As December is the month for the Holidays, I'm curious if our NVA members can shed any light on the NVA's official attitude and position on its member's celebration of Christmas. While I assume that Christmas was not officially celebrated, perhaps unofficially a blind eye was turned?
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Originally posted by jkeegen View PostAs December is the month for the Holidays, I'm curious if our NVA members can shed any light on the NVA's official attitude and position on its member's celebration of Christmas. While I assume that Christmas was not officially celebrated, perhaps unofficially a blind eye was turned?
And after that we was allowed to went home to celebrate christmas eve with our own families.... after 21.00... So my memories are for two Christmasses as officer in AR-11...
Merry Christmas to all you guys...
AR-11, Dirk
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Originally posted by jkeegen View PostAs December is the month for the Holidays, I'm curious if our NVA members can shed any light on the NVA's official attitude and position on its member's celebration of Christmas. While I assume that Christmas was not officially celebrated, perhaps unofficially a blind eye was turned?Attached Files
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Originally posted by torstenbel View PostChristmas Eve at the 6th Battery, Sektion 04, OHS Zittau on 24th December 2009. I was the UvD that day (I am the grinning one in the foreground). Cheers, Torsten.
A little joke, I could not resist...
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Originally posted by AR-11 View PostOhh yes, Christmas was officially celebrated.
In 1956, Hesse was working for US Intelligence in West Germany, as a recruiter for agents within the East German railroad industry to get early indications of any troop movements near the Fulda Gap (this before advanced electronic surveillance rendered such agents obsolete). On Pentecost weekend, when he knew West Germans would have Monday off and give him an extra day of cover (so he thought) he went to the US Intelligence services in the middle of the night, let himself in, walked past a sleeping guard, and loaded two strongboxes (that should have been, but were not, chained to the wall) full of secret documents into his car. He drove toward East Germany, was briefly stopped by a Bunesgrenzschütz patrol who checked his credentials, recognized them as intelligence service papers, and let him pass. He surrendered himself to East German Border Guards and...
That's where the problems started. The Border guards refused to mess with the safes, but phoned the Stasi number he asked them to... there was no answer. The Stasi office he was supposed to contact had taken the Pentecost weekend off too! He was basically held until Tuesday before the safes were opened and the documents examined.
That delay saved the hides of numerous Western agents in the DDR-- something like 25 agents were compromised by the security breach, and had the Stasi been in the office, ALL of them would have been arrested. As it was, something like nine or ten of the 25 were contacted and withdrawn, I think some even brought their families with them.
And all because the Sword and Shield of the Party (or at least key members thereof) was enjoying a long Pentecost weekend.
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