Twenty-five years since the reunification of Germany
On October 3, 1990 the German Democratic Republic (East Germany, known as the GDR), a state with 17 million inhabitants, was disbanded 41 years after its founding and incorporated into the Federal Republic of Germany.
In both East and West Germany, only a few of those affected were aware of the consequences of this step. There was no public debate and no referendum. Instead, there was a propaganda campaign by every political party and the media, which proclaimed that the liquidation of the GDR, the privatization of nationalized property and the introduction of capitalism were synonymous with freedom, democracy, prosperity and peace. Chancellor Helmut Kohl (CDU) spoke at mass rallies in the GDR and promised to transform the region into flourishing landscapes where it pays to live and work.
The GDR state party, the Stalinist Socialist Unity Party (SED), supported this campaign as well. In my opinion, the path to unity was unavoidable and had to be followed with determination, wrote the last SED prime minister, Hans Modrow, in his memoirs.
Gregor Gysi, who took over the chairmanship of the SED in late 1989 and is still playing a leading role in the Left Party, said this week in an interview that he had undertaken the task of leading the eastern elitesincluding middle ranking functionariesinto the united Germany.
Read more: https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2015/10/05/pers-o05.html
[font color=330099]The article continues with a description of the economic devastation that remains in the former East Germany.[/font]