52°32′30.3″N13°30′5.4″E / 52.541750°N 13.501500°E /52.541750; 13.501500
TheBerlin-Hohenschönhausen Memorial (German:Gedenkstätte Berlin-Hohenschönhausen) is a museum and memorial located inLichtenberg district, Berlin in the locality ofAlt-Hohenschönhausen, part of the former borough ofHohenschönhausen. It was opened in 1994 on the site of the mainpolitical prison of the former East German Communist Ministry of State Security, theStasi.
Unlike many other government and military institutions inEast Germany, Hohenschönhausen prison was not stormed by demonstrators after the fall of theBerlin Wall, allowing prison authorities to destroy evidence of the prison's functions and history. Because of this, today's knowledge of the functioning of the prison comes mainly from eyewitness accounts and documents sourced from other East German institutions.
The prison was depicted in the 2006 filmThe Lives of Others, in 2017 TV seriesThe Same Sky, in 2018Amazon Prime seriesDeutschland 86, and in the 2020 seriesThe Defeated. It is a member organisation of thePlatform of European Memory and Conscience.[1]
The Hohenschönhausen area was largely industrial prior to World War II. The area later occupied by the main building housed a factory manufacturing supplies for thesoup kitchens of theNational Socialist People's Welfare organization. That red-brick building was completed in 1939.[2]
In June 1945, at the conclusion ofWorld War II, the SovietNKVD took over the Hohenschönhausen area ofLichtenberg and transformed it into a detention and transit camp, called Special Camp No. 3. The camp served as both a prison and transfer point. Over 20,000 people passed through Special Camp No. 3 on their way to other Soviet camps, includingHeinrich George who was brought to theSpecial Camp No. 7 in Sachsenhausen in 1946 where he died shortly afterwards.[3]
Living conditions in the camp were deplorable, with death from malnutrition, disease, or common cold. Although official statistics list 886 deaths at the camp between July 1945 and October 1946, independent estimates put the toll as high as 3,000. Bodies were disposed of in local bomb craters.[2]
The camp was closed and prisoners relocated to other camps in October 1946.[2] After the closing of Special Camp No. 3, the Hohenschönhausen compound served as a Soviet prison during the winter of 1946–1947. The former cafeteria was converted to the underground prison area ("submarine") by prison labour.[4]
The prison was reopened by the East German Ministry of State Security (MfS), also known as theStasi, in 1951.[3] The Stasi added a new prison building (using prisoner labour) in the late 1950s. The new building included 200 prison cells and interrogation rooms. After the construction of theBerlin Wall in 1961, the prison was primarily used to house those who wished or attempted to leave East Germany, although political prisoners were also held there. The prison was used untildie Wende in 1989 and officially closed on 3 October 1990.[5]
The main prison also included a hospital wing, built in the 1950s and expanded in 1972. The hospital treated prisoners from all three Berlin prisons and sometimes from regional Stasi prisons as well. The hospital had up to 28 beds (in cells), an X-ray ward, treatment, operating rooms, a morgue, and outdoor exercise cells (called "tiger cages" by prisoners). In 1989, shortly before its closure, the hospital was run by Dr. Herbert Vogel with 28 full-time Stasi staff.[6]
Hohenschönhausen was a very important part of East Germany's system of political oppression.
Although torture and physical violence were commonly employed at Hohenschönhausen (especially in the 1950s),[5] psychological intimidation was the main method of political repression[5] and techniques including sleep deprivation, total isolation, threats to friends and family members, and the use of cells that could be filled with water to prevent the prisoner from sitting or sleeping.[7]
A suggested reason why the torture of East Germany's own citizenry was permitted for so long was the Hohenschönhausen exclusion zone. The prison was located in a large restricted area bordered by a large military town. Additionally, it officially did not exist during many of the years it operated, being left off all maps. These two measures combined meant that few people who did not work there knew what occurred inside. Because it was not well known, the prison was not stormed by demonstrators after the fall of the Wall. This allegedly allowed prison authorities to destroy much of the evidence of their activities. Today, much knowledge comes from former prisoners' personal accounts and documentation from other East German institutions.[8]
The Hohenschönhausen Memorial (Gedenkstätte) was founded in the early 1990s by former inmates.[9] The prison was listed as a historical site in 1992 and welcomed its first visitors in 1994. The Foundation is funded equally by both the German federal government and the Berlin state government.[9]
The Foundation was initially headed by Gabriele Camphausen, then by Mechthild Günther, who served as provisional director until September 2000.Hubertus Knabe has since served as executive director.[9]
The Foundation is open year-round, with hourly tours between 11:00 and 15:00 (10:00 – 16:00 at weekends). English-speaking tours are conducted three times a day (currently at 10:20, 12:20, and 14:20), year-round except some holidays. Visitors may tour in groups only, entrance fees range from €1, for students, to €6, the normal admission price.