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Death in Plumstead

Date: 20 August 2007

Dominik Danielewicz plays Peter Fechter. Photo: Yung Kha.
Dominik Danielewicz plays Peter Fechter. Photo: Yung Kha.

"One man spits at us. Behind us, Peter writhes, bleeds, and pleads. I glance over my shoulder. People throw bandages and first aid kits over the wall."

Left off the high street, under the railway bridge and through the gates, says Mark's email, and you should see something resembling the Berlin Wall.

And there it is: a little piece of East Berlin in the White Hart Road depot in Plumstead. Mark and his friend Clive have spent the week building a replica of the Wall as it stood on Zimmerstrasse in 1962: concrete, topped with breezeblocks and a Y-shaped strip of barbed wire. Far from plumb or true, it looks like a wall built in a hurry by inexperienced conscripts. But even then, all is not as it seems: the bottom part is a timber frame, faced with plywood and skimmed with concrete, and the barbed wire is novelty plastic.

This is the first day of rehearsal and preparation for Mark's live re-enactment ‘The Death of Peter Fechter', a re-enactment of the death of an 18-year old builder shot by East German border guards and left to die in the no-man's land beside the wall while guards on both sides looked on: one of the earliest and best-documented killings on the Wall.  I'm playing an American soldier, and soon my fellow Americans, East Germans, and the two actors playing Peter and his friend Helmut (who made it to the West) are all on site too. With one other exception, the performers are all professional or semi-professional actors. The last time I did any acting was for CSE Drama.

Mark shows us the performance area, and how the cameras capturing the event will be set up. We try on the uniforms - my boots are agony - and discuss how the performance might go. Unlike being given direction for a play, Mark allows us to think about our roles and how we want to react to the escape, the shooting, and the presence of the crowd.

On day two, we run through the first ten minutes of the performance: it turns out to be tricky getting Helmut over the wall. We start to develop our roles: the hard-ass sergeant, the corporal who nearly loses it, the grinning private. Photographer Lydia Polzer turns up to take some pictures of the wall and reconstruct one of the well-known photographs taken of Peter being removed from the death strip by DDR guards. She was born in the DDR, and is working on a photographic project documenting the architecture and infrastructure of East Germany that has become derelict since die Wende.

Saturday comes, and the performance proper. The crowd extras turn up early, to be primed on their roles, before hiding round the back of the depot so they can mingle with the audience when the coaches from central London arrive. The armourers turn up with blank-firing theatrical AKSU semi-automatic rifles and the DDR guards fire off a few test rounds. Mark is visibly delighted when the armourers ask him to fire a few rounds on fully automatic.

Then we're in uniform and on patrol, guarding a gap in the wall, as the audience turn up. We chew gum and give them our GI grins. Some of the audience attempt conversation, ask us where we're from: a backstory appears in my head. At noon, Peter and his friend Helmut leap from a window and scale the wall. Helmut balances precariously on top, and the audience of West Berliners help him down and over the barbed wire. The DDR guards fire their weapons: it's deafening; Peter falls and starts to cry for help.

So much we've rehearsed. But the new factor is the audience. The extras, and some members of the audience, start to shout at us, calling on us to help and try to push through our line to help him themselves. Twice they make a concerted group effort to push past us. Our job is to hold the line, keep the crowd under control. I find myself barking STAND THE FUCK BACK and poking people with the barrel of my rifle. Heads are (accidentally) knocked with the butt. The audience assume roles (the extras are all really excellent) and personalities: a couple of blokes are aggressive, trying to stare us down; one man calmly pleads with us to do the right thing; a young woman remonstrates, asks us if we have family, kids, what if this was our son? One man spits at us. Behind us, Peter writhes, bleeds, and pleads. I glance over my shoulder. People throw bandages and first aid kits over the wall.

The panic is tangible: I find my heart genuinely pounding, my breath coming roughly. Part of it is performance anxiety, part of it becoming the soldier. Having been in similar situations myself, confronting lines of police, I think the anger coming from the crowd feels genuine: I experience the raw hatred directed at me that I've so often projected myself. It's intimidating. You're always just a whisker away from losing it. But you also realise the logic of holding a line: positions aren't defended by argument, not because those arguments aren't tenable, or because you don't really believe them, but because the argument is simply irrelevant when you're armed. So you lose the grin, and start to avoid the eyes. They keep shouting. It becomes harrowing.

After fifty minutes, Peter dies, and the DDR guards cart him away. We GIs disperse the crowd, send them back to their coaches. We can't tell if they are bemused or angry: there's no curtain, no applause, just a patch of scrubby ground in Plumstead, empty again. We go to the pub for a drink and talk it over. It might just be the way that I was holding my rifle, but a couple of hours later, I'm still shaking slightly.

