Zürcher Nachrichten - Gay struggle offers new window on Berlin Wall's fall

EUR -
AED 4.237843
AFN 73.257453
ALL 95.411667
AMD 434.912384
ANG 2.065282
AOA 1057.975579
ARS 1599.582458
AUD 1.670108
AWG 2.076724
AZN 1.960569
BAM 1.960363
BBD 2.324109
BDT 141.58955
BGN 1.97209
BHD 0.435557
BIF 3421.978954
BMD 1.153735
BND 1.486246
BOB 7.973524
BRL 5.950946
BSD 1.153886
BTN 107.475834
BWP 15.830778
BYN 3.419128
BYR 22613.212239
BZD 2.320691
CAD 1.60548
CDF 2648.976455
CHF 0.9216
CLF 0.026803
CLP 1058.333104
CNY 7.944161
CNH 7.948717
COP 4219.244671
CRC 536.945085
CUC 1.153735
CUP 30.573986
CVE 110.614338
CZK 24.50453
DJF 205.041537
DKK 7.472779
DOP 70.060591
DZD 153.470574
EGP 62.592098
ERN 17.30603
ETB 181.136824
FJD 2.604561
FKP 0.865484
GBP 0.872334
GEL 3.103076
GGP 0.865484
GHS 12.719923
GIP 0.865484
GMD 85.376838
GNF 10124.027057
GTQ 8.827508
GYD 241.491139
HKD 9.042402
HNL 30.712283
HRK 7.533203
HTG 151.452506
HUF 384.180594
IDR 19591.579441
ILS 3.605959
IMP 0.865484
INR 107.230587
IQD 1511.393267
IRR 1521921.101957
ISK 144.378222
JEP 0.865484
JMD 181.923427
JOD 0.817999
JPY 184.174807
KES 150.106429
KGS 100.892773
KHR 4629.93971
KMF 492.644575
KPW 1038.355375
KRW 1743.525041
KWD 0.356896
KYD 0.961634
KZT 546.800308
LAK 25324.490548
LBP 103316.998208
LKR 364.03574
LRD 212.059395
LSL 19.405515
LTL 3.406681
LVL 0.697883
LYD 7.372255
MAD 10.758568
MDL 20.303168
MGA 4816.845182
MKD 61.5951
MMK 2422.406973
MNT 4121.505513
MOP 9.315742
MRU 46.29913
MUR 54.00615
MVR 17.825343
MWK 2004.038264
MXN 20.599085
MYR 4.659971
MZN 73.792692
NAD 19.406018
NGN 1592.801103
NIO 42.353323
NOK 11.22821
NPR 171.961335
NZD 2.016752
OMR 0.443585
PAB 1.153881
PEN 3.983267
PGK 4.974327
PHP 69.770411
PKR 322.010295
PLN 4.275363
PYG 7464.211207
QAR 4.204786
RON 5.097438
RSD 117.409822
RUB 92.532428
RWF 1684.453565
SAR 4.331593
SBD 9.285934
SCR 17.138789
SDG 693.395457
SEK 10.870482
SGD 1.482977
SHP 0.8656
SLE 28.379476
SLL 24193.265247
SOS 659.390178
SRD 43.093209
STD 23879.991707
STN 24.805309
SVC 10.0965
SYP 127.544195
SZL 19.38254
THB 37.644088
TJS 11.059282
TMT 4.038074
TND 3.362273
TOP 2.777917
TRY 51.324267
TTD 7.828186
TWD 36.832995
TZS 2999.711778
UAH 50.537626
UGX 4329.075922
USD 1.153735
UYU 46.727746
UZS 14023.652772
VES 546.092005
VND 30384.773344
VUV 138.601123
WST 3.196856
XAF 657.484445
XAG 0.01589
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.118028
XCG 2.079631
XDR 0.811629
XOF 651.287379
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.310064
ZAR 19.532508
ZMK 10385.013744
ZMW 22.298804
ZWL 371.502302
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    22.26

    +0.49%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    12.61

    +0.71%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.2

    -2.57%

  • RIO

    -0.3600

    94.45

    -0.38%

  • GSK

    0.7000

    56.69

    +1.23%

  • NGG

    1.1500

    87.99

    +1.31%

  • AZN

    2.7600

    203.49

    +1.36%

  • BCE

    -0.9300

    24.45

    -3.8%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    15.12

    +0.2%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    58.28

    +0.67%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    33.59

    +1.07%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.21

    +0.53%

  • BP

    0.9500

    47.12

    +2.02%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

Gay struggle offers new window on Berlin Wall's fall
Gay struggle offers new window on Berlin Wall's fall / Photo: Claire MORAND - AFP

Gay struggle offers new window on Berlin Wall's fall

The role of gay people in bringing down communist East Germany from within is getting fresh attention three decades on, at a time when sexual liberation is still a battleground.

