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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Prime Minister marks 20th anniversary of fall of Berlin Wall

On Monday November 9, 2009 Prime Minister Stephen Harper attended a commemoration ceremony marking the 20th Anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.

(Photo: Prime Minister Stephen Harper and German Ambassador Dr. Georg Witschel place a wreath in front of a section of the Berlin Wall at the Government Conference Centre to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. Photo by Jason Ransom.)

The ceremony took place at the Government Conference Centre in Ottawa, where a piece of the Berlin Wall has been on public display since 1991. At the ceremony the Prime Minister announced that it will be moved to the Canadian War Museum where it will be available for public viewing.

For almost thirty years, the Berlin Wall separated East Germany from West Germany, a tangible symbol of the Iron Curtain between Western Europe and the Eastern Bloc. On November 9, 1989, the government of the former German Democratic Republic announced that travel restrictions had been lifted and that citizens could visit West Germany. In the following weeks and months, citizens began tearing down the concrete division and poured across the border, escaping Communism and finding freedom.



For Canada and its citizens (particularly those familiar with the atrocities committed in the name of communism), the fall of the Berlin Wall holds a special significance. It marked the culmination of forty years of foreign policy objectives pursued in partnership with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) allies. It also reminds us that Canada has welcomed tens of thousands of newcomers fleeing communist regimes.

In 1991, Germany gave Canada an original piece of the Berlin Wall measuring approximately one metre wide and more than three metres high.

“I am pleased to announce that this section of the Berlin Wall will be relocated to the Canadian War Museum as an important relic of the Cold War,” said the Prime Minister. “There, it will honour the men and women of the Canadian Forces who served during that confrontation. It will also complement the memorial to the Victims of Totalitarian Communism, planned for the capital region by Tribute to Liberty.”

Two organizations – Tribute to Liberty and its partner the Open Book group – are proposing to erect a commemorative monument to honour the approximately 100 million lives lost under Communist regimes. According to the organizers, the design and construction of the monument is expected to begin in the fall of 2010 and an unveiling ceremony is scheduled for November 2011.

The monument would recognize the experience of the many Canadians who emigrated to escape these repressive regimes and pay tribute to Canadian ideals of liberty, freedom, democracy and human rights. The monument is to be entitled Memorial to the Victims of Totalitarian Communism – Canada, a Land of Refuge.

Incidentally, the "totalitarian" in the name of the memorial is a result of pressure from thin-skinned communists who are (still!) unwilling to acknowledge the atrocities committed in the name of their ideology. They couldn't exactly stop this memorial from being built... these days no one interested in avoiding ridicule dares deny the irrefuatable evidence of atrocities committed by soviet and other communists.

So they demanded that the word "communism" be removed ... ostensibly to make it "inclusive" of all oppressive regimes. (Nothing like detraction to obfuscate irrefutable facts, eh?)

And of course, as fond of political correctness as many of my fellow Canadians are, this worked. They succeeded at getting a qualifier in front of the name... "totalitarian."

Which is fine. The redundant qualifier will just serve as reinforcement of the reality of what communism is. After a close-up look at communism's legacy, it's not likely any intelligent person would regard communism as anything but totalitarian. So those communists with nefarious agendas (and their many useful idiots) will be hoist with their own petard. Good for them.

Congratulations and godspeed to the organizers of this monument. It is long overdue.

To support this noble effort, go here.

4 comments:

Ukemonde said...

Great compilation of the many great article that were written about the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Here s one more piece I enjoyed reading by Eric Margolis in the Ottawa Sun - 'Russian King Lear' did the world a huge favour
http://www.ottawasun.com/comment/columnists/eric_margolis/2009/11/08/11673861-sun.html
I welcome you to comment to some disguntled person on my blog in regards to - And the wall came tumbling down
http://ukemonde.blogspot.com/2009/11/and-wall-came-tumbling-down.html

BC real estate said...

Very interesting article. I'm happy that also Canada so officially commemorate so important day in modern history. I can't believe that it's already 20 years. I remember the 9th November 20 years ago like it was yesterday. The atmosphere spreading from Berlin through our TVs was amazing, full of hope and joy. I was just little bit afraid that army could have interfered like it was in Czechoslovakia in 1968. Fortunately, nothing like that happened and East Germany could enjoy the freedom.

Best regards,
Jay

Pawlina said...

Thanks for sharing that link, Roman. Great article. I was especially struck by this sentence:

The sinister Communist era, including Stalin's monstrous crimes, are being sugar-coated with nostalgia.

Kind of says it all.

Pawlina said...

Thanks, Jay, for your comment and for sharing an insider's perspective. I can only inagine what an exciting and exhilarating time it must have been for you!

I agree, it's hard to believe 20 years have passed snce the Wall fell. I too am proud that my country is helping to preserve the freedoms so hard won in other parts of the world.

Thanks agaim for stopping by. :-)

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