“The Incredible Story of Dieter Wiedemann, the Iron Curtain and the Greatest Cycling Race on Earth” is the subtitle of this book, which gathers the recollections of the East German cycling star and documents kept by East Germany’s secret police to tell of his daring defection to the West in 1964.
“One day a couple of journalists from Bild turned up offering me quite a lot of money for my story, but I said no. I didn’t want it to become a media circus, and I had no intention of allowing it to be used as a propaganda instrument.
“I’d left my friends and my family behind, and I didn’t want my name associated with anything that suggested that the east was inferior or that the people were ignorant. In Neues Deutschland they always portrayed the FRG as immoral, and so I assumed the West German press would be the same.
“The other thing is I was still living in fear of the Stasi. I knew they had agents in the west, and I couldn’t afford to rub their noses in it. I didn’t want to provoke them because for all I knew I might have been putting my own life at risk.”