|
By Jenna Lyle
Nov 9, 2009: Church leaders have paid
tribute 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
today.
The newly elected head of the Evangelical Church in
Germany (EKD), Bishop Margot Kaessmann, said dream
became reality when the wall came down on 9 November
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 said.
Bishop Kaessmann said she was grateful for the decisive
role played by the EKD in the GDR at this 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 said that remembering the historic event 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, the 9 November
1989 and the weeks of peaceful mass demonstrations in
the preceding autumn will always come to me as a
miracle.”
Preaching at an ecumenical service in the Gethsemane
Church in Berlin today, 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 fall of the wall, he continued, demanded that the
German people show solidarity with those still living in
bondage and contribute to a Europe “that truly serves
the relationship between people and states”.
“The memory of 9 November 1989 and no less the memory of
the terrible events of the Night of Broken Glass on 9
November (1938, against the Jews), teach us
unequivocally: walls – whether real or in people’s heads
– do not solve any problems. On the contrary, they
create problems. They obstruct the future.”
The head of the World Council of Churches, the Rev Dr
Samuel Kobia, said the church in the former German
Democratic Republic had offered an inclusive space to
people searching for freedom and a spiritual home.
“Christian hope and perseverance contributed
significantly to the fall of the Berlin Wall twenty
years ago,” he said.
“A movement that started with prayers and candlelight
vigils in the Saint Nicholas Church in the centre 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.”
Dr Kobia said there were still many walls separating
mankind today, like the demilitarised 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, stigmatise 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.
“They taught us that Christian faith can inspire a
resistance movement against despair - a lesson for today
as it was 20 years ago.”
|