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Garold N. Davis - Behind the Iron Curtain: Recollections of Latter-day Saints in East Germany, 1945–1989

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Behind the Iron Curtain: Recollections of Latter-day Saints in East Germany, 1945–1989: summary, description and annotation

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In 1939 when Hitlers armies marched into Poland, the LDS missionaries marched out of Germany and eventually out of continental Europe, leaving a strong and thriving Church in eastern Germany. Through personal interviews with East German Saints, this volume documents the moving personal faith of those Saints who survived World War II and rebuilt Zion during the communist years.

Read the personal histories of the East German Saints who saw their country destroyed by war and their church isolated by the Iron Curtain. Experience their joy at the dedication of the Freiberg Temple in 1985, the return of missionaries in April 1989, and the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989.

Behind the Iron Curtain brings to life a vital chapter of modern Church history that cannot be missed.

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Contents Acknowledgments Many people have contributed to this project the - photo 1

Contents

Acknowledgments

Many people have contributed to this project, the intention of which is to preserve some memory of the faithfulness of the members of the Church in the former German Democratic Republic (East Germany) who held the Church together under difficult circumstances during the forty years of communism. It is to these people themselves that we acknowledge our primary indebtedness. They lived the lives, they befriended us, they invited us into their homes, they told their stories. Thank you all!

We are deeply grateful to Manfred Schtze, former president of the Leipzig Stake and former president of the Berlin Mission. With the exception of chapter 6, The First Conference by Walter Krause and Walter Kindt (given us by Edith Krause), and chapter 11, My Mission by Kthe Wrscher (given to us by John W. Welch), all the journals and historical information in part II, Rebuilding Zion, were collected and edited by President Manfred Schtze and are translated and published here with his kind permission.

Our thanks to Sister Edith Krause who gave us a paper contained in chapter 1, part I, entitled The Dead Need No Water. With the exception of that paper and A Temple in Our Country? written by Elke Schulze, all of the other materials were taken from taped interviews which we made ourselves in the homes of the members in the spring of 1990 and again in the spring of 1994.

For the difficult work of transcribing these tapes onto computer discs we are grateful to Maja Lund, Renate Reading, and Scott Sheffield, former graduate assistants in the Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages at BYU. We must take the responsibility for the translations ourselves.

Acknowledgments for the photographs are included in the caption for each.

We are especially grateful to Doris Dant, executive editor of BYU Studies, and to her staff for seeing the book through the press.

Finally, we offer our special thanks to Sister Elke Schulze of Dresden for assisting us on site in collecting and distributing materials, arranging hotel reservations, setting up appointments for interviews, and in general for being gracious and willing to assist with any requestreasonable or unreasonable. Thank you Elke!

Introduction

They had survived six years of war. Their cities had been bombed. On February 13 and 14, 1945, the city of Dresden was burnt to the ground by three heavy bombing raids. Those husbands and sons who had not fallen in the war were slowly straggling back from POW camps. They had very little to eat. A new geographical term now described the area: Soviet Zone of Occupation. The people were forced to clean up the rubble of their destroyed cities, to dismantle their own factories, and to send them off piece by piece to the Soviet Union. The new state, the German Democratic Republic (GDRcommunist East Germanyfounded in 1949), established a communist government that was officially atheistic and antagonistic to religion. In 1961 the government of the GDR built a solid wallthe Berlin Wall, officially called antifaschistischer Schutzwall, the Anti-Fascist Wall of Protection. A secret police system watched the peoples every move.

Before the war, when Hitlers armies marched into Poland in 1939, the LDS missionaries had to leave Germany and eventually all continental Europe. But they left a strong and thriving Church in the eastern part of Germany. The major cities of this areaBerlin, Leipzig, Chemnitz, and Dresdenwere among the few cities in Europe with multiple branches, many of which were old and well established. In Dresden, for example, the Church had been established longer than most wards in Utah; the Dresden Branch was organized in 1855 with a young convert, Karl G. Maeser, as its first branch president. Many of the people in these congregations were second-, third-, and fourth-generation members of the Church. The eastern area of Germany had been sending a continuous stream of converts to Utah for almost one hundred years, yet approximately ten thousand members were still in Germany when the missionaries were forced to leave. When Hitlers armies were defeated in 1945, the missionaries returned to Europe, but foreign missionaries were not permitted to enter the Soviet Zone of Occupation.

The Church in the GDR was battered and scattered. Most of the branch meetinghouses had been destroyed by bombings. Priesthood holders who had survived the war were taken to prisoner-of-war camps. Members from the eastern branches fled westward, and many ended up in refugee camps. Members had to be gathered. Meeting places had to be found. Missionary work had to go on. The Church had to be rebuilt.

The men who returned from the war were called to leave their families again, to go out as missionaries, but only within the borders of the GDR. In addition to proselyting, they were to find the scattered members and rebuild the Church. To hold church services, the members were shifted from back rooms in taverns to old theaters, to horse barns, and to bombed out casinos, which they had to rebuild themselves.

After the Berlin wall was built in 1961, members could no longer serve missions, even inside the country. They could have no teaching manuals, no Church magazines, no handbooks, no printed material, no temple. They could not attend the university except under exceptional circumstances, and then they were told that because of their religion they would neither be advanced nor permitted to hold administrative positions in their professions.

In the years following the war, the Church in the GDR was presided over by a sequence of mission presidents who resided for the most part in West Berlin. During this time, Berlin provided a door between East and West. The frequency with which mission presidents living outside the country were permitted to visit the leaders and the various branches of the Church inside the GDR varied over the years according to the attitude of the government officials and the political situation. On some occasions, General Authorities were given permission to enter the country. Mission presidents and General Authorities entered through this door; up until 1961 many members exited.

With the erection of the Wall, entrance into Germany became more difficult for mission presidents and General Authorities, and except for the elderly and retired, authorized exit was nearly impossible. In spite of their isolation, the members inside the Wall carried on the programs of the Church with even greater determination. Because of the severe restrictions against entering the country, however, the organization of the Church in the GDR was somewhat more complicated.

Johannes Henry Burkhardt was recognized by the government of the German Democratic Republic as the authorized spokesperson for the Church inside that country. Henry Burkhardt was born and grew up in Chemnitz (Karl-Marx Stadt), and his family had been members of the Church for three generations. From the Churchs point of view, he was counselor to the mission president from 1950 to 1972. In 1972 the Dresden Mission was organized, and Henry Burkhardt was appointed mission president. For the first time, the presiding officer of the Church in the German Democratic Republic resided inside the country.

At first slowly, and then more and more rapidly, a brighter day began to dawn. On October 2224, 1969, President Thomas S. Monson visited the GDR, and at a meeting in Grlitz, a city on the Polish border, he promised the members of the GDR that they would have all of the blessings other members of the Church enjoy (as reported in the Ensign, May 1989). On April 27, 1975, President Monson offered a dedicatory prayer for the country on a small hill near Dresden. In August 1977, President Kimball held a special conference in Dresden. In 1982 the Freiberg Stake was organized with Frank Apel as stake president, and in 1984 the Leipzig Stake was organized with Manfred Schtze as stake president. At that time, Henry Burkhardt was appointed president of the Freiberg Temple, which was under construction. In June 1985 came a day the Saints in the GDR never dreamed would comethe dedication of a temple in their own country. In April 1989, the first foreign missionaries in fifty years entered East Germany, and by the end of that year, the newly organized Germany Dresden Mission reported 669 convert baptisms. On the night of November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall fell, and the long years of isolation were over.

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