Monday, August 12, 2024

The man who built the Berlin Wall


by Alan Stewart

 
The Rise and fall of Erich Honecker; The Man who Built the Berlin Wall
: Nathan Morley, Pen & Sword, Barnsley 2024, 272pp, rrp £25

Erich Honecker was born in Saarland in 1912. In 1922, when he was ten, he joined the Communist youth organisation, the Young Spartacus League. Then from 1929 onwards he was active in the German Communist Party, the KPD.  He was arrested by the Gestapo in December 1935 and was subsequently jailed by the Nazis.
After World War Two, in 1946, he co-founded what would become the youth movement of the new Socialist Unity Party (SED), the Free German Youth. The SED, a mass party based on the merger of the KPD and the Social Democrats (SDP) in what had been the Soviet Zone of occupied Germany, soon became the leading party in the new German Democratic Republic that was established in 1949.
Honecker played a leading role in the new people’s republic and as Security Secretary of the SED Central Committee he was the prime organiser of the building of the so-called Berlin Wall in 1961 to isolate the NATO enclave of West Berlin that lay in the heart of the German Democratic Republic.
In 1970 he initiated a power struggle, with the apparent support of Leonid Brezhnev, that led to him replacing Walter Ulbricht as General Secretary of the SED in 1971.
Honecker, like Ulbricht, was instrumental in the processes of detente which led to the GDR and West Germany being accepted into the UN in 1973 and the Helsinki Accords in 1979.  There were even attempts to normalise relations with West Germany when the social-democratic Chancellor, Willi Brandt, was at the helm in the early 1970s.
In the GDR itself there was state subsidised housing. There was also a comprehensive welfare state with free health care and full employment. There were great achievements in the sporting and cultural fields. Plus between 1970 and 1987 the net income of the working population rose by 97 per cent. All of this is well documented by Nathan Morley in his book.
Honecker was totally undermined by the new Soviet leader Gorbachev and in October 1989 the SED Politburo forced him to resign.
However Morley notes that Honecker and his wife had amassed no personal wealth or property.  He would die in relative poverty in Chile in 1994. But his great achievements and his personal integrity should be never be forgotten.

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