A LOUISIANA KID AND THE BERLIN WALL!
Thursday, June 22nd, 2017
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
A LOUISIANA KID
AND THE BERLIN WALL!
Thirty-one years ago this week, President
Ronald Reagan traveled to West Berlin, and at the Brandenburg Gate admonished:
“Mr.Gorbachev take down that wall.” The Berlin Wall had been
erected by the puppet soviet state of East Germany. Unless you are over
sixty five or are a history buff, you may not understand the tensions that
existed then had many observers feeling that we could be on the brink of war
with the Soviet Union.
The wall was initially a 25-mile long barbed
wire fence. In the months that followed, the “wire wall” became concrete
with guards aloft who shot anyone trying to climb the wall, and make their way
into West Berlin. For the next 26 years, German citizens were not
allowed to cross the wall. Americans could enter into East Berlin at
“Checkpoint Charlie,” only if they could establish some business purpose for
crossing the border.
At the time, I was a politically naïve
graduate student at Cambridge University in England. I had the privilege
of being a member of the U.S. Track Team competing in track meets throughout
Europe. A meet promoter approached me to compete at a major competition
in East Berlin. Since I had never been to East Germany, I figured if the
promoter was willing to cover the expenses of a struggling student runner, why
not go for it.
I would have to cross the Berlin Wall and
compete at the Olympic stadium in East Berlin. America did not recognize
East Germany as a legitimate country at the time. It was considered a Russian
puppet state, and the U.S. maintained no diplomatic relations with the East
Germans. Once I crossed to the other side of the wall, I would be on my own.
On the afternoon of the meet, I entered East
Berlin at Checkpoint Charlie. It was an evening event, and I was scheduled to
compete in the high hurdles against an East German who was world ranked. The
East Germans had built up the competition as a grudge match between our two
countries, and had made it a point of honor for their national pride.
The 100-meter dash was about to begin when my
agent brought over an American who wanted to talk to me. He said he was with
the U.S. Embassy in West Germany, and told me in the strongest of terms that it
would be completely unacceptable for me to run the high-hurdles race that was
soon to start. As a member of the American team, he argued, I was a
representative of my government. Since America did not recognize East Germany,
I would be giving tacit acknowledgment to a country that the United States
regarded as illegitimate. He implied that by competing I could start an
international incident, and if I had any patriotism, I would get my gear and
head back across the border to West Berlin immediately.
What a dilemma for a twenty-one-year-old who
was simply enjoying the opportunity to travel, and who had no real
understanding of the international consequences supposedly at stake. I wanted
to compete, but I certainly wasn’t going to go against the wishes of my
country.
As the announcement was being made that I
would not race, I headed for the locker rooms, located at the other end of the
stadium, diagonally across the infield. Thousands of people in the stadium
stood up and whistled loudly, which was their way of booing. I learned later that
the announcer had told the crowd the American was afraid to compete against the
East German. I was angry and disappointed, but I had enough common sense to
change my clothes and get back across the border.
Many years later I would look back on this controversy
as my first political act. I guess the possibility of starting an international
incident qualifies as a baptism in politics.
Thirty-four years have gone by since the
tearing down of the Berlin Wall, and we no longer fear one super power.
Instead, there are brush fires worldwide that have overwhelmed America’s
resources. Let’s hope in the future, we will continue to argue about
tearing down walls and not about destroying countries.
Peace
and Justice
Jim
Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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