AN 80-meter-long tunnel connecting the eastern and western parts of Berlin was accidently discovered in the Mauerpark in Prenzlauer Berg district during construction works almost 30 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Archeologists believe that the find is sensational, and hope that the tunnel can be presented to the German public “in its original condition.” “This is the first tunnel we have discovered in the inner city area, namely on Bernauer Strasse. For over 10 years I have been accompanying the work at the Berlin Wall Memorial. So far, we have not been able to find an escape tunnel. This is the first uncovered tunnel in the middle of the city,” chief archeologist Torsten Dressler told Sputnik Germany. Mauerpark is a public park in Berlin’s Prenzlauer Berg district. Its name can be translated to “Wall Park,” indicating its status as a former part of the Berlin Wall. Residential houses and other buildings in the area were located in the immediate vicinity of the former barrier. In the first days after its erection, many residents of East Berlin sought, by any means necessary, to escape, and jumped straight from the windows of these buildings onto sheets stretched out by their friends and relatives below. The area became the place with the largest number of underground tunnels due to the short distance between houses on the east and west sides of the wall. Over 70 tunnels were dug in Berlin, mainly in the early 1960s. Most of them were discovered by the East German authorities, but 19 of them managed to help more than 300 people escape to the west. (SD-Agencies) The main task is now to maintain the tunnel in its original form. The authorities and the city’s water service have already expressed their readiness to assist. |