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Anarchy In A Cold War PDF

167 Pages·2012·1.584 MB·English
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ANARCHY IN A COLD WAR Anarchy in a Cold War first appeared in a very limited Hooligan Press draft edition in the late 1980s. Shortly afterwards Hooligan Press, an anarcho-punk DIY publishing group, went the way of all flesh and dematerialised. In addition to non-fiction, Hooligan Press published several novels: Doc Chaos: The Chernobyl Effect, Down Wind of Eden and The Free; as well as the anarcho-satirical comic, The Faction File, and a collection of short stories, From Beneath the Keyboard, described by one reviewer as varying from ‘the excellent to the rather embarrassing’. Hooligan Press also published a history of squatting in West Berlin, imaginatively titled Squatting in West Berlin. Most of the above titles are still available from various sources, and some have been translated into other languages. Doc Chaos: The Chernobyl Effect has recently been republished as an ebook. An internet search will reveal more. Anarchy in a Cold War Kurtis Sunday Copyright © 2012 Kurtis Sunday Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND license granted, 2016. Permission granted to copy and distribute this digital edition in current unmodified PDF format and to print copies from this PDF for non-commercial purposes. Print edition published by Cambria Books, Wales 2012 Print edition ISBN: 978-0-9572459-5-2 Cover photo: Tom Chektout Back inset illustration: Kreuzberg Café, Berlin by Klara Meinhardt Cover design: Cyberium, www.cyberium.co.uk Special thanks to Fehlfarben and Crass for permission to quote their lyrics, either in the original or translated. Hooligan Vintage Print edition available from www.cambriabooks.co.uk, other internet sources, bookshops or at [email protected]. This book is dedicated to all those who made it possible. There is no need to name them. They know who they are. All characters in this book are fictitious. Any resemblances to persons living or dead are inevitable. Minimal poetic licence has been taken with historical events. Central Europe, 1981 West Berlin was a West German enclave within East Germany. The city, like Germany itself, was divided into four sectors after the Second World War. The American, British and French sectors became West Berlin, while the Russian sector became East Berlin. The Berlin Wall surrounded the American, British and French Sectors. Legally, the four victorious powers were the sovereign authorities in the city until German reunification. Planet Earth (already pretty fucked up), 1981 WEST BERLIN. Sun. Blue sky. As if spring's already arrived. Saturday afternoon. People are gathering. Have been for an hour, crowding round the intersection of Mehringdamn, Yorck- and Gneisenaustraße, blocking the traffic flow on the broad avenues, impatient to move, for the signal from the loudspeaker van. Nothing worse than standing around waiting for a demo to kick off. Long hair, short hair, Punks, black leather jackets, safety pins, lilac dungarees, Palestinian scarves, striped drainpipe trousers, blue jeans, parkas, yellow wind breakers, multicoloured jumpers, painted faces, clown noses, black ski masks. Women and men with babies Amerindian style on their backs or chests, SEW (hardcore Commies), Alternative Liste, Young Socialists, photographers, the Gewerkschaft für Wissenschaft und Erzeihung (trade union), cyclists, musicians, beards, woolly caps, Mohicans, the Marxistische Gruppe (fluffy Commies) distributing leaflets, a Jesus-lookalike in long white robes, hennaed hair, Helga Goetze with her multicoloured sandwich board advocating sexual liberation. Toddlers, a video camera crew, gym shoes, a juggler tossing rainbow balls, kebabs, anti-nuke badges, Dmitri and his bottle of Schultheiß1, Turks with leaflets about their people on 1 Schultheiß beer, particular to Berlin. The Schultheiß man – a later medieval respectable citizen type – is ANARCHY IN A COLD WAR hunger strike in Munich, groups, loners, lovers, nearly everyone wearing some sort of symbolic and sometimes very practical scarf. A lot of people, ten thousand perhaps. Maybe more. And others are sure to join along the route. Multiply the official figure the police will give afterwards by two: that might give some sort of idea of how many there really are. And down the back streets and almost out of view: the Bullen.2 Paramilitary olive-green uniforms, perspex shields, white helmets, new-model green-white and old- model navy blue police transits parked in rows, young closely shaved faces under clipped-up plastic visors, black boots and black batons being played with casually. And here and there the peaked cap of authority. Some Punks, bottles of Schultheiß in hand, have climbed onto the roof of the mobile Imbiß, which is doing a brisk trade in fried sausages soaked in curried Ketchup and salty pommes frites.3 An incomprehensible crackly voice suddenly booms from the loudspeaker van. People turn to each other. Are they starting? No. Not yet. It's something about having to hang around for another five minutes and would people please let the loudspeaker van through to the front. one, two, three ... The chant starts somewhere and is immediately taken up: on advertising billboards all around the city. 2 Bullen - bulls - German for police, not particular derogatory, English equivalent would be ‘cops’. 3 Imbiß – kiosk, in this case a mobile van selling mainly curried sausages, small hamburger-like balls of meat called Bouletten, pommes frites (chips topped with either tomato sauce or mayonnaise), potato salad, beer and coffee. In parts of the city there is one on nearly every street corner. 2 ANARCHY IN A COLD WAR free the prisoners! That’s the signal. A cheer spreads through the crowd. The voice on the loudspeaker takes up the chant. The crowd roars louder. free the prisoners! Out of sight, the Bullen, the representatives of those for whom the chant is meant, silently begin their preparations. The music starts: the familiar desperate beat of Fehlfarben. history is being made es geht voran! 4 The sound pulsates through the crowd. Bodies vibrate. Heads and feet beat it out. Some dance. space labs are falling on islands forgetfulness is spreading es geht voran! The vanguard starts pushing the loudspeaker van towards Yorckstraße. People follow it. Faces light up. mountains are exploding the president is guilty The Punks on top of the lmbiß cheer. Dmitri takes a slug from his bottle of Schultheiß. es geht voran! Black flags, red flags, yellow flags, lilac flags flutter in the February wind. The banners rise. Banners with paintings on them, the red banners of the SEW with their yellow socialist-realist block lettering, and a banner the width of the street at the front announcing that that The 4 es geht voran - things are moving (ahead), approximately. 3 ANARCHY IN A COLD WAR Berlin Mob is on the move. grey b-film heroes are about to rule the world es geht voran! es geht voran! history is being made es geht voran! The trees on both sides and in the middle of Yorckstraße are winter bare. A guy playing a full-sized Orange Order drum strapped across his beer belly dances through the crowd. Two women, squatter and feminist symbols finger- painted onto their whitened cheeks, are holding up a banner: Wenn Bullen prügeln, kriegen Steine Flügel!5 Cobblestones with wings fly in and out of the Punky red and black lettering. People hang from lamp-posts and perch on pedestrian barriers trying to get a better view. Cameras click, catching the colour and music in silent black and white. There are still people at the back who haven't started moving yet. The police transit leading the demonstration, a safe distance ahead of it, approaches the railway bridges that crisscross the avenue. Just before it passes under the first bridge the people pushing the loudspeaker van break into a trot, and start gaining on the transit. But after a warning to the driver from the helmeted Bulle riding shotgun at the open back doors, the transit accelerates and regains the gap lost in seconds. Stage one accomplished. The first row of demonstrators have stopped, are waiting for the gap between them and the loudspeaker van to widen again. 5 Translation: when cops apply undue force, cobblestones grow wings - or something like that. 4

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