes, your right. But there's another awful woman in Chile that never been to court to face Human Rights crimes. LUCIA HIRIART de PINOCHET.

    • @growingmelancholy8374
      @growingmelancholy8374 Před 2 lety +7

      @@margritpiepes8242 Sadly there is no hell or heaven and she just died. The end.

    • @SpringLeafWolf
      @SpringLeafWolf Před 2 lety +1

      @@growingmelancholy8374 there is hell on earth tho...Madagascar prison 😳

    • @brahmburgers
      @brahmburgers Před 2 lety +21

      All top officers in Stasi should have been put behind bars for 5 to 10 years. Saying "only following orders" is a flimsy excuse for ruining tens of thousands of lives.

  • @tady64
    @tady64 Před rokem +34

    In 1985 as 22 years old man for the first time, I was allowed to travel from communist Poland and went to West Berlin, and have a look at East Berlin from one of those step towers and the feeling of joy and freedom is still in me today, and I don't think anybody can have this kind of filling unless coming from the oppressing country.

    • @josephhudson8829
      @josephhudson8829 Před rokem +1

      I was stationed in West Germany 83-85 Front line combat troops.

    • @alanrogs3990
      @alanrogs3990 Před 6 měsíci

      All people are not free unless they truly forgive and work on themselves

  • @timburr4453
    @timburr4453 Před rokem +2

    Brilliant job with this. Fascinating, informative!

  • @toddbrackett4277
    @toddbrackett4277 Před 2 lety +32

    Imagine what East Germany could have accomplished if they had put their talent and energy into something good?

    • @Gareth1892000
      @Gareth1892000 Před 2 lety +2

      They achieved the most out of all communist state, but yeah, had they put things in better way...

    • @reneweisz9157
      @reneweisz9157 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Gareth1892000 The most is correct but most was still third world conditions!

    • @ab8588
      @ab8588 Před 2 lety +1

      @@reneweisz9157 2nd world. Alabama is 3rd world

    • @johnscanlon2598
      @johnscanlon2598 Před 2 lety

      @@Gareth1892000 no they didn’t

    • @PIcoAirBearings
      @PIcoAirBearings Před 2 lety +5

      Not much. Authoritarianism always ends up at the same place. Sadly Canada is heading towards a similar place as the old East Germany

  • @billcartormayank4718
    @billcartormayank4718 Před 2 lety +43

    We are blessed with DW thank you for making awesome documentaries. We salute your hard work and compassion for us

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Před 2 lety +14

      We really appreciate your feedback. Thanks for watching and stay tuned for more :)

    • @user-wz1ce5br9o
      @user-wz1ce5br9o Před 2 lety

      @@DWDocumentary , do you really believe in your own propaganda? You are ridiculous! You are modern followers of Gebels. I guess, Russians must liberate Germany again like in 1945.

    • @DW94576
      @DW94576 Před 2 lety +5

      @@user-wz1ce5br9o please justify to me a government that will not let its citizens leave its borders? In what world does that seem okay to you?

    • @user-wz1ce5br9o
      @user-wz1ce5br9o Před 2 lety +1

      @@DW94576 , firstly, GDR let its citizens leave its border always. Relatives from the GDR freely visited their relatives in West Germany and conversely. The government GDR did not create any obstacles.
      Secondly, all Western governments during past two years have established such restrictions and controls in the movement of their citizens not only outside their borders, but also within states, which were not even during the Cold War and spy mania.

  • @barrykevin7658
    @barrykevin7658 Před 2 lety +4

    Another great DW documentary. THANKS .

  • @OysterPir8
    @OysterPir8 Před 2 lety +14

    How these men didn't face the noose like the Nuremberg folks did is beyond me.