COMMENT(S)
Lisa Knight
This re-enactment was a brilliant thought provoking piece. It moved me so much, in some ways I'm still mentally at that depot

Here is a poem I wrote about the day:

http://allpoetry.com/poem/3317926
John Shepheard
HERE IS THE FIRST DRAFT OF A SONG I WROTE IN RESPONSE TO THE PLUMSTEAD KILLING:

Peter Fechter

Crowd threw you a bandage

The crowds threw you a line

Yankie guards they said no

German guards they said nein

Peter Fechter East Berlin defector

Peter Fechter I want to come and get you

Peter Fechter East Berlin defector

Peter Fechter please let me come and get you

You hung out like a bricklayer

In the Zimmerstrasse

You flung out like a soothsayer

In the ever after

Peter Fechter East Berlin defector

Peter Fechter you know I want to come and get you

Peter Fechter East Berlin defector

Peter Fechter I really want to come and get you

They re-enacted you in Plumstead

At some industrial estate

They got licences for the rifles

They re-enacted the same mistake

Peter Fechter Peter Fechter

Peter Fechter you know I want to come and get you

Peter Fechter East Berlin defector

Peter Fechter I really want to come and get you

They let you bleed in the death strip

They didn’t need to take ownership

Crowd demonstrated and remonstrated

Yanks said it’s not their problem

Peter Fechter Peter Fechter

Peter Fechter you know I want to come and get you

Peter Fechter East Berlin defector

Peter Fechter I really want to come and get you


Anonymous
Let me get this straight now... This is a re-enactment? If so you would be aware that the spontaneous crowd who formed at the actual shooting of Fechter were yelling at the COMMIE GUARDS! His body was on their side. They did nothing.

But since your'e all probably silly commies yourselves, making the "Yanks" the evil perps is the thing to do.

You defiled Peter Fechter's memory.

Jake

San Francisco


Anonymous
Jake: Sounds to me like you are a very biased and injudicious man. Who knows exactly what happened in that hour? There are many accounts some accurate some not. I think this performance was more about the psychological effects death can have on you, especially that of a young boy. And if you are trying to say that the crowd only pleaded and begged with the "commies" as you put it, I think you are doing the east and west Berliners a great injustice.
Anonymous
As the artist behind this piece, I feel it only right to comment on this strand. To be accused of defiling Peter Fechter's memory is both hurtful and disappointing, particularly when the accusation is from someone who did not experience the piece and is basing their opinion on second hand accounts. This, in itself, goes some way to addressing one of the points raised; there is no definitive account of what happened on that day. The basic facts are recorded, but what really happened varies from account to account and we are left to pick our way through them. It's well documented that a crowd of West Berliner's gathered and began shouting at the guards to help Peter. Every account I have come across in my research states that the Berliner's were shouting at both sets of guards (with this having happened very close to Checkpoint Charlie, both sets of guards are held accountable for their inaction). That said, in all of the interviews I have given around this work I have been careful to stress that I was reamining a-political within this work. The purpose was not to demonise the GDR guards (as most accounts do) nor the GI's. The primary intention of this work was to tell a tragic tale and to raise this event back in to a public consciousness; a consciousness which, in Britain, is greatly lacking in terms of what the Berlin Wall was and did to a nation. My interest was in the human story; a tragic tale of one teenager's bid for a better life and the inability of the defending forces (GDR and US) to make a direct difference, on a domestic level, in his life; the larger political situation leading directly to the death of another human being. I have no interest in 'Commies' and 'Yanks', terms which just serve to emotionally cloud any discussion around these events with an unecessary prejudice, diverting the discussion away from any useful path. I am more than happy to be challenged around the intentions of this work, there are some very interesting and valuable discussions to be had, but for its intention to be boiled down to such a basic political gripe does the work and the original tragic event a disservice.
Christos Georgalas
Congratulations for a fantastic performance... However, there has already been a re-enactement, history repeating itself, in an summer, "holiday resort" island, with all the other constituents: A no-man's land "green line", one totalitarian state with scant respect for human rights, one person , unarmed, attempting symbolically to cross the line and challenge the status quo, his execution in cold blood, and finally, his body laying there while no one could collect it: Cyprus, Green line (separating Occupied territories and the Republic of Cyprus), summer 1996: The death of Solomos Solomou. See european parliament resolution : www.greece.org/themis/cyprus/euro_resolution1_txt.htm
John Shepheard
IN RESPONSE TO JAKE'S INTERVENTION FROM SAN FRANCISCO, I HAVE NOW REDRAFTED MY SONG TO FLAG UP THE COLLECTIVE RESPONSIBILITY FOR PETER FECHTER'S DEATH AND TO SIGNAL THE REAL DEBATE AROUND OUR PERFCEIVED POWERLESSNESS TO RESPOND TO POLITICAL VICTIMS.

Peter Fechter

Hiding a bricklayer

In the Zimmerstrasse

Dying a soothsayer

In the ever after

Crowds fling you a bandage

Crowd they sling you a line

GI guards they bark no

German guards they bray nein

Peter Fechter I need to get you

Berlin defector

Gonna come, gonna come and get you

You bleed on the death strip

We put you up a cross

German ‘n’ American

We could not let you cross

Re-enact you in Plumstead

Some industrial estate

Licence for the rifle

Enact the same mistake

Peter Fechter I need to get you

Berlin defector

Gonna come, gonna come and get you

Peter Fechter, Peter Fechter

Really want to come and get you

Peter Fechter, Peter Fechter

Why can’t we come and get you?

Peter Fechter, Peter Fechter

Why can’t we come and get you?

Why can’t we come and get you?

Why can’t we come and get you?

John Shepheard c2007


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