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Baltic Way

The Baltic Way (Lithuanian: Baltijos kelias, Latvian: Baltijas ceļš, Estonian: Balti kett) or Baltic Chain (also "Chain of Freedom"[1]) was a peaceful political demonstration that occurred on 23 August 1989. Approximately two million people joined their hands to form a human chain spanning 690 kilometres (430 mi) across the three Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which at the time were occupied and annexed by the USSR. The central government in Moscow considered the three Baltic countries constituent republics of the Soviet Union.

The Baltic Way
Part of Singing Revolution and Revolutions of 1989
The Baltic Way: The human chain connecting the three Baltic capitals – Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius.
Date23 August 1989; 33 years ago (1989-08-23)
LocationEstonia, Latvia and Lithuania (three countries occupied by the Soviet Union)
Also known asBaltic Chain of Freedom
Cause50th anniversary of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact
ParticipantsAbout 2 million people
OutcomeIndependence of the three countries was regained by August 1991

The demonstration originated in "Black Ribbon Day" protests held in the western cities in the 1980s. It marked the 50th anniversary of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, in which Poland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Romania were (as "spheres of influence") divided between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. The Soviet-Nazi pact led to the outbreak of World War II in September 1939 and the Soviet invasion and occupation of the Baltic countries in June 1940.

The 1989 event was organised by the Baltic pro-independence movements: Rahvarinne of Estonia, the Tautas fronte of Latvia, and Sąjūdis of Lithuania, to draw global attention by demonstrating a popular desire for independence and showcasing solidarity among the three nations. It has been described as an effective publicity campaign, and an emotionally captivating and visually stunning scene.[2][3]

The event presented an opportunity for the Baltic activists to publicise the Soviet rule and position the question of Baltic independence not only as a political matter, but also as a moral issue. The Soviet authorities responded to the event with intense rhetoric,[2] but failed to take any constructive actions that could bridge the widening gap between the Baltic republics and the rest of the Soviet Union. Seven months after the protest Lithuania became the first Soviet republic to declare independence.

The 23 August 1939 Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact divided "the Baltic States (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania)" into German and Soviet "spheres of influence" (German copy)
Poster denouncing the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact

After the Revolutions of 1989, 23 August has become an official remembrance day both in the Baltic countries, in the European Union and in other countries, known as the Black Ribbon Day or as the European Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism.

Background

Baltic stance

The Soviet Union denied the existence of the secret protocols to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, even though they were widely published by western scholars after surfacing during the Nuremberg Trials.[4] Soviet propaganda also maintained that there was no occupation and that all three Baltic states voluntarily joined the Union – the People's Parliaments expressed people's will when they petitioned the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union to be admitted into the Union.[5] The Baltic states claimed that they were forcefully and illegally incorporated into the Soviet Union. Popular opinion was that the secret protocols proved that the occupation was illegal.[6]

Such an interpretation of the Pact had major implications in the Baltic public policy. If Baltic diplomats could link the Pact and the occupation, they could claim that the Soviet rule in the republics had no legal basis and therefore all Soviet laws were null and void since 1940.[7] Such a position would automatically terminate the debate over reforming Baltic sovereignty or establishing autonomy within the Soviet Union – the states never de jure belonged to the union in the first place.[8] This would open the possibility of restoring legal continuity of the independent states that existed in the interwar period. Claiming all Soviet laws had no legal power in the Baltics would also cancel the need to follow the Constitution of the Soviet Union and other formal secession procedures.[9]

In anticipation of the 50th anniversary of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, tensions were rising between the Baltics and Moscow. Lithuanian Romualdas Ozolas initiated a collection of 2 million signatures demanding withdrawal of the Red Army from Lithuania.[10] The Communist Party of Lithuania was deliberating the possibility of splitting off from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[11] On 8 August 1989, Estonians attempted to amend election laws to limit voting rights of new immigrants (mostly Russian workers).[12] This provoked mass strikes and protests of Russian workers. Moscow gained an opportunity to present the events as an "inter-ethnic conflict"[13] – it could then position itself as "peacemaker" restoring order in a troubled republic.[14]

