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Director's Statement
There are two events in German post-war history for which people still exactly remember where they were on this day: the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and Germany's surprising victory at the football World Cup on 4 July 1954, better known as THE MIRACLE OF BERN. This victory on a Sunday afternoon has become a myth, its makers have become legends: Sepp Herberger, Fritz Walter, Helmut Rahn, Toni Turek...
3 : 2 — Germany was the world champion, an entire nation jubilated. But what characterized this historical hour was not simply the joy in the victory of a football team, but a kind of collective bliss, an encouraging corrective to the dark years of the Third Reich.
The small joys and rebellions of the time are mirrored in the story of the Lubanski family of Essen-Katernberg. Counterbalancing the ordeal of the father returning from Soviet captivity are the first signs of the German economic miracle that was about to burst forth.
At first, it was difficult to find an access to this subject, especially concerning how to approach an event that is so deeply anchored in the collective memory of the Germans. But it turned out to be an exciting and very appealing task, precisely because its scope is so much broader than football alone.