    • @iknow4913
      @iknow4913 Před 10 měsíci +1

      It was a different world ppl became… “soft” that was considered harsh. I believe those who commit appalling atrocities to the detriment of those who are innocent or undeserving. should be subject to what I call “Trial of Own Indifference” and sentenced to “prolonged physical reeducation” which I consider torture over a period of time resulting in death. the length of which determined by the brutality and severity of the crime (Typical Murder)

    • @Alburr250
      @Alburr250 Před 9 měsíci

      @@iknow4913Agree!!

  • @arbaz79
    @arbaz79 Před 2 lety +15

    Thank you DW for this Excellent Documentary 👍.I always wanted to know more about Stasi and their tactics.I love these kind of Cold War documentaries.Keep uploading such interesting & informative documentaries.Love from PK💚.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks a lot for watching and for your positive feedback. We appreciate you taking the time to comment and are glad you like our content! :-)

  • @postscript5549
    @postscript5549 Před 2 lety +21

    Thank you. Informative. Amazing that this IMPORTANT part of history occurred in my lifetime.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!

  • @andynixon2820
    @andynixon2820 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent documentary , thank you .

  • @sherminator1617
    @sherminator1617 Před 2 lety +4

    Love this documentary, so much work behind it and great footages to. Loved the interviews too with stasi agent.

  • @StephiSensei26
    @StephiSensei26 Před 2 lety +79

    Fine educational documentary film. Frightening and horrific. The 60th Anniversary of the creation this disaster is in only two days. I hope many will celebrate to its final destruction and fall. Thank you DW.

  • @adro894
    @adro894 Před 2 lety +15

    I love all the history about the berlin wall, very interesting, especially the trains with the ghost stations etc

  • @mwnciboo
    @mwnciboo Před 2 lety +12

    After WWI and WWII...It always feels like Germany was like "We need to suffer more please!"

  • @richt6353
    @richt6353 Před rokem +1

    Thank for this great VIDEO!!

  • @blainemason8218
    @blainemason8218 Před 2 lety +5

    Fascinating documentary! Thank you!

  • @katyu16
    @katyu16 Před rokem +32

    My Mother's family all stayed in the east after the war. Why? I don't know. I have friends that I met in E. Berlin in 1981 and had kept in touch with since then...Their homes were directly on the border of E. Germany and West Berlin. In the the early days / weeks the the wall there was only barbed wire = EASY to escape. I asked them why their parents didn't escape with them when they had the chance. Their answer: This is our country and every year things are getting better and we didn't believe the wall would be permanent. Big mistake!

    • @zackabee5498
      @zackabee5498 Před rokem

      Do you believe them? What you think?

    • @jimstanga6390
      @jimstanga6390 Před rokem

      Well, ultimately they were correct. It is a shame that they had to spend 28 years behind it before they were vindicated…

    • @munawarkarim8026
      @munawarkarim8026 Před rokem +1

      Angela Merkel's father was a school teacher in Hamburg where she was born. Her father relocated the family to East Germany where she grew up. None of her family, including herself lifted a finger for freedom. An example of voluntary serfdom. Today's Germany is riddled with E. German sympathizers - reason why the reluctance to send tanks to Ukraine.

  • @theheartland1861
    @theheartland1861 Před 2 lety +2

    i was 5 years old, and watching east berlin building the wall. i still remember asking my dad questions, about why they were putting up wire and building the first parts of the wall, all while we were both watching on the evening news.

  • @gianizzle
    @gianizzle Před 2 lety

    Love these type of Documentaries. DW 🔝

  • @JC-vo5dt
    @JC-vo5dt Před 2 lety +12

    If not for the Berlin wall in 1961, East Berlin would have been a ghost town by 1965. It is a shame that never happened.

    • @Rich0305
      @Rich0305 Před 2 měsíci

      Just astonishing that nobody in power ever thought to themselves that maybe they were the problem !! If you have to keep your population imprisoned to stop them fleeing, you’re doing something very wrong

  • @TheYizuman
    @TheYizuman Před 2 lety +15

    Ridiculous that the Stasi leader, Erich Mielke, never died in prison!

