3rd World Festival of Youth and Students

3rd World Festival of Youth and Students
Host country German Democratic Republic
Dates5–19 August 1951
MottoPeace and Friendship Against Nuclear Weapons
CitiesBerlin
Participants26,000 people from 104 countries[1]
Follows4th World Festival of Youth and Students
Precedes2nd World Festival of Youth and Students
Demonstration at the 3rd Festival
Walter Ulbricht, Enrico Berlinguer, Wilhelm Pieck and Erich Honecker viewing the athlete's parade

The 3rd World Festival of Youth and Students (WFYS) was held from 5 to 19 August 1951 in Berlin, capital city of the then German Democratic Republic, and organised by World Federation of Democratic Youth. The motto of the festival was "Peace and Friendship against Nuclear Weapons"[2][3]

The third WFYS was held in a period of growing international tension between the Soviet Union and the western powers; it took place against the background of the Korean War and the spread of communism in Central Europe and China. The festival was meant to showcase the young German Democratic Republic, formed in the Soviet sector of postwar Germany.

West German police and the US military tried to prevent international delegates from crossing the western sector of Germany to attend the festival. In response, an operation was arranged to smuggle young people across the country in small groups.[4] Jan Myrdal wrote about incidents where young people were shot at by West Berlin police when trying to cross the West German border.[5]

The festival's sports programme featured an athletics competition.[6]

  1. ^ Rodden, John (2002). Repainting the Little Red Schoolhouse. Oxford University Press. p. 64. ISBN 9780195112443.
  2. ^ Sherif, Ann (August 2020). "Popular Protest in Postwar Japan: the Antiwar Art of Shikoku Gorō".
  3. ^ "Chronology of World Festivals of Youth and Students". Archived from the original on 2011-05-14. Retrieved 2021-09-04.
  4. ^ Rosa Branson (23 August 2008). My Dad Was a Communist (Television production). BBC 4. Event occurs at 13:36.
  5. ^ Myrdal, Jan (1988). Ett femtiotal. Stockholm: Askelin & Hägglund. pp. 15–16. ISBN 9789176841419.
  6. ^ World Student Games (UIE). GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2014-12-09.