Read the full story here Web Link posted Thursday, July 2, 2015, 9:37 AM
Town Square
Secret history of MV's Berlin Wall slab
Original post made on Jul 2, 2015
Read the full story here Web Link posted Thursday, July 2, 2015, 9:37 AM
Comments (14)
a resident of another community
on Jul 2, 2015 at 2:16 pm
What a cool story!
a resident of Cuesta Park
on Jul 2, 2015 at 2:51 pm
I'm delighted to see renewed interest in these pieces of the Berlin Wall. My husband served in the Army during the Cold War. The borders were very real and very serious. Sadly, members of the Mountain View City Council referred to these pieces as "ugly pieces of concrete" and seemed to feel burdened by the donation. Take your kids to see the Berlin Wall and talk about the blessings of freedom.
a resident of Martens-Carmelita
on Jul 2, 2015 at 3:18 pm
It's good to know the background on "our" wall. I've sat in front of library and watched kids circle the slab and stare at it. On occasion I've asked them if they knew what it was or why it was. No! is the predominant answer. So I've told them what it was and why it was and they often don't believe me. So I tell them to read the info posted with the wall. Usually they don't.
It's an odd thing to encounter kids whose curiosity stops with little info. What happening in our schools? is my thought.
a resident of Blossom Valley
on Jul 2, 2015 at 4:18 pm
I too think this is a wonderful story. It would be very interesting to somehow display the photograph along with the story at the site of the wall. I really feel that the information at the Berlin Wall exhibit is not adequate and could be made to be more visitor friendly.
a resident of Monta Loma
on Jul 2, 2015 at 4:26 pm
Socialism comes down from one side of the world after many years of failure from it. Now thanks to our pres, he wants to bring it here.
a resident of Waverly Park
on Jul 2, 2015 at 6:02 pm
You really have no idea what you're talking about, do you?
Get. Lost.
a resident of North Whisman
on Jul 2, 2015 at 8:35 pm
What a great example of how connected we all are. Parents should explain the history, not schools alone. I like the idea of posting the photo and story nearby or on the panel.
a resident of Rex Manor
on Jul 3, 2015 at 1:31 am
What a neat piece of history! When I saw the wall segments in their old location on the other side of the freeway, my first thought was to wonder who the words "we love you" were directed at. Now we know!
a resident of North Bayshore
on Jul 4, 2015 at 11:46 am
Why not a follow up story of how the pieces of the wall came to Mountain View in the first place?
a resident of Old Mountain View
on Jul 4, 2015 at 1:30 pm
@Los Altos
> It would be very interesting to somehow display the photograph along with the story at the site of the wall.
I would urge caution before posting that picture at the public library where our children are bound to see it: there is a large penis spraypainted in the background (just behind the people's heads).
Perhaps the penis could be photoshopped into something more child friendly, like a bunny rabbit?
Then I would be okay with posting the history.
a resident of Old Mountain View
on Jul 4, 2015 at 8:38 pm
Max Hauser is a registered user.
I remember staring across the defoliated zone between two fences separating West and East Germany in the open countryside 30 years ago. (To the east, armed GrenzePolizei -- "Grepos" -- in guard towers peered back at us through binoculars.) The barren dirt between the two fences was a kill zone, with land mines and automated guns confronting anyone who dared leave, without permission, the alleged workers' paradise of the eastern "German Democratic Republic." Official GDR story was that this zone defended against invasions from the West -- an Orwellian lie, laid bare when hard evidence revealed that the weapons between the fences pointed east, not west.
The Berlin-Wall slabs (from a version of the same border running through Berlin) are deeply symbolic. If, as reported above, children today don't want to know the realities behind them, it's only another reminder that each new generation has new history to learn, to understand the world they find themselves in -- and is often blissfully clueless of that responsibility. Yet the responsibility is theirs, as is responsibility for any consequences of their ignorance of the history itself.
I'm embarassed, though, by the Mountain View sign glibly crediting the wall's demise to "American resolve," because I remember the circumstances.
In 1989, the Cold-War-era "Warsaw Pact" governments in Central and Eastern Europe had been liberalizing; 50th-anniversary publicity was also raking up European memory of events leading into World War II: Hitler's and Stalin's power plays against many small states. In May, the "Iron Curtain" began to tear when Hungary boldly opened its border with Austria to free travel. In one Warsaw-Pact nation after another, it seemed the people had had enough of heavy-handed constraints on their free movement to the West. In November, the East-German gov't finally conceded, East Germans thronged across open borders, and Berliners gleefully vandalized the wall that had divided their city for almost 30 years.
The main actors in all that were local people. To attribute it just to "American resolve" -- even though that contains a grain of truth -- is a reminder of the parochial self-crediting that is another, less noble, behavior we Americans are internationally famous for.
Mountain View Voice Editor
on Jul 5, 2015 at 9:33 pm
Andrea Gemmet is a registered user.
If you'd like to read more about the history of Mountain View's Berlin Wall sections:
Berlin Wall sections find permanent home by library: Web Link
City's hidden tribute to fall of communism: Web Link
a resident of Bailey Park
on Jul 6, 2015 at 9:19 am
I absolutely LOVED the day I was cruising my bike through the business park area around Garcia ave. One day I saw a cut through path and followed it
until I came up on these slabs in their original home. I couldn't believe I'd never known they were there or even anywhere in MV.
I loved to bring my friends there and surprise them. It's great that it has a more worthy place to be displayed now, but it sure was fun to on a ride with friends and be able to say "Hey, ya wanna see something cool I bet you never knew was here?"
a resident of Sylvan Park
on Jan 2, 2016 at 4:03 pm
Was pleasantly surprised to see the wall earlier today. However, I have to disagree with the manner in which the struggles of the German people have been usurped by America. The plaques at the site are obsessed with associating the history with "American Resolve". I find this self-indulgent at best, and a misreading of history at worst.
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