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Escape to Freedom: A story of one teenager’s attempt to get across the Wall

By Kristin Lewis From the April 2019 SCOPE Issue

Every muscle in Hartmut Richter’s body ached. He’d been in the cold water for four agonizing hours. His body temperature had plummeted dangerously low. Now, to his horror, he found himself trapped in the water by a wall of razor-sharp barbed wire. Precious seconds ticked by. The area was crawling with guards carrying machine guns. Some had snarling dogs at their sides. If they caught Hartmut, he could be thrown in prison—or worse. These men were trained to shoot on sight. Hartmut grabbed the wire with his bare hands. He began pulling it apart, hoping he could make a hole large enough to squeeze through.

Hartmut Richter was not a criminal escaping from jail. He was not a bank robber on the run. He was simply an 18-year-old kid who wanted nothing more than to be free—to listen to the music he wanted to listen to, to say what he wanted to say and think what he wanted to think.

And right now, Hartmut was risking everything to escape from his country and start a new life.

A Bleak Time Hartmut was born in in 1948. He lived near the capital city of Berlin with his parents and younger sister. This was a bleak time for his country. Only three years earlier, Germany had been defeated in World War II.

During the war, Germany had invaded nearly every other country in Europe. It had carried out the Holocaust, systematically murdering 6 million Jewish people. Germany was deeply shamed by the horrors the country had unleashed on the world.The war had left much of Germany in tatters. Cities had been bombed into ruins. Buildings and streets were pocked with holes from bullets and grenades. Many people were struggling to feed and house themselves. It was during these brutal postwar years that Germany became caught up in a struggle between the two strongest countries in the world: the United States and the (which included modern-day Russia).

This struggle would divide Hartmut’s country—and the world—for decades.

The The struggle between the U.S. and the Soviet Union became known as the Cold War. This Cold War was not fought with bombs and armies. It was fought with fear and threats.

During this period of tension, both nations vied for power and control across the world. This struggle would go on for more than 40 years. The U.S. and the Soviet Union sent spies to each other’s countries to steal secrets. They competed to make the deadliest weapons, filling up warehouses with bombs more powerful than anything the world had ever seen. They told stories that vilified each other. Around the world, fear simmered that these hostilities would erupt into all-out war.

No Freedom Hartmut lived in a part of Germany that the Soviets took over after World War II. In 1949, when Hartmut was 1 year old, this area became a new country: . The official name was the German Democratic Republic. The rest of Germany became the Federal Republic of Germany, also known as . The capital city of Berlin was divided between East and West Germany. Germany had been split in two.

Life in East and West Germany could not have been more different. As West Germany recovered from the war, the people who lived there began to thrive. They had lives like Americans. You could walk into a bookstore and choose from all sorts of books. There were newspapers that expressed many viewpoints. There were planes to take you anywhere you wanted to go. Teenagers were watching the latest Hollywood movies and listening to the Beatles. But in East Germany, many felt they were living in a prison. You could only read books and see movies approved by the government. Listening to the Beatles—or any rock and roll music— was forbidden. You couldn’t simply get in the car and go where you wanted; you needed permission to travel. And getting news of the outside world was extremely difficult. Journalists were allowed to write only what the government told them to write.

If you were caught breaking a rule, the penalties could be harsh. The — East Germany’s ruthless secret police force—were always watching. They listened to phone calls and read personal mail. And they were notorious for their brutality.

This is the country Hartmut was growing up in. And this is the country he was determined to leave.

The Of course, Hartmut wasn’t the only one who wanted to get out. From 1949 to 1961, millions fled, and Berlin was one of the main places for escape. By 1960, 1,000 people were crossing from East Berlin into every day.

East German leaders were alarmed by the flood of people leaving the country. They became determined to put a stop to it. And so on August 13, 1961, at 1:00 in the morning, they began building a giant wall to physically separate East Berlin from West Berlin.

How strange it must have been for Hartmut, who was 13 at the time and visiting relatives in Berlin, to wake up that morning and see the capital city literally cut in two. Streets connecting the two sides of the city were blocked off. So too were train lines and sewers. Phone lines were cut. Families and friends were suddenly separated. If you happened to live on one side of the wall and work in the other? Too bad. You had to get a new job.

Over the years, many people tried to get over the Berlin Wall. Some made a run for it. Others dug tunnels deep underground. Many were caught and thrown in prison—or killed. Historians estimate that as many as 5,000 people managed to escape. At least 200 died trying.

Hartmut came up with his own escape plan: He would swim.

A Dangerous Swim The Canal flowed from outside East Berlin into West Berlin. Hartmut had heard about a section of the canal that was not well guarded—a place he could climb in undetected. He decided that this canal would be his route to freedom.