Text size:

Art exhibitions, films and city tours are casting a new spotlight on LGBTQ life in the now defunct state, capturing the imagination of generations born after the Berlin Wall tumbled on November 9, 1989.

"It was a high-wire act," said East German art expert Stephan Koal about the life of Juergen Wittdorf, a long-closeted gay artist whose daringly homoerotic works decorated even official buildings of the Stalinist regime.

Koal has co-curated a major retrospective of more than 250 pieces by Wittdorf for what would have been his 90th birthday.

Although it's being staged in a sleepy eastern Berlin suburb, the exhibition has been a surprise success with more than 20,000 visitors since it opened in September.

As sexual autonomy comes under fresh attack around the globe, even in EU members such as Hungary and Romania, Wittdorf's work is seeing a renaissance four years after his death.

Part of that renewed interest comes from a contemporary understanding of the "courage" required for LGBTQ people to fly beneath the radar, Koal said.

"Gay people were an important part of an incredibly exciting subculture," he said, along with overlapping groups of intellectuals, churchgoers, environmentalists and squatters that finally spilled onto the streets in East Germany's peaceful revolution.

"The regime saw the gay scene as a threat."

- 'Bubbling beneath' -

Born in 1932, Wittdorf was a long-time member of the German Democratic Republic (GDR)'s ruling SED party, living off official commissions for his art.

The communist state decriminalised gay sex in 1968 -- a year before West Germany -- but it remained a serious social taboo.

Years before that reform, Wittdorf pushed the envelope with graphically lustful works featuring young men's bodies that he managed to pass off as Socialist Realist heroism.

One work that stands out is a print that hung in the official Academy of Sport in Leipzig featuring buff athletes soaping up together under the showers.

Karin Scheel, artistic director of Biesdorf Palace, which is hosting the Wittdorf retrospective, said the collection was a "nearly buried treasure" that explored the limits of social repression in an authoritarian state.

"In the GDR these were just depictions of athletes," said Scheel, who co-curated the show. "Today we see it totally differently -- under these prints there's something huge bubbling beneath the surface."

Wolfgang Winkler, 86, a retired librarian visiting the show who met Wittdorf a few times, said the role of LGBTQ people in East Germany's churning underground had long been "underestimated".

"History just swept it aside, what Wittdorf achieved with his work," he said. "But for those of us who knew about it, it was a sensation."

Berlin's chief culture official, Klaus Lederer, who is also gay and from the east, hailed new efforts to correct the "erasure" of Eastern artists and their battles for freedom.

Although most gave way to gentrification and online dating, a few of the gay bars and cafes of East Berlin are still around, such as the Sonntags Club (Sunday Club) which is now a stop on popular tours of the Prenzlauer Berg district's LGBTQ history.

Since 2021, an annual East Pride Berlin demonstration has paid tribute to the LGBTQ pioneers in the "resistance" behind the Iron Curtain as well as embattled communities in eastern Europe today.

- 'Cheeky' -

One of the stops is at the Gethsemane Church, a centre of anti-regime protest and the birthplace of the rights group Lesbians in the Church.

Sexual liberation also drives the new movie "In a Land That No Longer Exists" set in East Germany's world of fashion in the summer of 1989.

Director Aelrun Goette, who was herself discovered as a model on the street in East Berlin, tells the story of Suzie, a teen who escapes a state-mandated factory job by posing for a style magazine.

There she meets the designer Rudi -- based on GDR style icon Frank Schaefer, author of a rollicking memoir about his life as a gay punk in then bohemian Prenzlauer Berg.

Even as they work in the official clothing industry, Rudi leads Suzie into East Berlin's wild, creative underground -- a "niche" Goette said could be found in most dictatorships.

"Either you're free everywhere or you're not," Rudi tells his protegee. "If you're not, then the West can't help you either."

Goette said the time had come to tell a story about how "cheeky, insubordinate" East Germans liberated themselves, little by little then all at once.

The movie's success has a certain symmetry with the first gay-themed feature film to be released in East Germany, "Coming Out", which premiered the night the Wall fell.

L.Muratori--NZN