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From 1. March 2008, Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler will boast yet another tourist attraction with the Museum of the Cold War, the documentation site of the government bunker. Idyll and politics are merging in a unique alliance. In the era of the Cold War the subterranean building was officially known as the "Emergency Seat of the Constitutional Organs of the Federal Republic in case of Crises and Defence". The Emergency Seat was originally a 19-kilometre-long subterranean network of tunnels. It contained 895 offices, 936 dormitories, five canteens and command centres, a dental surgery, a medical unit and a hairdressing salon. In case of war 3,000 persons from public life were to be protected there from a nuclear, biological or chemical attack. The most expensive building complex in the Federal Republic of Germany was not officially closed until 1997. From 2001 to 2006 Europe’s largest bunker was finally dismantled by the Federal Office for Building and Regional Planning. The infrastructure installed in the tunnels disappeared.
As unique as the Berlin Wall
In a 200-metre-long section the museum now shows original installations and equipment. Based on plans by the Bonn architects Schroeder and Schevardo, an adjoining reception centre has been constructed in front of the actual bunker. This accommodates the reception and an information and exhibition area. Visitors are informed about the history and technology of the former government bunker by an exhibition and by films. The actual entrance to the bunker is situated behind the foyer. Only this section of the former tunnel network is open to the public, yet the complex already conveys an indelible impression of the "Cold War" scenario after taking only a few steps inside. A feeling of claustrophobia is inescapable. The temperatures sink in comparison to the outside world, the air humidity rises. Since former members of staff have trained as guides for the public, their descriptions will contribute to reviving the era when the Great Powers were at loggerheads and threatened one another. The Museum of the Cold War is a fortress of the nuclear age. For Jürgen Pföhler, chief administrative officer of the district of Ahrweiler, the new museum has a significance "comparable in its uniqueness to the Berlin Wall." It is an original site of the Cold War, the only one of its kind in Germany. For the conversion of the bunker the Federal Government has provided funds amounting to 2.5 million euros. The organisation in charge is the Heimatverein "Alt-Ahrweiler" (a local conservation association), which with acquisition of the museum assumes responsibility for the budget. There is no further support from the Federal Government or the regional authority. The Federal Government remains the owner of the gutted tunnels and areas surrounding the exterior buildings.
Interview with Wilbert Herschbach, chairperson of the Heimatverein Alt-Ahrweiler, future operator of the Museum of the Cold War
Mr Herschbach, without the Heimatverein Alt-Ahrweiler the project involving the reconstruction of the "Government Bunker" could not have been realised. What motivated you to take over the operation of this documentation site?The project had developed positively – from an originally empty tunnel to a museum equipped with exhibits in one section of the former bunker. We can once again restore some rooms to their original state. With the section that, due to its historical and political significance, has not been gutted, we can tell a very important story: we say – we never want war here again. We want to showcase the history of the Cold War and get our message across, in particular to young people. That’s our motivation.
What message is to be conveyed on the tour, what should be triggered in the minds of the visitors?
Being in the bunker is oppressive. And when you get to the end of the gallery, you stare into a long, straight tunnel. It’s a really spine-chilling experience. When you then leave the bunker, you realise what was going on there. You reflect about what was happening back then, the arms upgrade of the Super Powers. I believe that people develop a different consciousness of co-existence and co-operation when they come out of the museum.
You are expecting visitors from all over the world. How are you preparing for this?
We have been developing the project for two years and are currently working under high pressure. Meanwhile we have trained 40 guides. Two museum educators are concentrating on the topic of the Cold War and how to impart it to school classes. So I believe we’ll be able to cope with any enquiries.
In what way are contemporary witnesses, i.e. people who worked in the former government bunker for decades, mostly under the seal of secrecy, particularly suited to carry out what may be termed political education in the museum?
Contemporary witnesses were aware every day that there was a nuclear threat. They went into this bunker with the consciousness that something could happen. They knew that they sustained the Federal Government’s ability to govern with their work. The former employees should tell people how they lived. This is important. We have authentic descriptions from the contemporary witnesses, who can also say exactly how everything was controlled. They also staged tests. They rehearsed the emergency situation. They can convey this far more vividly than someone who lived outside and gleaned his/her knowledge from books.
What do you think is the reason for most of the visitors to come here, or to put it another way, what awaits them?
3.000 people were to survive 30 days in the bunker in order to prepare a possible counter-attack. Where and how would they have lived? This is an interesting question. It’s simply fascinating to enter another world. A civilian society lived in a parallel world. Getting to know this other society – this attracts visitors.
What influence, in your opinion, can the documentation site have on the here and now, for nuclear threat is still a topical issue?
We have been living without a war in Europe for 60 years. Anyone who comes out of the bunker should be aware of this. Visitors should think about how we can motivate politicians to act responsibly in the interests of the population. I think it’s important that we function like little wheels. The more people we can influence in this way, the more we can bring home the threat of that era, which still lingers even today, the greater the consciousness of the need for future action.
Translation: Heather Moers
Copyright: Goethe-Institut, Online-Redaktion
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December 2007
The German Interior Ministry has announced it will sell 2,000 bunkers and shelters formerly in place to protect civilians. The ministry said such rooms were no longer necessary because threat scenarios had changed.
Though the ministry made the decision in May, the Bonn-based German Federal Office of Civil Protection and Disaster Assistance (BKK) only announced the move this week.
The BKK said the shelters would not offer sufficient protection in the face of terrorist attacks and added that only a portion of the German population would find space in the rooms.
Millions in maintenance
Maintenance for the bunkers and shelters has cost the government 2 million euros ($2.7 million) per year.
BKK spokeswoman Ursula Fuchs said the Institute for Federal Real Estate would take care of selling the government-owned bunkers.
Shelters to be sold also include those located in subway stations in several major cities.
Most of the protective structures were built during World War II. Some of them were integrated into an "Emergency Program" developed during the Korean War in the 1950s.
Additional bunkers were refurbished and expanded in the 1960s during the Cuban missile crisis when the Cold War came closest to escalating into a nuclear war.
Following the end of the Cold War, programs for refurbishing bunkers and other projects for installing civilian shelters came to a halt in the 1990s.
Some historians have said they hope at least some of the bunkers will be kept intact so future generations can visit the structures and see information material common when the bunkers were built, such as a poster of a man hiding behind a tree with his briefcase in front of his head. The poster's headline read, "You're better protected this way!"
This year a bunker near Bonn, the former capital of West Germany, that would have housed West German government officials in the case of nuclear attack will be opened as a museum documenting the Cold War.
DW staff / DPA (als)
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Im Herbst 1997 beschloß die Bundesregierung, ihren "Ausweichsitz der Verfassungsorgane des Bundes", wie die 19 km lange Tunnelanlage unter den Weinbergen bei Marienthal an der Ahr im Amtsdeutsch hieß, aufzugeben. |