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Making history

November 10, 2009

Most Europeans remember where they were the day the Berlin Wall fell. It seems, however, that French President Nicolas Sarkozy has become a little forgetful. Critics accuse him of trying to rewrite history.

https://p.dw.com/p/KTAz
Sarkozy in front of the Brandenburg Gate.
20 years on, Sarkozy really was in Berlin on November 9Image: AP

Nicolas Sarkozy posted an emotional entry on the social networking website Facebook late on Sunday entitled: "Memories of the fall of the Berlin Wall, November 9, 1989." However, it seems that the French president's recollections of that historic day are somewhat hazy.

French journalists have been questioning Sarkozy's gripping tale of a journey to Berlin on the morning of November 9th, culminating in him hacking into the Berlin Wall with his pickaxe later the same evening.

It was, seemingly, a busy day for the French president, then 34 years old and deputy leader of the conservative RPR party. Early that morning, having "received interesting news from Berlin, apparently heralding a change in the divided German capital", he set off towards Berlin together with political ally Alain Juppe.

"On arriving in West Berlin, we headed towards the Brandenburg Gate, where an enthusiastic throng of people had already gathered, after the announcement of the probable opening of the Berlin Wall," Sarkozy wrote.

"Then we nipped off to Checkpoint Charlie to travel to the eastern side of the city and confront the Berlin Wall, on which we were able to land a few blows with a pickaxe."

Picking holes in the story

While the decline of the German Democratic Republic was clear to see, the fall of the Berlin Wall was triggered by a surprise announcement in the evening of November 9th, 1989, which makes it difficult to believe that Sarkozy got wind of the imminent event in the morning of that same day.

Also, on November 9th, Sarkozy's alleged companion, Alain Juppe, was in fact in France attending a memorial service for former French leader Charles de Gaulle. Juppe says he remembers neither the ceremony, nor the date of his trip to Berlin, but archive material from conservative newspapers like Le Figaro confirms Juppe's whereabouts.

Nicolas Sarkozy and Alain Juppe by the Berlin Wall, at some point in November 1989
Graffiti on the Wall suggests this is West BerlinImage: Sarkozy

Historians were also baffled by Sarkozy's description of attacking the Wall with his pickaxe on November 9th, as nobody thought to attack the structure until the following day.To imply that he attacked the eastern side of the Wall is also confusing, as in the accompanying photo Sarkozy is seen in front of a section clearly covered with graffiti. This is a distinctly Western characteristic, as the armed guards in the GDR prevented people from even touching the eastern side of the Berlin Wall, let alone painting on it.

Tentative support

Alain Juppe, who initially wrote a blog post corroborating Sarkozy's story later changed its content, adding the proviso that he could no longer remember precisely which day he had been in Berlin. Reports from the Agence France Presse news agency, dated November 17, stated that Juppe had just returned from "a flying visit to Berlin, during which he was accompanied by Nicolas Sarkozy".

Prime Minister Francois Fillon - whom Sarkozy claims to have met by chance at the Brandenburg Gate on his visit - also supported his president's version, and added that he saw another French politician, Alain Madelin, on the same day. Madelin, however, immediately denied that he was in Berlin on November 9.

"Maybe I was there on November 10, maybe later ... No one could have foreseen what was going to happen and reacted so quickly," Madelin told the Rue89 investigative website.

Among the more than a thousand comments by Facebook users on the controversial post, is this question to Sarkozy, "What makes you think you can rewrite history?"

msh/AFP/Reuters

Editor: Susan Houlton