Free Republic of Wendland
de: Republik Freies Wendland
Micronation
Coat of arms of Wendland
Coat of arms
StatusDissolved
Official languagesGerman
Organizational structureRepublic
Establishment
 Declared
3 May 1980
MembershipUnknown
Claimed GDP (nominal)estimate
 Total
N/A
Purported currencyN/A

The Free Republic of Wendland (from German Republik Freies Wendland) was a protest camp established in Gorleben, West Germany, on 3 May 1980 to protest against the establishment of a nuclear waste dump there. On 4 June 1980, the police moved in and evicted the camp.

History

Background

The Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt conducted drilling in Gorleben in 1979 to test the salt domes there for suitability in storing radioactive waste. After small occupations by local activists at drill sites 1002 and 1003 failed, a plan was set in motion for a bigger occupation action that would include international anti-nuclear activists. A new demonstration was called for on 3 May 1980, under the motto "Day of action for the Wends" (Kampftag der Wenden).

Occupation

Around 5000 anti-nuclear activists moved to the planned area around drilling site 1004, between the villages of Gorleben and Trebel. There they occupied the area as part of a protest against further drilling to store nuclear waste. During the occupation, the so-called "Underground Office of Gorleben-Shall-Live" (Untergrundamt Gorleben-Soll-leben) declared the occupied area as an independent nation, naming it the Free Republic of Wendland (Republik Freies Wendland). The Lower-Saxon Minister of the Interior Egbert Möcklinghoff declared this proclamation to be high treason.

Wendenpass, taken 3 May 1980

The site was created on sandy soil and burned trees that was destroyed during the Fire on the Lüneburg Heath in 1975. On this location, the protesters built over the course of several days a village of around 110 huts, made from wood and clay, which was a typical style of protest for anti-nuclear activists at the time.[1] Among the buildings were numerous community facilities, such as the 100-person-capacity Friendship House, greenhouses, an infirmary, a hairdressing salon and an area for waste disposal. There was also a sauna and bathing facilities. Water was piped in by a wind-powered well and warmed with solar power.

On the approach to the "republic", a border checkpoint with a boom barrier was built, over which the flags of the Wends and of the Anti-Nuclear-Sun were hoisted.[2] In the nearby information center, a Wends Passport (Wendenpass) could be issued, along with an entry stamp, for 10 Deutsche Marks. In the words of the occupiers, the passport was good "for the entire universe [...] so long as its owner could still laugh."[3]

Community life

The roughly 1000 permanent occupiers organized community life during the 33-day occupation around a model of grassroots democracy. They established a spokespersons council and made decisions in regularly occurring mass meetings. Regarding their possible eviction by police, the widespread consensus was that of passive resistance, though a few militant occupiers spoke against this course. On the weekends, several thousand sympathizers and sightseers came to the occupied site, among them prominent people, such as the former head of the "Young Socialists", Gerhard Schröder. Other well-known visitors and residents included the resistance fighter Heinz Brandt, the musicians Walter Mossmann and Wolf Biermann, the photographer Günter Zint and the SPD politician Jo Leinen, as well as the writer Klaus Schlesinger. The group decision-making process took place both in the Friendship House as well as at other equally suitable platforms. These places also hosted lectures, discussions, readings, rock concerts, and puppet shows. Residents of the surrounding region supported the occupation with food and timber.[4] On 18 May 1980 Radio Free Wendland began a pirate radio broadcast from a tower at the occupation site.

Eviction

On the morning of 4 June 1980 the occupation site was cleared by the Lower Saxony police and the Federal Border Guard on the order of Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. Around 3500 officers took part in the operation, according to the Lower Saxony Ministry of the Interior and of Sports.[5] Legal grounds for the eviction of the occupiers were based on violations of various laws, including forestry laws, building regulations, the Field and Forest Planning Act, and the Registration Act. By the time of the eviction, around 2000 occupiers had gather in the village's central square for a sit-in style protest. The eviction, during which many of the squatters were carried away by police officers, went largely peacefully.[6] The pirate radio broadcast Radio Free Wendland reported on the eviction from its tower throughout the day. Once finished, the police thanked the demonstrators over a loudspeaker for their nonviolent approach.[7]

Reception

A reproduction of the huts typical for the Republik Freies Wendland protest camp in Hanover in 2010.

