Berlin's Hidden Escape Tunnels | Going Underground in Berlin | Fleeing from East to West Germany
Did you know about Berlin's hidden underground tunnels? During the Cold War, when Germany including Berlin was divided in East and West, some of them were used to flee from East- to West-Berlin. Dietmar Arnold, co-founder of the organization Berliner Unterwelten takes you on a tour. People from over 190 countries live and work in Berlin. The series Planet Berlin, DW presents 50 people from different countries in a book, videos and in a web special.
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Go West - Escape from East Berlin
Go West - Flucht aus Ost-Berlin
Für viele Jahre wurden Ost und West Deutschland von eine Sperranlage und Ost und West Berlin von einer Mauer getrennt. Die Mauer trennten Familien und Freunde. Zugegeben, nicht jeder hasste den Osten, aber viele wollten weg aus das was sie als ein Gefängnis Empfanden. Der Englischsprachig Dokumentarfilm „Go West - Escape from East Berlin“ beschreibt die Geschichte der Berliner Mauer. Die Dokumentation ist in Englisch, mit englischen Erzählung und Übersetzte deutschen Interviews mit Ex-Wachen, Flüchtlinge und Familienangehörige von Personen die zu fliehen müssten.
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Go West - Vlucht uit Oost Berlijn
Voor vele jaren werden Oost en West Duitsland door een barrière en Oost en West Berlijn door een muur gescheiden. De muur scheden families en vrienden. Toegegeven, niet iedereen haatte het Oosten, maar veel wilde weg omdat ze de DDR als een soort gevangenis voelde. De Engelstalige documentaire film Go West - Escape from East Berlin beschrijft de geschiedenis van de Berlijnse Muur. De documentatie is in het Engels, met Engels gesproken tekst en vertaalde interviews met ex-bewakers, vluchtelingen en familieleden van mensen die moesten vluchten.
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For many years, East and West Germany of a separation barrier and the East and West Berlin were separated by a wall. The wall separated families and friends. Granted, not everyone hated the East, but many wanted to get away from what they as a prison felt. The documentary film Go West - Escape from East Berlin describes the history of the Berlin Wall. The documentation is in English, with English narration and attempts have translated German interviews with ex-guards, refugees and family members of people who have to flee.
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1UP - WHOLECAR - ROPE ESCAPE - BERLIN
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Live Escape Game Berlin: The Room
Innerhalb von 60 Minuten durch das Lösen verschiedener Rätsel und Aufgaben aus einem Raum entkommen - das ist Live Escape. Und das Reality-Game boomt mittlerweile auch in Deutschland. Wir haben The Room in Berlin besucht und das Live Escape Game selbst ausprobiert...
Attempted East Berlin Escapes and the Wall: Let them come to Berlin
Germans attempting to escape East Germany. Throughout the video echoes President John F. Kennedy's famous Ich bin ein Berliner ( I am a Berliner) speech from June 26, 1963, in West Berlin from a platform erected on the steps of Rathaus Schöneberg for an audience of 450,000 Germans.
Watch rare footage of the building of the Berlin Wall and how Germans attempted to escape East Germany.The first barricades of what would become the Berlin Wall sprung up in August 1961.
There are many people in the world who really don't understand, or say they don't, what is the great issue between the free world and the Communist world.
Let them come to Berlin.
There are some who say -- There are some who say that communism is the wave of the future.
Let them come to Berlin.
And there are some who say, in Europe and elsewhere, we can work with the Communists.
Let them come to Berlin.
And there are even a few who say that it is true that communism is an evil system, but it permits us to make economic progress.
Lass' sie nach Berlin kommen.
Let them come to Berlin.
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10 Most Amazing Berlin Wall Escapes
The Berlin wall was constructed in the early 1960s to divide the city. West-Berlin was capitalist and free, but the East was under Soviet control. The Soviets built the wall to prevent East-Berliners from escaping west. But 5 thousand did escape. Here are some of their stories.
