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The victims at the Berlin Wall: Window of Remembrance of the Berlin Wall Memorial, Photo: 2010 (Photo: Hans-Hermann Hertle)

Ingolf Diederichs

born on April 13, 1964
fatally injured in an accident on January 13, 1989


in the area of Böse Bridge/Bornholmer Strasse border crossing
on the sector border between Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg and Berlin-Wedding

Diederichs, Ingolf

Ingolf Diederichs was born on April 13, 1964 in Wismar. After finishing school, he first trained to become a repair mechanic. [13] In September 1986, he enrolled at the Technical University of Dresden to study vocational education with a specialization in mechanical engineering. One of his fellow students desribed Ingolf Diederichs as an ambitious and technically skilled student who was determined to complete his studies successfully. He was a good engineer, but the teaching profession had not suited his strengths. When his fellow students were celebrating the halfway point of their studies, Ingolf Diederichs was exmatriculated. He tried to study engineering, but was not granted approval for this. [14]

Early in the evening of January 13, 1989, Ingolf Diederichs used a wooden folding ladder that he had made from the slats of a crib to climb from an S-Bahn train traveling from Pankow towards Schönhauser Allee. This was a unique S-Bahn line that allowed East German citizens to come very close to the West. As the train approached Bornholmer Strasse, passengers were a mere twenty meters from West Berlin, making the West seem very much „within reach." To counter this feeling, the Berlin Wall there was 5.4 meters high - higher than elsewhere. Trains sped through this part of their journey.

At about 6:30 p.m. Ingolf Diederichs jumped from a moving train at a point very close to the Bornholmer Strasse border crossing. [15] When he fell, he got caught on the train and was dragged with it. His head was seriously injured and caused his immediate death. An S-Bahn driver noticed the mangled body hanging between the long-distance tracks and the S-Bahn tracks as he passed over Böse Bridge. The East German secret police and border troops blocked off the route between Pankow and Schönhauser Allee in order to remove the body and secure evidence. [16]

It is not known what led the 24-year-old to risk such a dangerous undertaking. The East German secret police created what they called a „legend" to make the escape attempt appear to have been a mere accident. Ingolf Diederichs’ relatives were only told that he died after falling out of a moving train. [17]

To determine whether someone else was responsible for the fugitive’s death, the Berlin public prosecutor’s office opened a preliminary investigation in late August 1994. The case was closed again the following month for lack of evidence indicating any external influence. [18]

Martin Ahrends/Udo Baron

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