They promised change and we got it all right, because the 1970s Red Commie fossils are back out of the museum cabinet (1)

Published: September 23, 2013 at 12:38pm
1970s East Berlin Commie fossil Mario Vella - now heading Malta Enterprise

1970s East Berlin Commie fossil Mario Vella – now heading Malta Enterprise

Malta Enterprise chairman Mario Vella, who has now declared that that there is no need for a Malta Enterprise CEO because he can do that job himself too, read economics in East Berlin in the early to mid-1970s.

He was at the Humboldt, which was called something else at the time because the Communist rulers had changed its name in 1949. Until the wall went down at the end of 1989, that university remained under the clawlike ideological control of the Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands (Socialist Unity Party of Germany).

This was the Communist dictatorship and despite the name, which suggests that there were other political parties and elections, it was the only party and there were no elections. East Germany was a totalitarian state. I feel slightly idiotic explaining this but have to bear in mind that what might be taken for granted as universal knowledge is often not so.

The ruling Communists selected students for the East Berlin university according to their conformity to ideals of communist totalitarianism. Background checks were carried out by the Ministry of National Security, commonly known as the ‘Stasi’.

This was to ensure, after the experience of student rebellion in the early years, that there would be no risk of the university becoming a hotbed (or even seedbed) of democratic opposition. By selecting only students who were rigorously scrutinised for their support of Communist totalitarian ideals, they ensured that there would have no riots or protests to suppress and that there would be no plots against them by students entertaining dangerous notions of freedom and human rights.

You will have gathered that this was not a situation into which random foreign students were welcomed for the joys and inspiration of cultural exchange. Mario Vella, a student from Dom Mintoff’s socialist and Gaddafi-friendly Malta, would have been specifically selected and he would have gone through an even more rigorous ‘Communist credentials’ check before being given a place in East Berlin in the mid-1970s.

To fully grasp the significance of a foreigner being OFFERED a place as a student in 1970s East Berlin you would have to know that East Germany was one of the world’s most paranoid and oppressive totalitarian states. Outsiders carried the risk of danger. To be allowed in for a long stay at the university, you would have to be an insider.

You couldn’t just wander in for a visit on a tourist visa, and if you lived there and tried to escape to the freedom of the west, you were shot at the border. People risked death to escape over the Berlin wall, and so many were shot by the guards that the space they patrolled came to be known as the death-strip.

If you wish to know some of the scale of it, I suggest you read a factual piece in Der Spiegel, to which I have uploaded a link below.

Documents which surfaced in 2007 include the order, dated 1 October, 1973, to shoot even women trying to escape with their children across the border to freedom:

“Don’t hesitate to use your weapon even when border breaches happen with women and children, which traitors have often exploited in the past.”

In other words, those who made a bid for freedom were “traitors” and if women thought they and their children wouldn’t be shot, shoot them regardless to prove the contrary.

This was the regime which selected Mario Vella, now resurrected as Malta Enterprise chief, and the regime under which he elected to receive part of his tertiary education.

And lest you dismiss this as ancient history, it most definitely is not. This was contemporary reality for my generation: it made for the daily news. The last person to be shot and killed while trying to escape from East Berlin was Chris Gueffroy, aged 20, who literally went down in a hail of bullets, 10 of which punctured his body. This was in February 1989, just 10 months before the wall went down. Had he survived, he would have been just 45 today, not 95.

Communist totalitarian control over the university which selected Mario Vella was so complete that when the East German civil rights movement began to take fire in 1989, its students and academics, who should have been at the forefront of it, instead barely participated at all, and even after the wall went down, they elected Stasi spy Heinrich Fink as rector.




10 Comments Comment

  1. Alexander Ball says:

    We should all become academics.

    Let’s give up our jobs en masse and sign up to study political science.

    Of course no workers means no tax but so what.

    We shall eat and breathe our ideals.

  2. etil says:

    Unfortunately it appears that is the way Malta is heading. One can see from the various comments posted in newspapers that people still think the Opposition has no right to criticise the government and if it does, it is causing harm to the national institutions. Thank you all you switchers who have made this possible.

  3. ciccio says:

    This communist was on TVM’s Persjani last week, and I could hardly tell the difference between him and Malta’s ambassador to China – I think they both buy their rounded glasses from the same source (and I don’t think it is Prada).

    He was sitting there, praising the Chinese government and economy, defending Muscat’s strategic ‘partnership’ (‘l-ahjar ghazla’) with China.

    Besides his communist political waffle, there was little economic and business attitude that I could see in him that could convince any non-communist ‘investor’ to come to Malta.

  4. C C says:

    Those who go to Berlin should make a point of visiting the museum at Checkpoint Charlie. It breaks one’s heart reading all about the people who died in search of a better, free life.

  5. Tinu says:

    I visited East Germany [DDR] in 1969 for a sports activity and from my experience I noticed that the regime installed fear among the population. No one trusted each other for fear of being reported to the authorities and thus being castigated.

  6. Victor says:

    I visited East Berlin and of course went through Checkpoint Charlie in the 70s. I wanted to experience it personally.

    Apart from the scrutiny to pass through, one could see soldiers with guns all over the place. The most impressive sight was of two soldiers with a machine gun in a sort of glass cockpit on top of the Brandenburg Gate.

  7. it-Tezi ta' Mario says:

    The regime which awarded Mario Vella a place at university, also awarded (Leistungsabzeichen der Grenztruppen) Chris Gueffroy’s executors for their action and gave them a prize of 150 East German Marks each.

    When the wall came down and the West Berlin authorities stepped in, the four border guards were tried and found guilty and, a few short years later, Mario Vella was appointed to a government quango where he took Joseph Muscat under his wing.

  8. kev says:

    Tsk, tsk, the Lady knows not what she blathers.

    We should thank the Good Lord our Shepherd for Doctor Mario Vella. Having studied economics in the GDR means he knows all there is to know about what not to do for an enterprise to thrive and flourish.

    Besides, it’s not like we have had no proof of his capabilities in the past. You cannot downplay his worth, just as you cannot wet an ocean… even if you piss on it. Try it.

    Moreover, taking this a step further, from the ‘political economy’ to the ‘politically correct’ there is hardly a bridge to cross. It’s more like crossing from Gzira to Manoel Island than across the San Francisco Bay Bridge.

    [Daphne – Oh sorry to upset you, Kevin. I forgot for a moment there that you too were (re)educated in the USSR. Touchy subject, I would imagine.]

Leave a Comment