BRECHE DIE GRENZEN
BRECHE DIE GRENZEN
35 Years Later: The Walls Still Stand
The crisp November air bit at my skin as I stood before the Berlin Wall Memorial, clutching a towering sticker in my hands. Thirty-five years had passed since the Wall fell—since I watched, as a child, the joy and defiance etched in the faces of those who smashed it to pieces.
Now, on this anniversary, I returned not to celebrate, but to confront. The sticker—a haunting design—showed children’s faces behind barbed wire, crowned by red letters: BRECHE DIE GRENZEN—"BREAK THE BORDERS." A plea against Europe’s new walls—not of concrete, but of policies, bureaucracy, and neglect—that imprison refugees in limbo.
Germany, once triumphant over its Wall, now tolerates others. The message was clear: 35 years later, the fight to tear down walls must continue.