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Top 10 Remarkable Escapes Across The Berlin Wall
Top 10 Remarkable Escapes Across The Berlin Wall
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Disintegrating - myuu (
CAN 350 East German people escape from East Berlin through tunnel
East German people escape from East Berlin through tunnel
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East Berliners Jump to freedom and Cross the Berlin Wall to Escape Newsreel PublicDomainFootage.com
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3:33 newsreel. Berlin Drama. East Berliners Jump to freedom. HIghlights of some of the worst violence and protests of the Berlin Wall. Dramatic scenes of East Berliners escaping and police clashing with citizens.
This is a low-resolution sample. Watermark does not appear on master. For full screen/full resolution of this and other historic footage and newsreels visit PublicDomainFootage.com. All material public domain and royalty-free saving you hundreds and even thousands. Total buyouts. No licensing hassles. Lowest rates on newsreels, archival stock footage and contemporary stock footage packages. Everything from the historical to the hysterical. If we don't have it we'll personally search the National Archives for you.
Tunneller helped hundreds escape; Berlin Wall file
(2 Nov 2009) SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION
FILE: Berlin, Germany - November 9, 1989
++NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Wide of piece of wall being lifted by mechanical digger
2. Chunk of wall coming down
3. Man sawing wall
4. People climbing over Berlin Wall
5. Pan of Berlin wall being torn down, soldiers and protesters watching
AP TELEVISION
Berlin - 29 October 2009
6. Berlin underground, train passing by
7. Mid of a 1:1 model of a cart and tunnel that people used to escape
8. Close up bucket with tools to excavate a tunnel
9. Mid of tool bag
10. Set up shot Anita Moeller, who fled East Germany using a tunnel
11. Close up eyes of Anita Moeller
12. SOUNDBITE (German) Anita Moeller, fled East Germany through a tunnel:
I remember that there was a track in the middle and mud and we had to crawl on our knees.
13. Close up of sign reading (German) Attention: in 80 meters you are leaving West-Berlin
14. Pan bucket to tunnel
15. Close of rocks
16. Set up shot Hasso Herschel
17. SOUNDBITE (German) Hasso Herschel, excavated tunnels to help people to escape into the West (talking about the escape of his sister Anita Moeller++):
I got her packed, and pulled her two metres toward this entrance hole where you could slide down into the basement. Then I didn't see her for about two or three hours. She had to wait on this side (West) until I finished my task.
18. Street sign reading (German) Bernauer Strasse, Wolgaster Strasse
19. Memorial statue of soldier jumping over the border
20. Close up memorial statue of soldier jumping over the border
21. SOUNDBITE (German) Anita Moeller, fled East Germany through a tunnel:
Then (outside) I met the young woman who had crawled ahead of us, along with her husband and baby. She was already sitting on a bench, and then slowly it sank in - we had made it!
22. Wide of buildings on Schoenholzer Strasse 7 in which entrance to underground tunnel was hidden
23. Close up Schoenholzer Strasse 7
24. SOUNDBITE (German) Hasso Herschel, excavated tunnels to help people to escape into the West:
It was the best thing I did in my life. Because you did something you were 100 percent sure was the right thing to do. And with every success story came the embraces.
25. Entrance to Berlin underworlds
26. Close up sign reading (German) Welcome to Berlin underworlds
27. Berlin underground, train passing by
28. Various of steel barrier with sharp spikes on top
29. Mid of Dietmar Arnold in the underworld exhibition
30. SOUNDBITE (German) Dietmar Arnold, Head of Berlin Underwolds:
The escape agents were undermined by Stasi spies so that the Stasi knew about some tunnels and took counteractive measures. They also installed traps at the exits of the tunnels.
31. Sign reading (German) Restricted area
32. Close up gully cover
33. GDR flag behind wire
AP TELEVISION
++NIGHT SHOTS++
FILE: Berlin, Germany - November 9, 1989
34. Pull out to wide of Checkpoint Charlie
35. Pan of East German border guards
36. Mid people crossing, couple hug
STORYLINE:
When Hasso Herschel first dug up a tunnel under a Berlin that had just been divided by a wall, he wanted to help his sister flee East Germany.
Within a decade he had helped some 300 people escape the communist regime, digging through the soft, sandy soil beneath the city.