The rising tensions in anticipation of the protest spurred hopes that Moscow would react by announcing constructive reforms to address the demands of the Baltic people.[15] At the same time fears grew of violent clampdown. Erich Honecker from East Germany and Nicolae Ceaușescu from Romania offered the Soviet Union military assistance in case it decided to use force and break up the demonstration.[16]

Soviet response

On 15 August 1989, in response to worker strikes in Estonia, Pravda, the official daily newspaper of the Soviet Union, published sharp criticism of "hysteria" driven by "extremist elements" pursuing selfish "narrow nationalist positions" against the greater benefit of the entire Soviet Union.[12] On 17 August, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union published a project of new policy regarding the union republics in Pravda. However, this project offered few new ideas: it preserved Moscow's leadership not only in foreign policy and defense, but also in economy, science, and culture.[17] The project made few cautious concessions: it proposed the republics the right to challenge national laws in a court (at the time all three Baltic states had amended their constitutions giving their Supreme Soviets the right to veto national laws)[18] and the right to promote their national languages to the level of the official state language (at the same time the project emphasised the leading role of the Russian language).[17] The project also included law banning "nationalist and chauvinist organisations," which could be used to persecute pro-independence groups in the Baltics,[18] and a proposal to replace the Treaty on the Creation of the USSR of 1922 with a new unifying agreement, which would be part of the Soviet constitution.[17]

On 18 August, Pravda published an extensive interview with Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev,[19] chairman of a 26-member commission set up by the Congress of People's Deputies to investigate the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and its secret protocols.[4] During the interview, Yakovlev admitted that the secret protocols were genuine. He condemned the protocols, but maintained that they had no impact on the incorporation of the Baltic states.[20] Thus Moscow reversed its long-standing position that the secret protocols did not exist or were forgeries, but did not concede that events of 1940 constituted an occupation. It was clearly not enough to satisfy the Baltics and on 22 August, a commission of the Supreme Soviet of the Lithuanian SSR announced that the occupation in 1940 was a direct result of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and therefore illegal.[21] It was the first time that an official Soviet body challenged the legitimacy of the Soviet rule.[22][23]

Protest

Preparation

In the light of glasnost and perestroika, street demonstrations had been increasingly growing in popularity and support. On 23 August 1986, Black Ribbon Day demonstrations were held in 21 western cities including New York, Ottawa, London, Stockholm, Seattle, Los Angeles, Perth, and Washington, DC to bring worldwide attention to human rights violations by the Soviet Union. In 1987, Black Ribbon Day protests were held in 36 cities including Vilnius, Lithuania. Protests against the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact were also held in Tallinn and Riga in 1987. In 1988, for the first time, such protests were sanctioned by the Soviet authorities and did not end in arrests.[7] The activists planned an especially large protest for the 50th anniversary of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in 1989. It is unclear when and by whom the idea of a human chain was advanced. It appears that the idea was proposed during a trilateral meeting in Pärnu on 15 July.[24] An official agreement between the Baltic activists was signed in Cēsis on 12 August.[25] Local Communist Party authorities approved the protest.[26] At the same time several different petitions, denouncing Soviet occupation, were gathering hundreds of thousands of signatures.[27]

The organisers mapped out the chain, designating specific locations to specific cities and towns to make sure that the chain would be uninterrupted. Free bus rides were provided for those who did not have other transportation.[28] Preparations spread across the country, energising the previously uninvolved rural population.[29] Some employers did not allow workers to take the day off from work (23 August fell on a Wednesday), while others sponsored the bus rides.[28] On the day of the event, special radio broadcasts helped to coordinate the effort.[26] Estonia declared a public holiday.[30]

