Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
remember 'Baltic Way' protest against Soviet Union
August 23, 1989 : Baltic residents forms a human chain linking the cities of Tallinn, Riga and vilnius |
Lithuania, Estonia, and Latvia mark the 30th anniversary of
the 1989 ‘Baltic Way’, a historic anti-Soviet protest that saw nearly 2 million
people form a human chain in protest against Soviet occupation.
By Stefan J. Bos
"People holding hands can be stronger than people
holding guns." That's how Estonian Prime Minister Juri Ratas reflected on
what became one of the defining events in recent Soviet history.
On August 23, 1989, as the Soviet Union was weakening, some
two million Lithuanians, Latvians, and Estonians sent a powerful message.
They formed a human chain known as the 'Baltic Way' of more
than 600 kilometers or 370 miles long. They wanted to show that they were not
giving up on hopes for their independence, even after decades of Soviet Union
occupation.
The Baltic News Service recalled Friday that then-Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev said: Moscow, "started realizing very
clearly that the three Baltic nations were moving toward political independence."
No random event
Vytautas Landsbergis, who led Lithuania's drive toward
independence and served as its first president, said in published remarks:
"It was not a one-day random event...It was a climax of events and also a
leap forward that ultimately led to full independence."
That was also a reference to the Baltic states Lithuania,
Latvia, and Estonia eventually joining the European Union and the NATO military
alliance as independent states.
Politicians aren't the only people celebrating: Estonian,
Latvian and Lithuanian singers, and musicians join together these days. Their
song with the title Via Baltica remembers he 30th anniversary of the Baltic
Way.
However, the celebrations came as people in the three
nations — and many beyond — worry about Russia's renewed ambitions to influence
the region once again.
Friday also marked the 80th the anniversary of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. That secret agreement between the then Soviet Union
and Nazi Germany led to the occupation of the Baltic states and Poland.
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