PDA

View Full Version : Berlin marks 50 years of JFK's famous speech



Jake
06-26-2013, 09:35 PM
0GKd50lrROc



BERLIN (AP) — Berlin on Wednesday celebrated the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy's famed "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech — a pledge of support to the divided city on the Cold War's front line that still resonates in a much-changed world.

Kennedy made his speech during a several-hour trip to West Berlin on June 26, 1963, nearly two years after communist East Germany cut the city in half by building the Berlin Wall and amid concern that America might abandon the Cold War outpost.

The "freedom bell" at the former West Berlin city hall, where Kennedy spoke to a crowd of some 300,000, tolled to mark Wednesday's anniversary ahead of a ceremony that featured students from Berlin's John F. Kennedy School reading excerpts from the speech in German and English.

Egon Bahr, 91, then an aide to West Berlin mayor Willy Brandt and later one of West Germany's most prominent politicians, recalled the "explosive applause" that greeted Kennedy's "I am a Berliner" declaration.

"It matched the feelings, the hopes and the expectations of Berliners," Bahr said. "They knew instinctively, 'we can feel safe after this sentence.'"

Kennedy's declaration has become a symbol of strong German-U.S. ties, and President Barack Obama evoked it when he spoke last week at the city's Brandenburg Gate, which in 1963 stood on the communist side of the wall.

Even today, "U.S. presidents ... can feel at home in this city," Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit said. Still, he alluded to the tensions that preceded Kennedy's euphoric reception.

Many Berliners wondered why the Americans hadn't prevented the building of the wall and used their power to reverse it, he said. "People in the divided city were desperate and angry. They feared that the Western powers would back down and give up West Berlin."

http://news.yahoo.com/berlin-marks-50-years-jfks-famous-speech-115339424.html