The Baltic pro-independence movements issued a joint declaration to the world and European community in the name of the protest. The declaration condemned the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, calling it a criminal act, and urged declaration that the pact was "null and void from the moment of signing."[31] The declaration said that the question of the Baltics was a "problem of inalienable human rights" and accused the European community of "double standards" and turning a blind eye to the "last colonies of Hitler–Stalin era."[31] On the day of the protest, Pravda published an editorial titled "Only the Facts." It was a collection of quotes from pro-independence activists intended to show the unacceptable anti-Soviet nature of their work.[32]

Human chain

 
Airplane flying over the human chain
 
Baltic Way demonstration in Šiauliai, Lithuania. The symbolic coffins decorated with national flags of the three Baltic countries and placed under the flags of Nazi Germany and Soviet Union.

The chain connected the three Baltic capitals – Vilnius, Riga, and Tallinn. It ran from Vilnius along the A2 highway through Širvintos and Ukmergė to Panevėžys, then along the Via Baltica through Pasvalys to Bauska in Latvia and through Iecava and Ķekava to Riga (Bauska highway, Ziepniekkalna street, Mūkusalas street, Stone bridge, Kaļķu street, Brīvības's street) and then along road A2, through Vangaži, Sigulda, Līgatne, Mūrnieki and Drabeši, to Cēsis, from there, through Lode, to Valmiera and then through Jēči, Lizdēni, Rencēni [et], Oleri, Rūjiena and Ķoņi to Estonian town Karksi-Nuia and from there through Viljandi, Türi and Rapla to Tallinn.[33][34] The demonstrators peacefully linked hands for 15 minutes at 19:00 local time (16:00 GMT).[5] Later, a number of local gatherings and protests took place. In Vilnius, about 5,000 people gathered in the Cathedral Square, holding candles and singing national songs, including Tautiška giesmė.[35] Elsewhere, priests held masses or rang church bells. Leaders of the Estonian and Latvian Popular Fronts gathered on the border between their two republics for a symbolic funeral ceremony, in which a giant black cross was set alight.[30] The protesters held candles and pre-war national flags decorated with black ribbons in memory of the victims of the Soviet terror: Forest Brothers, deportees to Siberia, political prisoners, and other "enemies of the people."[23][35]

In Moscow's Pushkin Square, ranks of special riot police were employed when a few hundred people tried to stage a sympathy demonstration. TASS said 75 were detained for breaches of the peace, petty vandalism, and other offences.[35] About 13,000 demonstrated in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic which was also affected by the secret protocol.[36] A demonstration was held by the Baltic émigré and German sympathizers in front of the Soviet embassy in Bonn, then West Germany.

Measure[37] Estonia Latvia Lithuania
Total population (1989) 1.6M 2.7M 3.7M
Indigenous population (1959) 75% 62% 79%
Indigenous population (1989) 61% 52%[38] 80%

Most estimates of the number of participants vary between one and two million. Reuters News reported the following day that about 700,000 Estonians and 1,000,000 Lithuanians joined the protests.[36] The Latvian Popular Front estimated an attendance of 400,000.[39] Prior to the event, the organisers expected an attendance of 1,500,000 out of the about 8,000,000 inhabitants of the three states.[35] Such expectations predicted 25–30% turnout among the native population.[29] According to the official Soviet numbers, provided by TASS, there were 300,000 participants in Estonia and nearly 500,000 in Lithuania.[35] To make the chain physically possible, an attendance of approximately 200,000 people was required in each state.[5] Video footage taken from airplanes and helicopters showed an almost continuous line of people across the countryside.[22]

Immediate aftermath

"Matters have gone far. There is a serious threat to the fate of the Baltic peoples. People should know the abyss into which they are being pushed by their nationalistic leaders. Should they achieve their goals, the possible consequences could be catastrophic to these nations. A question could arise as to their very existence."

