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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Ida Siekmann
| name = Ida Siekmann
| image = [[File:Window idasiekmann.jpg|thumb]]
| image = [[File:Window idasiekmann.jpg|thumb|Ida Siekmann, "Wall of Remembrance"]]]]
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1902|08|23|df=yes}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1902|08|23|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Górki, Kwidzyn County|Gorken]]
| birth_place = [[Górki, Kwidzyn County|Gorken]]

Revision as of 18:20, 29 June 2014

Ida Siekmann
Ida Siekmann, "Wall of Remembrance"
]]
Born(1902-08-23)23 August 1902
Died22 August 1961(1961-08-22) (aged 58)
Lazarus Hospital, Berlin
Cause of deathLeapt from fourth floor apartment window on Bernauer Straße to reach West Berlin
Body discoveredBernauer Strasse 48
52°24′42″N 13°24′39″E / 52.4118°N 13.4107°E / 52.4118; 13.4107 (Site of Ida Siekmann fatality)
Resting placeUrnenfriedhof Seestraße Berlin-Wedding
52°33′08″N 13°21′16″E / 52.5521°N 13.3544°E / 52.5521; 13.3544
Monuments"Window Of Remembrance", Berlin
Known forFirst casualty at the Berlin Wall

Ida Siekmann (23 August 1902 – 22 August 1961) was the first person to die at the Berlin Wall, only 9 days after the beginning of its construction.

Biography

Makarios III, President of Cyprus, at the Siekmann memorial (1962)

Ida Siekmann was born in Gorken near Marienwerder (West Prussia) (now Górki, Kwidzyn County, Poland). She had moved to Berlin where she worked as a nurse,[1] and lived at Bernauer Strasse 48 in the center of Berlin.[2] She had a sister, Martha L., who lived only a few blocks away, on Lortzingstraße.[3]

After World War II, Berlin was divided in four Allied sectors. While the street and the sidewalk of the Bernauer Straße lay in the French sector of West Berlin, the frontage of the buildings on the southern side lay in the Soviet sector of East Berlin. Until 13 August 1961, the day the Berlin Wall was built, Siekmann crossed the sector’s border just by leaving her house.[2] Her sister's apartment was also in the French Sector of West Berlin.[3]

Death

Immediately after the border between East and West Berlin was closed on 13 August 1961, 50 households at the Bernauer Straße fled to the West.[4] On 18 August 1961, Walter Ulbricht ordered the East German border troops to brick up the entrances and windows on the ground floor of the houses on the southern side of the street. Members of the Combat Groups of the Working Class and police controlled every person who tried to enter the houses and the residents were subject to rigid controls, even in the hallways. Many residents of such tenements still fled to West Berlin: residents of the upper floors were often rescued by jumping-sheets of the West Berlin fire department.[2]

Bernauer Straße (2007); as of 2007, the death strip remained untilled

On 21 August, the entrance and windows of Bernauer Straße 48 were barred. In the early morning of 22 August, Siekmann, living on the fourth floor (dritte Stock/Obergeschoss), threw eiderdowns and some possessions down onto the street and jumped out of the window of her apartment before the firefighters were able to open the jumping-sheet.[5][6][7] She fell on the sidewalk and was severely injured. Siekmann died shortly after on her way to the Lazarus Hospital, thus becoming the first casualty at the Berlin Wall.[4][5]

Burial

Siekmann was buried at the Seestraße cemetery on 29 August; in September a memorial was erected at Bernauer Straße 48. The memorial was often visited by foreign politicians (including Robert Kennedy and Archbishop Makarios) to honour the victims of the Berlin Wall.[2]

The houses at the southern Bernauer Straße were torn down in 1963 and replaced by a concrete wall.

External links

References

  1. ^ Peter Galante and Jack Miller, "The Berlin Wall" (pgs 79-80), 1 January 1965, Arthur Baker Ltd., ASIN B0000CMM6U
  2. ^ a b c d Biography at Chronik der Mauer.de Template:De icon
  3. ^ a b Hamburger Abendblatt article "In der Tasche der Toten fand man die Adresse der Schwester", 23 August 1961Template:De icon
  4. ^ a b Die Erste und der Letzte Die Welt, 13 August 2010 Template:De icon
  5. ^ a b Sprung in den Tod Deutschlandradio Kultur Template:De icon
  6. ^ Die Berliner Mauer Focus, 19 October 2009 Template:De icon
  7. ^ Forscher korrigieren in neuer Studie Zahl der Mauertoten Berliner Morgenpost 8 August 2008 Template:De icon

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