From the DW:
“Stasi HQ storming: German
president praises 'democratic act'”
German President Frank-Walter
Steinmeier on Wednesday marked the 30th anniversary of the storming of the
Stasi headquarters. On January 15, 1990 large crowds forced their way into the
offices of East Germany's secret police to stop thousands of files being
shredded. Opening the Stasi archives had given reunified Germany a "deep
insight into the mechanisms, into the efficacy of a dictatorship," said
Steinmeier during a commemoration at the former Stasi hub in Berlin. Around 7.3
million applications have been made by individuals, entities and researchers
since late 1990 to view Stasi documents. Lessons about the past could only be
gleaned when the public knew what had happened and why, added Steinmeier. The
president described the storming as a "profoundly democratic act" —
in the wake of dissident rallies and the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. The
archive was admired worldwide as a unique institution for its invaluable work,
Germany's president added. The storming was "perhaps more
important" than the rallies, according to retired eastern German Catholic
bishop Joachim Reinelt. The January moment represented the "ultimate disempowerment
of the scaremonger" police state regime, Reinelt said. The East German
Volkskammer parliament dissolved with German reunification in October 1990.
Important signal 'worldwide' Roland Jahn, a former dissident,
has been in charge of the team that curates the former Stasi records in Berlin
and 12 outlying regional offices since 2011. He says the 1990 storming became
an important signal "worldwide." "For the first time in the
world, citizens occupied the offices of a secret police force to safeguard its
files and to make them accessible later for society," Jahn told the
Northwest-Zeitung newspaper. "Great euphoria prevailed, but also a certain
trepidation, a queasy feeling, to penetrate these premises," said Jahn.
Overheated shredders From the third quarter of 1989,
Stasi officers began putting files through shredders, which became overheated,
and had switched to manual shredding as the site was overrun in January 1990. Some
111 kilometers (69 miles) of shelved files were left intact, alongside 16,000
bags of paper shreds. Of these, only 23 bags have been reassembled using
painstaking manual labor and computerized scanning technology to depict the
original documents. Two years ago, the electronic scanning was halted in the
hope that future technical advancements would speed up the process.
^ It’s important to remember that
ordinary East Germans did this to save historical information. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/stasi-hq-storming-german-president-praises-democratic-act/a-52009115
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