By Oliver Ohmann
Same man, same place, same sentence: “I’m a Berliner.”
US President John F. Kennedy addressed it on June 26, 1963 in front of Schöneberg Town Hall. 60 years later, his historic freedom speech could be experienced again on the spot on the big screen.
Many thousands of Berliners came to the citizens’ festival on Kennedy-Platz on Saturday. A double anniversary was celebrated: 75 years of the Airlift and 60 years of Kennedy’s speech.
Governing Mayor Kai Wegner (50, CDU) called Berlin the city of freedom and revealed: “My father was also on the square in 1963 and heard Kennedy. He left the square with a lot of hope.” US Ambassador Amy Gutmann (73) recalled the Ukrainians’ struggle for freedom today and Kennedy’s nephew Timothy Shriver (63) thanked the Berliners for hosting the Special Olympics (read more on the pages 20/21).
When Kennedy’s speech flickered across the screen at 7:20 p.m. (in full length, 18 minutes, with German translation) – goosebumps. The freedom bell then rang in the town hall tower in memory of the victims of the airlift.
The US Air Force Jazz Band from Ramstein played, while choirs from the John F. Kennedy School in Zehlendorf sang. Colleagues from the police history collection exhibited two motorcycle treasures. BMW R50 machines that escorted the Kennedy visit in 1963 and a white uniform jacket that was in use at the time.