    • @gertexan
      @gertexan Před 2 lety +2

      West German elites did want him to reveal their secrets so he was allowed to live out his remaining years at home as sign of "compassion". Just like allowing the Hoenickers to "retire" in Chile due to Erick`s ill health. These people really never have to pay a price.

    • @TheYizuman
      @TheYizuman Před 2 lety +2

      @@gertexan Still doesn't make it right. But then, there's God, so I guess I'll take His Judgement over anything else for that matter.
      Thing is, I would never wish anyone in Hell.

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain Před rokem +1

      To them, a free Germany was punishment enough.

  • @bababii4745
    @bababii4745 Před 2 lety +5

    DW never fails to educate viewers so we don't repeat these unbelievably scenes of separation

    • @garrisonnichols7372
      @garrisonnichols7372 Před 2 lety +1

      Idk man have you seen some of these Liberal Socialist Democrats today! Very creepy! People like AOC and Bernie Sanders have the same mindset.

  • @kollusion1
    @kollusion1 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Thanks to the clever ones, that help to prevent the meaningless commercials from disturbing my peace time viewing!
    . . . Oh, & thanks to the makers of this doc. . .
    . . . & Thanks to the channel for sharing - Cheers !!

  • @BentBaniHashimBBH
    @BentBaniHashimBBH Před 2 lety +20

    The world is such a depressing place .. I pray and hope we can make the future less scary than the past .
    Thank you DW for your great content .

    • @MrSvenovitch
      @MrSvenovitch Před 2 lety

      Hahaha you're funny. It's clearly getting worse every day and you type smth like that...Anyway, keep praying...since doing useless things is high on your list.

    • @jamie.777
      @jamie.777 Před 2 lety

      Your prayers do nothing, blame Germany for there own mistakes....

  • @AndyNL
    @AndyNL Před 2 lety +14

    Remember during end of the seventies I was in transfer a few times to Poland via the DDR and visa versa.
    Great docu with a lots of explainations, thank you DW !!! You are great !

  • @eileenalholinna5310
    @eileenalholinna5310 Před rokem +3

    I cannot imagine waking up to discover you are blocked from leaving your city. How evil. What was the idea of that?

  • @williambrandt9254
    @williambrandt9254 Před 2 lety +84

    A great book on the Stasi and their power over the average citizen was called Stasiland. Written by an Australian journalist who lived in what was East Berlin right after the wall came down. She interviewed a number of people who had stories.
    It was chilling.
    They literally had the power of life and death over you and people just disappeared never to be seen again.
    And try to see the movie the lives of others.
    It’s a German film and I think it accurately depicted life in east Germany.
    I think when the wall came down there was a shock among former East Germans when that headquarters was opened up to learn that their trusted friends and neighbors were paid informants.
    There was not anything funny about the Stasi.
    I think in the Soviet union about 1 in 2000 citizens was an informant.
    In East Germany, it was 1 in 60.

    • @Ellen24493
      @Ellen24493 Před 2 lety +15

      The movie The Lives of Others was chilling. The Stasi was monitoring every one.

    • @TheLadyDiazepam
      @TheLadyDiazepam Před rokem +6

      I've seen The Lives of Others. Excellent and absorbing film.

    • @Ratkill
      @Ratkill Před rokem +4

      The sort of things a weak person is capable of when given an "elevated" position is astounding.

    • @stephenkammerling9479
      @stephenkammerling9479 Před rokem

      For all their supposed hatred for the Nazis, the Stasi sure took a lot from the Nazi playbook. Those agents likely would have been very comfortable in the Gustavo. Granted, the Stasi's evils don't even approach what the the Nazis did, but their tactics seem quite similar, like in formats, and disregard for human life for just a couple.

