Posted on 09/22/2007 8:22:50 AM PDT by vahet pole
September 22 marks the Day of Resistance in Estonia. The holiday was re-named this year after decades when it was known as The Day of the Struggle Against Fascism. The different interpretations between ethnic Russians and Estonians in the country are causing tensions. The Soviet army entered Tallinn on September 22, 1944, and this day has gone down in history two very different ways. For Russians it is known as the day the city was freed from fascism. For Estonians it is the day when almost 50 years of Soviet occupation began.
The date was officially re-named this year and the two very different versions of history are still fueling a bitter conflict between local residents, and diplomatic tension between Russia and Estonia.
On Saturday, Russian and Belarusian diplomats have laid flowers at the tomb of the Bronze Soldier in the Estonian capital Tallinn.
At the same time, hundreds of activists from the Russian youth movement Nashi have been holding a rally near the Estonian Embassy in Moscow. The participants dressed up in the uniforms of Soviet soldiers in memory of those who fought and died for Estonian freedom.
Later leftist activists are going to replace them near the Embassy. They will protest against those who claim Estonia was a victim of Soviet occupation.
Russians make up one third of Estonias population and for most of them the re-naming of the holiday is an outrage. They remember things differently.
There have been severe complaints by some of the Russian nationals living in Estonia that legislation passed there in parliament in recent years violates their human rights.
Many Russian minorities living in Estonia dont have national citizenship.
The government claims attaining citizenship is easy, while the people say its just made to look that way.
The process is especially unattractive for Estonias older Russians who have lived in the country most of their lives. They consider themselves Soviet and are proud of the past.
But for many Estonians that is nothing to be proud of. Nazi and Soviet items lie side-by-side at Tallinns Museum of Occupation. While the swastika has been banned throughout Europe, Estonia aims to get rid of Soviet symbols arguing they represent the same ideas.
Just this spring, a Soviet war memorial was removed from the centre of Tallinn and soldiers remains were re-buried on the outskirts of the city.
The move sparked violent riots and worsened relations between ethnic Russians and Estonian authorities, and soured already shaky diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Europe's leading human rights body, the Council of Europe, has encouraged both sides not let the past spoil the future.
But it keeps coming back. In August, Estonian Prosecutors launched a case against Arnold Meri accusing him of genocide. They claim the first Estonian Hero of the Soviet Union supervised the deportation of hundreds in 1949 for life-long exile in Siberia.
However, two years after the supposed crime, Arnold Meri was stripped of his hero status by Stalins regime for conducting the deportation of Estonians too mildly. Russians there call the accusations against Meri absurd and often protest and say they will continue to fight for their rights.
Perhaps one day a common language will be found allowing Estonian people to embrace the freedom of today, rather looking back at the struggles of yesterday.
"The truth is that the Red Army and its NKVD security police liberated Estonia as much as the Wehrmacht and Gestapo before them," Ilves asserted. Ilves also re-asserted his wish to set up a memorial to victims of communism: "I repeat my appeal to establish an honorable memorial to the tens of thousands of victims of communism in Estonia. Not only to the victims of Stalinism, because this would nullify the suffering of those who were imprisoned, repressed, and persecuted between 1953 and 1988." "Unfortunately, we still do not know the names of all the victims. Our job is to find out and chisel them in stone," the president said
This article is nothing but Russian propaganda. Worthless.
Not really. the truth is in there. I don’t care for the assertion that the Estonians are the ones who need to let go of the past- as opposed to the Russians who consider themselves Soviets to this day.
Many Russian minorities living in Estonia dont have national citizenship. ==
Is it the “propaganda” too?
This is an interesting article. There is a great documentary about Estonias history and the revolt against Russia- it is a Documentary about Estonia’s Singing Revolution: http://singingrevolution.com
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