THE East German authorities called it Antifaschistischer Schutzwall, or "Anti-Fascist Protection Rampart." But we know it as the Berlin Wall, and this weekend we celebrate the 25th anniversary of its fall.
It will be a time of reflection for the regulars at the Mahogany Ridge, some of whom, no doubt, will have done a little falling of their own by the time tomorrow evening rolls around. But that is neither here nor there.
After the Second World War and before construction began, on August 13, 1961, some 3.5 million East Germans had strolled across the divided city into the western sector and, circumventing Eastern Bloc emigration restrictions, travelled on to West Germany and other countries.
The wall that would eventually encircle West Berlin, making it an isolated enclave deep inside the Eastern Bloc, did end the mass defections. But, in the ensuing years, about 5 000 more people tried to scale it in a bid for freedom. Such was the East Germans' resolve to protect citizens from the fascism on its other side that scores were killed as they attempted to escape. As an October 1973 directive to guards put it, "Do not hesitate to use your firearm, not even when the border is breached in the company of women and children, which is a tactic the traitors have often used."
In truth, though, the Berlin Wall did not fall on November 9, 1989, but was rather breached in several places by jubilant mobs on that day to allow easier access from one side of the city to the other. Almost immediately, thousands of Mauerspechte, or "wall woodpeckers", sledgehammered and chiseled away at the concrete barrier, not to knock it down, but - crass capitalists! - to collect souvenirs for sale. Its actual demolition began some months later, with the German reunification process underway, and was formally concluded in 1992.
And neither did the fall strictly coincide with the collapse of the Soviet empire and the end of the Cold War. Months earlier, political scientist Francis Fukuyama had declared that the great ideological ding-dong between East and West was over; liberal democracy had triumphed, history was done, hooray for us, everyone's a winner.