A cross was placed on the western side near the spot where Fechter was shot and bled to death. At the invitation of
Willy Brandt, the mayor of West Berlin, the
Yale Russian Chorus sang a German translation of
Mozart's
Ave Verum Corpus near the site in the week following the shooting. On the first anniversary, a wreath was placed there by
Willy Brandt and US
major general James Polk. The story of Peter Fechter was the headline of American news magazine
Time in August 1962. In this article, the expression "Wall of Shame" (Mauer der Schande) was coined, and this would become a synonym for the Wall. After German reunification in 1990, the Peter-Fechter-Stelle
memorial was constructed on Zimmerstraße, at the precise spot where he had died on the Eastern side, and this has been a focal point for some of the commemorations regarding the wall. The shooting has also been the subject of documentaries on German television.
Cornelius Ryan dedicated his book
The Last Battle to the memory of Fechter. Composer
Aulis Sallinen wrote an orchestral work
Mauermusik to commemorate Fechter. In 2007, artist Mark Gubb was commissioned by the
Institute of Contemporary Arts to create a performance based on the death of Peter Fechter. The performance was a one-hour live piece that was later recorded and screened at the ICA with a discussion panel at the end consisting of the artist, and actor Dominik Danielewicz who played the part of Peter Fechter. The 1972 ballad
Libre ("Free") – a recording famous in all
Ibero-America – by
Spanish singer
Nino Bravo, is widely believed to be in memory of this event, but its author, Pablo Herrero, says that it was actually written about the Franco dictatorship in Spain. In 2012 Canadian playwright
Jordan Tannahill's play
Peter Fechter: 59 Minutes, a poetic re-imagining of the final hour of Fechter's life, was produced in Canada and Berlin. == Literature ==