    • @williambrandt9254
      @williambrandt9254 Před rokem

      @Sheriff Duane Dwayne Not on the Berlin Wall but you will find this one fascinating

  • @quangtruong3484
    @quangtruong3484 Před 2 lety +9

    Fantastic and benifits knowledge for those who want to know the history of Cold War . Between east & west , like an great adventured to the past . Thanks so much for whose was making this video topics and thanks to DW . From asia ! Beloved

  • @AndrewTubbiolo
    @AndrewTubbiolo Před 2 lety +23

    I want to see comparative methods and types of data collected by the STASI in comparison to the social media companies.

    • @JundunYashua
      @JundunYashua Před 2 lety +4

      I bet you it would be absurdly similar.

    • @logical_human
      @logical_human Před 2 lety +2

      @@JundunYashua you have a choice not to have a social media account

    • @parus6422
      @parus6422 Před 2 lety

      social media companies collect huge amounts of data that is processed by AI to target ads at you. No human reviews your data or cares.
      The STASI would bug houses and record every conversation. If they wanted you to be a good citizen then would listen to your conversations for leverage. Like for some Gay men, they would have good looking men have a relationship with them, they would threaten to expose them for being gay if they did not play ball with the government and be a gratefully little worker bee. It's not really comparable.
      The lives of others is a good moive

    • @13strigoi69
      @13strigoi69 Před 2 lety +2

      The Stasi would be green with envy.

  • @Josealdojunior248
    @Josealdojunior248 Před 2 lety

    Simply Awesome, what a beautiful made documentary 💯

  • @MrWadstw
    @MrWadstw Před 2 lety +4

    Excellent Documentary into this Historical period.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Před 2 lety

      Glad you liked the documentary. We upload documentaries regularly so don’t forget to subscribe. 🙂

  • @JaSoLuV
    @JaSoLuV Před 7 měsíci +1

    They should do a movie about the Stasi. They sound like they were no joke.

  • @davisoneill
    @davisoneill Před 2 lety +27

    The Stasi had files on 30% of the population. Google and Facebook have files on 100% of the population. And much much more detailed files.

    • @PauloCarnaxide
      @PauloCarnaxide Před 2 lety +2

      I can't sleep at night thinking about it.

    • @Holyproperty
      @Holyproperty Před 2 lety

      peoples give up the information willingly so that they can have social interaction with their long lost relatives and friend, they are free to leave, that what the freedom mean, learn the different, dont let socialis utopia BS dumb you down..

  • @glenatkinson1230
    @glenatkinson1230 Před 2 lety +12

    My tante Regina was helped through the burgeoning wall in 1961 by my Uncle Joe who was a British soldier. Heard many stories about the post WW2 period and being separated from family and friends. So sad. Great video.

  • @bateaflorea1793
    @bateaflorea1793 Před 2 lety +1

    Great documentary!

  • @northernbohemianrealist1412

    Word has it that Texas legislators and judges are studying the Stasi methods.

    • @teutonalex
      @teutonalex Před 2 lety +2

      Stop eating lead paint chips.

    • @helenajennings4912
      @helenajennings4912 Před rokem +1

      Could it be the 3 letter agencies like we have today: FBI CIA ABC CBS.....??

  • @Silenced23
    @Silenced23 Před 2 lety +6

    Its sad that stuff like this is no longer on TV

  • @angryzergling7832
    @angryzergling7832 Před 2 lety +4

    22:40 Oooh, look at that power play by Honecker during and after the handshake. Honecker clasped his hand, then jerked Mielke toward himself. Afterwards, he held his hand above him and then brought it down, clasping him by the shoulder and holding him throughout like a puppet master subtly manipulating the movements of a prop. Translation: "You are mine - I control you. I am above you, I am your superior. I own you."
    He wasn't subtle with that, so it makes me wonder what particular event or something that was said led him to feel the need to remind this man to whom he belonged.

    • @jyotifraser7439
      @jyotifraser7439 Před 2 lety

      I much appreciate your observations and interpretation - hey, body lingo speaks so loud!