Long after the occupation by anti-nuclear activists of the Wendland was concluded, the concept of the Free Republic of Wendland continues to be evoked. Thus in 2006, a five-page advertisement by the Free Republic of Wendland against the Nuclear Industry and Police Brutality was published in a local newspaper.[8]

Between June 4 and 6, 2010, on the 30th anniversary of the eviction, a memorial and protest weekend was held near Gorleben in which about 800 people participated.[9] During this action, members of the Rural Emergency Association Lüchow-Dannenberg erected a "hut sanctuary" in the forest in memory of the hut village of the Free Republic of Wendland.[10]

After the 30th anniversary of the eviction, the director Florian Fiedler, along with the Playhouse Hannover, initiated the theatre project Free Republic of Wendland -- Reactivated from 17 until 26 September 2010. About 50 students, especially from the Gesamtschule IGS Roderbruch, and 25 adults from the Ballhof Theatre in Hannover erected a hut village in Ballhof Square along the same lines of the original protest village. Several performances, including puppet acts by the Bread and Puppet Theater, as well as concerts, lectures and discussions on nuclear power took place. The festivities were kicked off with a performance by Ton Steine Scherben and concluded with a discussion led by Oskar Negt.[11] A lot of media attention was focused on the project after someone threw a pie at Green Party member Trittin during a panel discussion.[12] After nine days the hut village was dismantled. Two of the wooden huts were brought to the Wendland in order to provide an anti-nuclear activist shelter.[13]

As before, the flag with the coat of arms of Wendland is a symbol of the anti-nuclear movement. It can be purchased in many places, and occasionally Wends Passports with stamps are offered at some protest camps.

Publications

  • "Resistance Report Wendland: Part 1, January 1983 - June 1985", 1985

See also

References

  1. "Photo of the hut village". Archived from the original on 2012-03-04. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  2. Gorleben-Archiv: Village History of the Free Republic of Wendland. Hut Village on 1004 (Dorfgeschichte Freie Republik Wendland. Hüttendorf auf 1004) Archived 2009-11-08 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 13 April 2011
  3. DER SPIEGEL, cited by Andreas Baum, "Nuclear power opponents name Gorleben in Lower Saxony the 'Free Republic of Wendland'. 25 years ago" in the "calendar page" of the Deutschlandradio Kultur, from 3 May 2005
  4. NDR Recap: We are the lucky ones. The Free Republic of Wendland (NDR-Rückschau: Wir sind die Glücklichen. Die Republik Freies Wendland), accessed 13 April 2011
  5. Venceremos, Goodbye. DER SPIEGEL. Published 14 July 1980
  6. Very Careful. DER SPIEGEL. Published 9 June 1980
  7. Institute for Peace Pedagogy Tübingen e. V.: "The Defense of the 'Free Republic of Wendland' (1980)" (Die Verteidigung der „Republik Freies Wendland“ (1980)) Archived 2007-02-12 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 14 April 2011
  8. "Notice from the Free Republic of Wendland from 21 October 2006". Archived from the original on 15 September 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2013.
  9. "30 Years Free Republic of Wendland (30 Jahre Freie Republik Wendland), from the Citizen Environmental Initiative Lüchow-Dannenberg e. V." Archived from the original on 2013-06-05. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  10. 33 Day village, 33 year resistance in Gorleben as a focal point of anti-nuclear movement
  11. Archive Playhouse Hannover, Issue 4, 2010, pp. 11 (PDF; 3,7 MB); Archive Playhouse Hannover, Issue 5, 2010, pp. 12-15 (PDF; 2,8 MB), accessed 14 April 2010
  12. Spiegel-Online from 23 September 2010: "Trittin verzichtet auf Anzeige"
  13. "Hut village on Ballhof Platz scheduled to be cleared"". Archived from the original on 2020-05-07. Retrieved 2013-09-29.

Works cited

  • Günter Zint; Caroline Fetscher (1980), Republik Freies Wendland. Eine Dokumentation (in German), Frankfurt am Main: Zweitausendeins
  • Dieter Halbach; Gerd Panzer (1980), Zwischen Gorleben und Stadtleben. Erfahrungen aus 3 Jahren Widerstand im Wendland und in dezentralen Aktionen (in German), Berlin: AHDE-Verlag, ISBN 3-8136-0021-1
  • 101 UKW: Radio Freies Wendland, hrsg. Network Medien-Cooperative, Frankfurt/Main, 1983 (Tondokumentation der Räumung des Hüttendorfes am 4. Juni 1980)

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.