The “hollow” in Görlitzer Park was heaving with revellers who had gathered in reaction to a court ruling against Berlin’s mayor who wanted to lock it up at night. “Görli is our garden,” said Monika, a retired psychiatric nurse who lives nearby and had joined the crowds on Monday night for a beer and a bop on the popular deep bowl-shaped meadow in the Kreuzberg district.
“Görli is where we socialise and where my daughter grew up,” she said, using the affectionate nickname for the centrally located green space covering 14 hectares (35 acres).
A decades-long on-off row about the park’s patrons and its role in Berlin’s daily life resurfaced earlier this year when the state government voted to seal it with a perimeter fence overnight in order to squeeze out the drug dealers and addicts who proliferate there.
Judith, left, and Monika, who says Görlitzer Park is where she and her neighbours socialise. Photograph: Kate Connolly“We must, in the literal sense, take back control of Görlitzer Park,” the mayor, Kai Wegner, declared in 2023 after a “security summit”.
After much deliberation, a metal fence with 16 gates, installed at a cost of about €2m (£1.7m), became operational on 1 March. After the ruling on Monday, the fence has stayed up but the gates have remained open 24/7.
Few deny the problems attached to drug dealing – families report finding syringes and human faeces in playground sandpits and women say they have been abused.
But “a fence doesn’t solve any problems, it just moves them elsewhere”, said Monika, a member of Görli Zaunfrei (Görli Fence-Free), one of several groups that campaigned against the fence and are calling for a more integrated, sustainable and better-funded plan to tackle the park’s challenges.
A banner with the inscription ‘Görli stays open!’ hangs in Görlitzer Park at night. Photograph: Christophe Gateau/dpaMonday’s court ruling came as a blow to Wegner, of the conservative Christian Democrat party, who faces an election in September that he has billed as referendum on his promise to clamp down on crime in the German capital.
In Kreuzberg, a culturally diverse and bohemian neighbourhood, parts of which have rapidly gentrified, he is disparagingly referred to as the “Zaunkönig” (fence king).
“He himself has nothing to lose in Kreuzberg, where the CDU hardly stands a chance politically,” said Judith, a teacher and, like Monika, a member of Görli Zaunfrei.
The park has long been at the centre of wider culture war debates in Germany, to the extent that most Berliners – and many beyond – have an opinion about it even if they have never set foot in it. As Judith put it: “A fence around Görli was never anything more than symbol politics – an election campaign gift for CDU voters in the suburbs.”
Police officers guard the entrance to Görlitzer Park, where drug dealing is common. Photograph: Christophe Gateau/dpaAs opponents of the fence predicted, illicit activity has been pushed into neighbouring areas, where there are reports of drug users being found sleeping in the stairwells and doorways of apartments and kindergartens.
Many of the Berliners interviewed by the Guardian in the park this week – from people watching their grandchildren at a play day to a group singing campfire ballads – said they would rather the €2m, and estimated annual security costs of €800,000, were used to tackle addiction and related issues.
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