  • @johnnicholas1488
    @johnnicholas1488 Před rokem +2

    Well done. Thank you.

  • @heavenly.psycho
    @heavenly.psycho Před 5 měsíci

    While watching this documentary, I also enjoy reading the comment section which provides supplementary info of the situation 😊 I’m glad to be able to virtual meet the people who have first hand experience of east Germany 🤝

  • @roryslaine7896
    @roryslaine7896 Před 2 lety +21

    For anybody interested in this subject I'd highly recommend watching the German film 'The Lives of Others'. Not sure how to spell it in German, sorry! But it's a fascinating look into the Stasi and life in East Germany at that time. The actor who plays the main character/ Stasi agent (Ulrich Mühe RIP) was under state surveillance himself from the Stasi in real life so I imagine it must have hit really close to home. It's genuinely a phenomenal movie. I can't speak German so I had to watch it subtitled but I still found it powerful. I honestly don't even know how I ended up watching it because it wasn't marketed in my country at all. I think it won/was nominated for the best Foreign picture at the Oscars and I'm fascinated by that period of time in history so I gave it a watch randomly not expecting much. I was absolutely blown away by how good that film is.

    • @tszirmay
      @tszirmay Před 2 lety +2

      it won the Oscar! Superb movie....

    • @GnosisEnglish
      @GnosisEnglish Před 2 lety +2

      A teacher showed us that movie in high school, I love German productions! They always leave you thinking about what you saw for days after watching it, I love them!

    • @fabiandimaspratamathesecond
      @fabiandimaspratamathesecond Před 2 lety

      I'd also recommend "Deutschland 83" TV series, it is about East German spy sent into West Germany during "Able Archer" exercise which back then was thought to be NATO preparation of nuclear attack on Warsaw Pact countries. What fascinating thing is.. imagining that so many East German spies infiltrate West Germany positions including university professor, culture ambassador, and even Bundeswehr officer!

    • @tszirmay
      @tszirmay Před 2 lety +1

      @@fabiandimaspratamathesecond Or Gunther Guillaume who was Chancellor Willi Brandt's secretary

    • @fabiandimaspratamathesecond
      @fabiandimaspratamathesecond Před 2 lety

      @@tszirmay Indeed! Shocking

  • @jjwwqq
    @jjwwqq Před rokem +3

    This video should cause people to open their eyes as to what is happening in the world today.

  • @neilalbaugh4793
    @neilalbaugh4793 Před rokem +33

    If you have seen the movie "The Spy Who Came In From The Cold" (with Richard Burton), you've seen the most accurate representation of what it was like in the East (Soviet) Zone of Berlin in the early '60s. The prevailing climate was one of fear; people were afraid of being seen talking to a Westerner or even of looking directly at them. East Berliners would look at our reflection in the glass shop windows along the street instead of looking directly at us (US soldiers). Some would even engage in a quick conversation if they were unobserved. Even as late as 1962-1963 there were work parties of young girls clearing up the rubble left from WW II behind the facade of Karl Marx Allee (previously Stalin Allee) where their propaganda films were made. The stories you've heard about life behind the Berlin Wall are true. Thank God it is gone now. These STASI officers should have been tried and sent to prison.

    • @gottagowork
      @gottagowork Před rokem

      All gone? Looks like it's re-emerging in the US based on how some GOP ruled states appears to be governing as of lately.

    • @neilalbaugh4793
      @neilalbaugh4793 Před rokem +1

      @@gottagowork Ah...the "Useful Idiots" heard from.

    • @JB-pd3ir
      @JB-pd3ir Před rokem +2

      Regarding the cleaning up of the rubble - my father went to East Germany mid 1960s and he said looking around in some areas it felt as though the war had just happened a little while ago.

    • @neilalbaugh4793
      @neilalbaugh4793 Před rokem +2

      @@JB-pd3ir Yes, that was certainly true in East Germany and particularly East Berlin. The contrast between East & West Germany was like night and day.

