Excerpts from former German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s soon-to-be-published autobiography cover everything from growing up in a dictatorship to the conflict in Ukraine. A look at the key quotes.

Angela Merkel was the longest-serving chancellor of a post-war, united Germany, earning a reputation for calm and pragmatic leadership. On Thursday, Die Zeit published passages from her highly anticipated book Freedom. Memories 1954-2021.
Here are some of the key takeaways.
On growing up in East Germany
Born in Hamburg in what was then West Germany in 1954, her father’s work took the family to Brandenburg in the former East Germany when she was a baby.
In her book, she describes childhood under the East German (GDR) dictatorship as “a life constantly on the edge. No matter how carefree a day began, everything could change in a matter of seconds” if someone around her stepped out of line.
“The state knew no mercy,” she writes, adding that realizing what lines could not be crossed was an important skill, even for a child. “My pragmatic approach helped me” in that regard, she says.
The ex-chancellor writes that despite the GDR’s attempts to totally control its citizens, she maintained her carefree attitude and would come to disdain the “pettiness, narrow-mindedness, tasteless and…humorlessness” of the East German regime.
On becoming Germany’s first female chancellor
In Germany’s 2005 federal election, Merkel was selected to represent the center-right CDU/CSU bloc over, among others, current CDU leader Friedrich Merz.
She says she found “a difference between theory and practice” in the acceptance of a female candidate for head of government. “There were doubts about this” she writes, even “deep within the ranks of women” in her party.
Merkel then explains the challenge of going up against then-Chancellor Gerhard Schröder and his reputation for being “energetic and smart.”
“Any man who challenged the chancellor…would have felt the same way. But being a woman, I felt, was definitely not an advantage.”
On Putin and Trump
In an excerpt on meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 2007 Munich Security Conference, Merkel says Putin presented himself as “someone who was always on his guard, not to be trifled with, and always ready to dish it out.”
She confirms a famous story that Putin brought his large Labrador to a private meeting with her. It is well-known that an earlier incident left Merkel with a phobia of dogs, but Putin has denied doing it on purpose to intimidate her.
She also says he regularly arrived late for the purpose of making people wait.
“You could find all this childish, reprehensible, you could shake your head at it,” but that didn’t make Russia any less important on the world stage, the ex-chancellor says. She goes on to describe him as singularly preoccupied with the United States, as if longing for the days of the Cold War.
Merkel also sheds some light on her infamous first meeting with US President Donald Trump in 2017. An incident went viral on social media in which Merkel appeared to ask Trump to shake hands for a photo, and he ignored her.
Credit: DW News






