In the first months after the erection of the Berlin Wall on August 13, 1961, about 600 escapees got away via the city's canals and the subway system, but by the end of 1961, East German border troops had sealed off access completely.
It was then, that people started digging their way to freedom.
Herschel, who escaped to West Germany with a forged passport in 1961, dug several illegal tunnels underneath the wall.
Fleeing East Germany was dangerous.
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The Tunnel - Escaping from Communist Regime, Berlin 1961 [HQ].mp4
Cold War escape tunnel opens under Berlin Wall
An escape tunnel underneath the Berlin Wall has been opened to the public for the first time amid celebrations of the 30-year anniversary of the opening of East Germany's border. (Nov. 7)
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Berlin After World War 2 | Berlin Before the Wall | Documentary | 1961
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This film (originally titled as ‘Journey Across Berlin’) is a 1961 documentary produced by the United States Information Agency (USIA) about the capital city of Germany, Berlin after World War 2. It documents the West's position on defense of Berlin against the Soviets. Beginning with the destruction and economic breakdown of the city at end of the war, the film presents significant historical events from an American perspective, such as establishment of occupation zones, Berlin blockade and airlift in 1948–49, uprising of 1953 in East Germany, elections in free Berlin and the West's determined actions to maintain the freedom of West Berlin. The film was completed a few months before the construction of the Berlin Wall (German: Berliner Mauer), a barrier that divided Berlin from 1961 to 1989.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND / CONTEXT
As World War 2 came to an end in 1945, a pair of Allied peace conferences at Yalta and Potsdam determined the fate of Germany’s territories. They split the defeated nation into four “allied occupation zones”: The eastern part of the country went to the Soviet Union, while the western part went to the United States, Great Britain and France.
Even though Berlin was located entirely within the Soviet part of the country, the Yalta and Potsdam agreements split the city into similar sectors. The Soviets took the eastern half, while the other Allies took the western. This four-way occupation of Berlin began in June 1945.
Blockade and crisis:
The existence of West Berlin, a conspicuously capitalist city deep within communist East Germany, “stuck like a bone in the Soviet throat,” as Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev put it. The Russians began maneuvering to drive the United States, Britain and France out of the city for good. In 1948, a Soviet blockade of West Berlin aimed to starve the western Allies out of the city. Instead of retreating, however, the United States and its allies supplied their sectors of the city from the air. This effort, known as the Berlin Airlift, lasted for more than a year and delivered more than 2.3 million tons of food, fuel and other goods to West Berlin. The Soviets called off the blockade in 1949.
After a decade of relative calm, tensions flared again in 1958. For the next three years, the Soviets – emboldened by the successful launch of the Sputnik satellite the year before and embarrassed by the seemingly endless flow of refugees from east to west (nearly 3 million since the end of the blockade, many of them young skilled workers such as doctors, teachers and engineers) – blustered and made threats, while the Allies resisted. Summits, conferences and other negotiations came and went without resolution. Meanwhile, the flood of refugees continued. In June 1961, some 19,000 people left the East Germany through Berlin. The following month, 30,000 fled. In the first 11 days of August, 16,000 East Germans crossed the border into West Berlin, and on August 12 some 2,400 followed – the largest number of defectors ever to leave East Germany in a single day.
The Berlin Wall:
That night, Premier Khrushchev gave the East German government permission to stop the flow of emigrants by closing its border for good. In just two weeks, the East German army, police force and volunteer construction workers had completed a makeshift barbed wire and concrete block wall – the Berlin Wall – that divided one side of the city from the other.
Before the wall was built, Berliners on both sides of the city could move around fairly freely: They crossed the East-West border to work, to shop, to go to the theater and the movies. Trains and subway lines carried passengers back and forth. After the wall was built, it became impossible to get from East to West Berlin except through one of three checkpoints: at Helmstedt (“Checkpoint Alpha” in American military parlance), at Dreilinden (“Checkpoint Bravo”) and in the center of Berlin at Friedrichstrasse (“Checkpoint Charlie”). At each of the checkpoints, East German soldiers screened diplomats and other officials before they were allowed to enter or leave. Except under special circumstances, travelers from East and West Berlin were rarely allowed across the border.
