The newly formed Russian Baltic Party of Estonia plans to create Estonia's first Baltic Russian history museum next fall as part of its platform to improve life for Estonia's Russian minorities, said party board member Viktor Lanberg.
Published:
21 July 2000 y., Friday
RBPE formed last June as a splinter of the Russian-speaking People's Trust party. One of its major cultural projects includes a museum intended to preserve Russian culture in the Baltics and improve attitudes toward ethnic Russians living in Estonia, Lanberg said.
Lanberg said he hopes the museum, which will be housed in Tallinn, will help raise awareness that Russians were contributing members of the Baltics long before the great influx of Soviet Russians led to tensions between the two cultures.
"It is politically not fair, and historically not right to think that the history of Russians in the Baltics started in the 1940s," said Lanberg, adding that Russian immigrant groups were important contributors to Estonian culture as far back as the 13th century - long before Soviet Russification policies
increased the Russian population of Estonia to nearly 40 percent.
Lanberg said the party, which now has 800 members, will try to find funding for the museum from next year's budget. If Parliament approves the funding, the museum will house historical documents, photos and artifacts from as far back as the 13th century.
Much of the museum's content will be contributed by archivist Alexander Dormidontov, whose photo collection of Baltic-Russian culture has traveled throughout Estonia and was on display at Parliament last spring.
Dormidontov, who will be a permanent board member of the museum, said he wanted to find a better way to preserve what he and others have collected as well as give ethnic Estonians and Russians another perspective on the country's history.
Šaltinis:
The Baltic Times
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A long-simmering scandal of phantom voters and rigged elections is beginning to bubble over in Paris.
more »
Officials in both Latvia and Estonia have announced the first annual increases in the number of births for more than a decade.
more »
Czech, Hungarian Catholic Primates Celebrate Hungarian Millennium.
more »
Hillary Rodham Clinton's support for women's organizations in former Soviet republics could help boost their status.
more »
The last chief of the communist Czechoslovak secret police (StB), General Alojz Lorenc, is to stand trial before a Slovak military court.
more »
Deadline Set for Russia Regions to Synchronise Laws.
more »
The American Civil Liberties Union is backing former Intel employee Kourosh Hamidi who was ordered to stop criticising Intel in internal emails.
more »
Poland rapturously celebrated on Thursday the 80th birthday of Pope John Paul II, the country's most famous son -- and nowhere more so than in his hometown of Wadowice.
more »
Sri Lanka: Foreign minister calls for talks to end `futile' 17-year war.
more »
Tens of thousands of women rallied in Washington on Sunday to urge legislators to enact stricter gun-control measures and protect their children.
more »