    • @neilalbaugh4793
      @neilalbaugh4793 Před rokem +1

      I guess this guy fled the scene!

  • @charlescole3040
    @charlescole3040 Před 2 lety +16

    And perhaps the biggest tragedy of the Stasi era is that now, in America, significant numbers of young people consider that socialism is preferable to our free market system. They preach to us, "follow the science." We should answer: "follow the history."

    • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684
      @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Před 2 lety

      Well after all, the lefties are really such lovely, "touchy feely", caring people aren't they?
      Strange how education systems and the MSM around the world never highlight, Stalin, Pol Pot, Mao Zedong, Lavrentii Beria isn't it?

    • @Davey-Boyd
      @Davey-Boyd Před 2 lety +3

      There does exist free market socialism you know. And the USA is far from free anyway. It is a bunch of corporations pretending to be a country, that brainwashes its citizens.

    • @CBeatty59
      @CBeatty59 Před 2 lety +5

      Talk about mixing apples and oranges! You’re mixing watermelons and parsnips!

    • @robrussell5329
      @robrussell5329 Před 3 měsíci +1

      You don't know what socialism is. Socialism is an economic system where the State decides all aspects of the economy. What to build and how much. What wages to pay, and what consumer goods cost. Who gets what job and who gets what apartment. Young people don't want any of that. The Soviet Union was, and North Korea and Cuba, still are - Socialist. And many European countries have some socialist leanings, like universal health care and strong workers protection. But their economies are capitalistic, not socialism. Their politics are democratic. At present only a handful of countries - less than five - practice pure socialism. They also are dictatorships.

    • @Tolpuddle581
      @Tolpuddle581 Před 2 měsíci

      America has Socialism but not in a good way it's in the form of handouts to big corporations of taxpayer money sometimes called a stimulus or a massive tax break for the already obscenely wealthy.
      America could easily afford universal healthcare but the masses have been convinced it's Socialism and that's bad so they continue to vote against their own interests.

  • @Yuhon100
    @Yuhon100 Před 2 lety +3

    Wonderful documentary of the life in the former East Germany.

  • @jcspider7259
    @jcspider7259 Před 2 lety +24

    I am an American scientist who in January 1980 moved to (then West) Germany for 2 years. One of my adventures while there was to drive from the city of Essen (West Germany) to Berlin, which meant I had to drive through East Germany. To make that drive, one made sure one's vehicle was in PERFECT operating condition and full of gas because, if you exited the highway, you would likely not be heard of again. Upon reaching West Berlin, I decided to visit East Berlin. To do that, one used the West Berlin subway to a certain point and, while still underground, walked over to the East Berlin subway, showed your papers to the VERY anti-social guard, and boarded an East German subway car that was VERY old (1950s?). Upon reaching the "allowed" station in East Berlin, I disembarked and walked up the stairs. I sat at an outdoor cafe on Unter den Linden and ordered a Coca Cola, which turned out to be some sort of totally fake "soft drink". After a while, I decided to take another risk and walk around some neighborhood streets (where visitors were NOT supposed to stray), and was shocked to see all the WW II damage on the outside of buildings that had never been repaired. It was an unforgettable day for me.

    • @jyotifraser7439
      @jyotifraser7439 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for your vivid and riveting account of that day. Filmic, in my imagination. Were any feelings present, or predominant during your escapade??

    • @jcspider7259
      @jcspider7259 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jyotifraser7439 My father was a true "edge dweller" and I most definitely inherited that risk-taker gene, as expressed in my racing cars, parachuting, etc. The predominant feelings for me during that escapade were calm excitement and hypervigilance.

    • @selenem3384
      @selenem3384 Před 2 lety

      fake soda? lol wonder if it was spiked with microscopic spy cameras or tracking chips🤔😉

    • @jcspider7259
      @jcspider7259 Před 2 lety

      @@selenem3384 LOL, but even so, the answer would be no since this was 1981.