Berlin After World War 2 | Berlin Before the Wall | Documentary | 1961
TBFA_0106
NOTE: THE VIDEO DOCUMENTS HISTORICAL EVENTS. SINCE IT WAS PRODUCED DECADES AGO, IT HAS HISTORICAL VALUES AND CAN BE CONSIDERED AS A VALUABLE HISTORICAL DOCUMENT. THE VIDEO HAS BEEN UPLOADED WITH EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES. ITS TOPIC IS REPRESENTED WITHIN HISTORICAL CONTEXT. THE VIDEO DOES NOT CONTAIN SENSITIVE SCENES AT ALL!
The Story of Tunnel 57, The Secret Escape Way Under the Berlin Wall
During the 30 years that the Berlin Wall effectively imprisoned East Germans, only about 300 people managed to escape through underground tunnels to West Germany. In 1964, a group of West German college students planted themselves in an abandoned bakery and dug for five months until they accidentally emerged in an outhouse on the East German side. The East German police were alerted to their plan but not before 57 people managed to escape to the West German side in just two days. Despite the enormous risks, Tunnel 57 was the most successful tunnel escape in the history of the Berlin Wall.
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How These 8 People Escaped the Berlin Wall
Remarkable escape attempts in Germany! Amazing jumps to freedom & stunning acts of people who escaped the Berlin Wall.
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What Is It?
From 1961 to 1989, the Berlin Wall was both a physical and ideological barrier between East and West Germany. The US, the UK, France and the Soviet Union each took their share of the land.
Number 8 Flying a Hot Air Balloon
After watching a documentary on hot air ballooning, aircraft engineer Hans Peter Strelczyk was inspired. Alongside friend, Gunter Wetzel, he built an engine from propane cylinders. The balloon itself was made from bedsheets stitched together by their wives. On September 16, 1979, they took off, soared over the Wall and landed on West German soil. The hot air balloon flight that changed the lives of the two men and their families lasted roughly half an hour.
Number 7
Wolfgang Engels helped build the Wall in 1961 but who soon realized that life in the West was more alluring. Unfortunately it wasn’t powerful enough to break through the concrete barrier. That’s when Engels got out and tried to climb the wall but got stuck in the barbed wire. Engels said that he knew he’d made it because, as he awoke on the bar counter, he saw all the Western brands of liquor.
Why Was It Built?
To counter this move the Allies began dropping supplies by air, which became known as the Berlin Airlift. The following year the Soviets cancelled the blockade and a decade of relative peace followed. Crossing the border could only be done through checkpoints alongside the wall.
Number 6 Paddling on an Air Mattress
In 1975, Ingo Bethke decided to flee East Berlin by using an air mattress. He used to work as an East German border guard and knew the terrain on the banks of the River Elbe. Bethke and a friend made their way to the river and used an air mattress as a raft. They followed the course of the Elbe and quietly paddled to West Germany.
Number 5 Using a Zip Line
After Ingo Bethke defected to West Germany, his family was tightly monitored by East German authorities. However, that didn’t stop his younger brother Holger planning a daring escape. A trained archer, Holger found a tall building overlooking the other side of the wall. In 1983, he snuck into the attic and used a bow and arrow to fire a cable to West Berlin. Ingo, who’d gotten word from his brother, was waiting on the other side and attached the cable to his car. Holger then rode the zip line using a metal pulley and was reunited with his brother on the other side.
The Berlin Wall was a 12-foot-tall, 4-foot-wide structure made of reinforced concrete with a giant pipe at the top that made climbing it next to impossible. The wall zig-zagged across the country for 96 miles, separating East and West Germany, with about 27 miles running across the capital city.
Number 4 Driving a Stolen Train
Four months after the wall was built, 27-year-old railway engineer Harry Deterling found a disused train track that still stretched from East to West Berlin. Deterling signed on as a conductor on the route nearest to the disused track. In early December, 1961, Deterling’s friends and family climbed aboard the train. After disabling the emergency brakes, Deterling drove the train at full speed towards West Berlin and, implicitly, to freedom.
