From the DW:
“Former inmates recall life in
Erich Honecker's GDR prisons”
The Nazis jailed partisans such
as Erich Honecker in the Brandenburg-Görden prison. Several decades later, when
Honecker had become the East German leader, he in turn locked up political
adversaries in this very jail. Thirty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall,
there remain Germans who tout the legacy of the German Democratic Republic. The
oft-heard claim that "not everything was bad about the GDR" and that
the Soviet-allied state had great day care facilities, as some still assert,
strikes 68-year-old Manfred Wilhelm as utterly absurd. He was a political
prisoner. In 1981, Wilhelm was sentenced to eight and a half years behind bars
for the crime of inciting hatred against the state — just for telling a few
political jokes to friends and in bars. He was locked up in Brandenburg-Görden
prison, where Erich Honecker, the leader of the GDR, was once jailed by the Nazis.
When Wilhelm's sense of humor offended the Stasi, he was sentenced to eight
years Honecker was the prison's most infamous inmate. The young communist was
jailed there between 1937 and 1945 by the Nazis, and then freed by the Red
Army. By 1971, he had become the most powerful man in East Germany. The
dictator would do to his political enemies what the Nazis had once done to him:
throw them in jail. That became a lucrative business for the chronically skint
communist state; the GDR jailed its citizens, and West Germany paid to have
them freed — as it would for Wilhelm in 1985.
Drews, a Catholic priest, preached to the
prisoners once a month
Many inmates held at
Brandenburg-Görden prison and elsewhere in the GDR suffered tremendously. At
least 500 prisoners took their lives. Starting in 1988, Catholic priest
Johannes Drews, who was allowed to hold a monthly sermon at Brandenburg-Görden
prison, experienced firsthand what inmates were going through. Though he was
not officially allowed to talk to them, he did anyway. Drews says he was
"inwardly very motivated" to do this because the Soviet army had incarcerated
his grandfather in the former Sachsenhausen Nazi concentration camp between
1945 and 1948. It is estimated that at least 170,000 people were incarcerated
during the GDR's 40-year existence. Brandenburg-Görden prison, located along
the Havel River just west of Berlin, was one of East Germany's biggest jails,
and held up to 3,500 inmates. Historian Tobias Wunschik, who researched its
history and mistreatment of inmates, has now published a detailed, 1,000-page
study on the prison. Wilhelm's stories and those of other former prisoners
greatly helped Wunschik compile his study. Most significantly, though, the
historian relied on files kept by East German secret police — the Stasi — which
was instrumental in pitting political prisoners against each other and spying
on them. Wunschik estimates that up to 12 percent of prisoners were in fact
undercover Stasi agents. Political prisoners were treated worse than ordinary
inmates "even though they did not behave inappropriately."Convicted murderers would
physically abuse Wilhelm as inmates to lined up in corridors to be counted.
Overall, Wilhelm remembers, there was a lot of distrust among the inmates. He
says it was very difficult to talk to other inmates about how he felt. At some
stage, he decided to think positively as a way of dealing with the monotony,
hostility and pervasive sense of suspicion. He says he would think about his
previous experiences and his dreams for the future. The double isolation — from
both their East German society and from the world outside it — was extremely
difficult to cope with. To get a sense of what was going on in the outside
world, inmates even built miniature radios with which they secretly tuned into
West German radio programs.
Compassionate Catholic priest
Drews had a feeling that some of
the repressive methods used by the GDR bore similarities to what the Soviets
and Nazis did to their prisoners. To combat this, Drews always made an effort
to greet inmates with a handshake and to tell them about the goings-on in the
country. After all, by autumn 1989, hundreds of thousands were taking to the
streets, demanding political and societal reforms. After the Berlin Wall had
fallen on November 9, 1989, the prisoners sensed that they, too, would finally
be freed. Four weeks after this historic event, they insisted on a press
conference. Drews says he will never
forget this day. Inmates led him into their cells, in which ten prisoners or
more had often been crammed. They showed him the bunk beds, the handful of
chairs, and toilets without walls that robbed them of a bare minimum of
privacy. "We tend to forget so fast," Drews said. He added that
Germans must continue to "reflect on law and justice" and above all
be compassionate to others. Alas, there was very little of this in East German
jails. Wilhelm concurs. GDR leaders, he said, "applied what they
themselves once endured under the Nazis to East Germany" — demonstrating
how the tormented can become the tormentors.
^ The Communists (especially the East Germans)
often used what the Nazis did to their political prisoners - like the
Communists – to show how the Communist Party was different and better. In
reality, the Communists did the same horrible things to their political prisoners
as the Nazis did. Erich Honecker knew first-hand what the Nazis did to their
political prisoners and should have spent the rest of his life preventing other
people from having to endure what he went through. Instead he simply took what
the Nazis did to him and used it to further his own political career as a
Communist Dictator. The Government of reunited Germany has done little to
nothing to bring the Communist authorities to justice (the same way the West
German Government did little against the Nazi authorities for decades.) ^
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