Archive for the ‘Wende’ Category

Pastor Christian Führer

Tuesday, July 1st, 2014

..June 2014.. ..Leipzig..

Pastor Christian Führer passed away earlier today in Leipzig, Germany. He was the organizer of the Monday Demonstrations in Leipzig which was the catalyst for the fall of the East German Socialist regime. During the autumn of 1989 millions of disgruntled East German citizens marched peacefully every Monday night to voice their displeasure demanding more civil rights such as freedom of speech and travel, economic reform and democratic elections.

All this was started by an ordinary man who believed that citizens had the right to publicly voice their opinions.

I photographed Pastor Führer at the Nikolakirche in April 2013. He was wearing his customary denim jacket which he wore during the Wende. I have photographed extraordinary people but never has light reflected on someone as regally than on Pastor Fuhrer.

My translator, Leonie, and I had the honor of spending three hours listening to his recollections about the Wende. He was a wonderful man who was at the epicenter of change in Germany and Europe. More credit should be given to individuals like Pastor Führer who did their little parts to make momentous changes in the way millions of people presently live their lives.

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Pastor Manfred Fischer

Monday, December 16th, 2013

“I was a pastor in a divided parish. With my back to the wall, responsible for the west side.” -Pastor Fischer

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Earlier this week I received the sad news that Pastor Manfred Fischer passed away at the age of 65. I photographed Pastor Fischer exactly a year ago at the Chapel of Reconciliation in Berlin for my project about the Berlin Wall.

He became pastor of the Chapel of Reconciliation in 1977. The fascinating aspect of Pastor Fischer’s story was that the chapel was located inside the death strip of the Berlin Wall which sat in between the walls that separated East and West Berlin.

The congregation was cut off from its church when the East German government constructed the Berlin Wall in August 1961. No one could step foot in the chapel for nearly three decades. Soaring above the monolith wall, only the chapel’s steeple was visible from the streets of the West Berlin neighborhood Wedding. In 1985 the East German government blew up the church.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, Pastor Fischer was instrumental in getting back the land the chapel once stood on and constructing a new chapel on the original foundation. Today the chapel stands as a symbol of “reconciliation.” Pastor Fischer was also one of the few voices in favor of saving a portion of the Berlin Wall along Bernauer Strasse as a reminder of what stood there and the oppression that the wall helped contribute to.

I only photographed him once on a sunny but brisk Berlin day. But I will always remember the couple of hours I spoke with him at the chapel and our several telephone conversations. It was an honor to consider Pastor Fischer a friend. The world is a better place because of him and he will be missed.

Bornholmer Brücke

Saturday, November 9th, 2013

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Günter Max Brock

Friday, November 8th, 2013

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Pastor Christian Führer

Wednesday, November 6th, 2013

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October 8, 1989 Dresden, DDR

Tuesday, October 9th, 2012