How Did It End?
On November 9, 1989, the East German government announced its citizens could visit the West. In a celebratory atmosphere, thousands of Germans crossed or climbed over the Wall to embrace those on the other side. The Berlin Wall, in its ideological form, had fallen and Germany was whole again. The physical demolition of the Wall was completed from 1990 to 1992.
Number 3 Driving a Convertible
While working in East Berlin, Heinz Meixner fell in love with Margarete Thurau. Meixner was Austrian but East German authorities wouldn’t allow him to marry Thurau in his native country. Meixner then rented a convertible and modified it by removing its windshield and deflating its tires. In 1963, with Thurau and his future mother-in-law in the trunk, Meixner approached a border checkpoint.
Number 2 Swimming
When he was only 18 years old, in 1966, Hartmut Richter swam across the Teltow Canal to reach West Berlin.
Number 1 Moving on a Tightrope
Driven by his passion and love of the circus he plotted an escape by doing what he was best at…climbing the tightrope. In the winter of 1962, he climbed an electricity pole adjacent to the wall and started moving hand-over-hand across a disused power cable.
Quest Room Berlin - Das Leichenhaus - Das schaurig schöne Abenteuer
Hi zusammen!
Wieder einmal waren mein Schatz und ich unterwegs in Berlin und haben es uns nicht nehmen lassen, das Live-Escape-Game namens Leichenhaus zu spielen.
Wir können nur betonen, dass wir restlos begeistert sind! Angefangen von einem herzlichen Empfang, über ein mehr als gelungenes Spiel (welches wir dieses Mal geschafft haben) und eine tolle Unterhaltung mit den Betreibern im Nachhinein, war es rund um ein Erfolg.
Für alle die nicht wissen, was Live-Escape-Games sind:
Man wird in einen Raum mit einem bestimmten Thema eingesperrt. Nun hat man 60 Minuten Zeit über Hinweise und Rätsel einen Code herauszufinden, welcher einem die Tür in die Freiheit öffnet.
Es ist wirklich ein großer Spaß und fördert Kommunikation und Teamfähigkeit!
Wir können wirklich allen nur empfehlen es uns gleich zu tun und dem Quest Room Berlin einen Besuch abstatten.
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Hunting Hitler: An Escape Route Under Berlin (S1, E2) | History
Lenny DePaul describes the significance of searching for Hitler's escape route in Berlin in this web exclusive from Secret Nazi Lair. #HuntingHitler
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Hunting Hitler
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Secret Nazi Lair
In Hunting Hitler, an FBI cold case that has laid dormant for 70 years leads a group of world-renown investigators on the ultimate manhunt to finally answer the question: Did Adolf Hitler survive World War II?
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Cold War escape tunnel opens under Berlin Wall
(7 Nov 2019) FOR CLEAN VERSION SEE STORY NUMBER: 4238658
An escape tunnel underneath the Berlin Wall has been opened to the public for the first time amid celebrations of the 30-year anniversary of the opening of East Germany's border.
The tunnel at Bernauer Strasse, near the main Wall memorial, was opened Thursday Berlin Mayor Michael Mueller.
The tunnel was built by a group of people who had escaped earlier to West Berlin.
They wanted to help friends and family to flee to the West but, days before it was finished, East German officials discovered the tunnel and partially destroyed it.
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Germany: GDR-era escape tunnel unearthed in Berlin’s Mauerpark
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The first excavation of an escape tunnel between East and West Berlin discovered last week started Monday morning at Berlin famous Mauerpark, after being hidden for more than 50 years.
The tunnel is five-meters (16 feet) under the ground and 80-meters (262 feet) long. It stretches from Eberswalder Strasse, which was located at the Eastern Berlin, to Oderberger Strasse in the West.
It was built in 1963 by a group of activist opposing the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED). However, the tunnel construction came to a halt before it was completed.
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Insane TRAIN SURFING in BERLIN in 4K - Crazy Parkour Mission
Some random guys decided to go train surfing and smokebombed some trains in Berlin and get some droneshots in 4k of it! ↓ Open the description for my social media, the music and my gear! ↓
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