On a warm August night in 1966, Hartmut put on his darkest clothes. He carefully wrapped in plastic his ID and some money—the only belongings he would take with him. He did not tell his parents or sister that he was leaving. He knew that would only put them in danger with the Stasi. He could not even say goodbye. Then, under the cover of darkness, Hartmut made his way through the streets. Just past midnight, he quietly slipped into the canal and began to swim. He figured it would take him 20 minutes—not easy in the cold water but not impossible for someone young and strong. He was wrong.

Many guards and their dogs were out that night. Each time Hartmut saw someone crossing a bridge over the canal or peering down into the water, he had to stop and hide, crouching among the reeds. Minutes turned to hours. He became dangerously cold in the chilly water. He pushed on. Finally, at about 4 a.m., Hartmut saw a street sign that told him he was nearing West Berlin. Freedom was mere feet away.

There was just one problem. Stretching across the canal was an iron gate. On top of it was a tangle of barbed wire. To make matters worse, every 60 seconds, a bright searchlight from a nearby patrol swept over the canal. Was this the end? Had he come all this way only to fail now? Hartmut waited in the shadows for the searchlight to pass, then sprang into action, carefully separating the sharp wire with his bare hands. At last, he made a large enough opening. He slipped through and climbed out of the canal. Moments later, he stepped onto dry land in West Berlin. He had made it. And then he collapsed, unconscious.

A New Life What happened next is a blur in Hartmut’s memory. But he remembers being taken to a hospital, where he spent nearly three days recovering from hypothermia and pneumonia.

He was free. And yet Hartmut’s incredible swim to freedom was not the end of his story. In many ways, it was only the beginning. After Hartmut recovered, he started a new life. He went to work on a ship, traveling the world. Still, he thought often about his family and friends, of everyone he had left behind.

In 1972, an important agreement eased travel restrictions between East and West Germany. This made it possible for Hartmut to travel back and forth between West and East Berlin. And so he decided to go back—this time with a new mission: to help others escape. He began sneaking people across the border in the trunk of his car. He brought 33 people to freedom before the Stasi caught him and sent him to prison. By the time he got out five years later, he was 29 years old.

The Wall Falls By the 1980s, the Cold War was starting to thaw. Tensions between the U.S. and the Soviet Union were softening. In Germany, people had grown weary of living in a divided country. They began pressuring the government to change. And then, on November 9, 1989, came a shocking announcement: The border between East and West Berlin would be opened. All would be allowed to cross freely. Berliners on both sides rushed to the wall. When the border opened, tens of thousands of East Berliners streamed into West Berlin. An enormous celebration erupted. Men, women, and children began tearing off bits and pieces of the wall, hacking away at it with hammers and chisels. Eventually, giant cranes and bulldozers were brought in to topple what had been one of the most powerful symbols of the Cold War.

A year after the Berlin Wall fell, Germany was officially reunified. Then in 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed.

As for Hartmut? It’s been more than 50 years since his courageous swim to freedom. Today he works to expose the crimes of the East German regime. He talks about his experiences often. And he counsels victims of the Stasi. What matters to Hartmut now is that what happened is never forgotten. “When people are informed, they learn the lessons of what history teaches us,” he says.

Name ______HR______

Directions: Follow the prompts below to explore the claims and evidence in “Escape to Freedom.”

1.Read the claim of the section “No Freedom” below. Then circle the THREE pieces of evidence that best support the claim.

CLAIM: Life in East Germany was challenging.

Evidence (circle three):

“Hartmut lived in a part of Germany that the Soviets took over after World War II.” (p. 6) “ You couldn’t simply get in the car and go where you wanted; you needed permission to travel.” (p. 7) “And getting news of the outside world was extremely difficult.” (p. 7) “ Germany had been split in two.” (p. 6) “If you were caught breaking a rule, the penalties could be harsh.” (p. 7)

2. Read the evidence from the section “A Dangerous Swim” listed below. Write a claim that these pieces of evidence support. CLAIM: Hartmuts’ escape was ______

Evidence 1: “Each time Hartmut saw someone crossing a bridge over the canal or peering down into the water, he had to stop and hide, crouching among the reeds.” (p. 8) Evidence 2: “Hartmut waited in the shadows for the searchlight to pass, then sprang into action, carefully separating the sharp wire with his bare hands.” (pp. 8-9) Evidence 3: “Minutes turned to hours. He became dangerously cold in the chilly water.” (p. 8)

The CLAIM of the whole article is written below. One piece of evidence from the article that supports this claim is given. Write two more pieces of evidence in the spaces provided.

CLAIM: Hartmut Richter is a brave and determined person. Evidence 1: He decided to go back with a new mission: to help others escape.

Evidence 2: ______

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Evidence 3: ______

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Study this photo:

What can you infer about what life was like in Germany after World War II?

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Study this photo:

What can you infer from this photo about how people in Germany felt about the Berlin Wall?

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