  • @kaemlice
    @kaemlice Před rokem +2

    great documentary thank you !!!

  • @ralphwatkins9170
    @ralphwatkins9170 Před rokem +5

    I was stationed in West Berlin in the early 80s. From what I could tell, there was Soviet Communism but the East Germans still had that old Nazi flare to their form of Communism. Their uniforms, banners, marching style, & security was like the Nazis had just flipped their symbols is all. Then again, Communism & Nazism are both forms of Fascism. It was also hypocritical that the Berlin Wall was was called "anti-fascist" to keep the West out of their sector but it was really meant to enslave their own people. Being assigned to Berlin during that time period was like living in some spy novel full of danger & intrigue that you just did not want to stop reading. Many of us who were stationed there back then have very fond memories of that assignment. None of us ever hated the people themselves, just the political system that they had to live under.

  • @Rayman1971
    @Rayman1971 Před 2 lety +9

    Pretty much like this:
    Citizen A spies on Citizen B
    Citizen B spies on Citizen A
    Citizen C spies on both A and B

  • @davidwhitt8149
    @davidwhitt8149 Před 10 měsíci +10

    Evidence that just labeling something “antifascist” doesn’t make it so. Still relevant today.

  • @thornil2231
    @thornil2231 Před 2 lety +4

    The fall of the Berlin wall was on of the saddest day in History.

    • @jyotifraser7439
      @jyotifraser7439 Před 2 lety +3

      Your reasoning for that conclusion, I am interested to read ... hope to learn something new. Please do enlarge on it, and give context. Ta.

    • @jamalrobinson8321
      @jamalrobinson8321 Před rokem +1

      @@jyotifraser7439 yeah me 2

    • @michaelahern6821
      @michaelahern6821 Před rokem +1

      Why.,?

    • @thornil2231
      @thornil2231 Před rokem +1

      @@jyotifraser7439 Look at what is happening today in Ukraine, look at what happened in Yugoslavia. Look at what's happening in Poland and all the other East European countries. And look at what's happening in Wester Europe.What ever it was the Germano-Soviet pack or the so called Iron Curtain, it was a natural division. It has been true since the Roman Empire, Charlemagne's Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and on and on.
      Also Communism provided a Plan B forcing companies to give something to their workers.
      Now, globalism is freedom... for the slave owners.

  • @emancipatedlionm9215
    @emancipatedlionm9215 Před rokem +1

    Informative...
    Thank u

  • @johnreynolds5407
    @johnreynolds5407 Před 2 lety +17

    Exceptional documentary and puzzling how anyone could draw comparisons between the Berlin Wall and US/Mexico border.

    • @danielbright2916
      @danielbright2916 Před 2 lety

      Indeed. Or even Brexit: more people than ever before are trying to flee France now to get to Britain. France is in the european union.

    • @asullivan4047
      @asullivan4047 Před 9 měsíci

      There is no longer a wall that separates US & Mexico. But there is a tall chain link fence. Between Mexico & Guatemala. There’s a reason for border fences.

  • @schepvogelk5971
    @schepvogelk5971 Před 2 lety +3

    Interesting docu. Lot to learn from it.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Před 2 lety

      Thank you for watching! We're glad you liked the documentary :)

  • @iwaisman
    @iwaisman Před rokem +2

    Thanks

  • @luminouspage4359
    @luminouspage4359 Před 2 lety +1

    VERY INFORMATIVE

  • @imranfaizal8813
    @imranfaizal8813 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm new subscriber of your channel..it's gives informative knowledge...

  • @stateradio115
    @stateradio115 Před 2 lety +27

    Love learning about the Stasi. Please do more documentaries on their history and tactics! Thank you DW!!

  • @ronrutan
    @ronrutan Před 2 lety +3

    I can't believe that guard is just walking around free

  • @jasontucher7011
    @jasontucher7011 Před 2 lety +4

    This is the best DDR documentary I've seen.