Declaration of the Central Committee on the situation in the Soviet Baltic republics, 26 August[40]

On 26 August 1989, a pronouncement from the Central Committee of the Communist Party was read during the opening 19 minutes of Vremya, the main evening news program on Soviet television.[41] It was a sternly worded warning about growing "nationalist, extremist groups" which advanced "anti-socialist and anti-Soviet" agendas.[42] The announcement claimed that these groups discriminated against ethnic minorities and terrorised those still loyal to Soviet ideals.[42] Local authorities were openly criticised for their failure to stop these activists.[32] The Baltic Way was referred to as a "nationalist hysteria." According to the pronouncement, such developments would lead to an "abyss" and "catastrophic" consequences.[27] The workers and peasants were called on to save the situation and defend Soviet ideals.[32] Overall, there were mixed messages: while indirectly threatening the use of force, it also placed hopes that the conflict could be solved via diplomatic means. It was interpreted that the Central Committee had not yet decided which way to go and had left both possibilities open.[43] The call to pro-Soviet masses illustrated that Moscow believed it still had a significant audience in the Baltics.[32] Sharp criticism of Baltic Communist Parties was interpreted as signalling that Moscow would attempt to replace their leadership.[43] However, almost immediately after the broadcast, the tone in Moscow began to soften[44] and the Soviet authorities failed to follow up on any of their threats.[45] Eventually, according to historian Alfred Erich Senn, the pronouncement became a source of embarrassment.[45]

President of the United States George H. W. Bush[46] and chancellor of West Germany Helmut Kohl urged peaceful reforms and criticised the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[47] On 31 August, the Baltic activists issued a joint declaration to Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, Secretary-General of the United Nations.[48] They claimed to be under threat of aggression and asked for an international commission to be sent to monitor the situation. On 19–20 September, the Central Committee of the Communist Party convened to discuss the nationality question – something Mikhail Gorbachev had been postponing since early 1988.[49] The plenum did not specifically address the situation in the Baltic states and reaffirmed old principles regarding the centralised Soviet Union and the dominant role of the Russian language.[50] It did promise some increase in autonomy, but was contradictory and failed to address the underlying reasons for the conflict.[51]

Evaluation

 
Baltic Way Monument in Vilnius
 
Litas commemorative coin dedicated to the Baltic Way

The human chain helped to publicise the Baltic cause around the world and symbolised solidarity among the Baltic peoples.[52] The positive image of the non-violent Singing Revolution spread among the western media.[53] The activists, including Vytautas Landsbergis, used the increased exposure to position the debate over Baltic independence as a moral, and not just political question: reclaiming independence would be restoration of historical justice and liquidation of Stalinism.[54][55] It was an emotional event, strengthening the determination to seek independence. The protest highlighted that the pro-independence movements, established just a year before, became more assertive and radical: they shifted from demanding greater freedom from Moscow to full independence.[22]

In December 1989, the Congress of People's Deputies accepted and Mikhail Gorbachev signed the report by Yakovlev's commission condemning the secret protocols of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[56] In February 1990, the first free democratic elections to the Supreme Soviets took place in all three Baltic states and pro-independence candidates won majorities. On 11 March 1990, within seven months of the Baltic Way, Lithuania became the first Soviet state to declare independence. The independence of all three Baltic states was recognised by most western countries by the end of 1991.

This protest was one of the earliest and longest unbroken human chains in history. Similar human chains were later organised in many East European countries and regions of the USSR and, more recently, in Taiwan (228 Hand-in-Hand Rally) and Catalonia (Catalan Way). On the 30th anniversary of the Baltic Way, a 30-mile (48 km) human chain called the Hong Kong Way was formed during the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests.[57] Documents recording the Baltic Way were added to UNESCO's Memory of the World Register in 2009 in recognition of their value in documenting history.[58][59]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Wolchik, Sharon L.; Jane Leftwich Curry (2007). Central and East European Politics: From Communism to Democracy. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 238. ISBN 978-0-7425-4068-2.
  2. ^ a b Dreifelds, Juris (1996). Latvia in Transition. Cambridge University Press. pp. 34–35. ISBN 0-521-55537-X.
  3. ^ Anušauskas (2005), p. 619
  4. ^ a b United Press International (12 August 1989). "Baltic Deal / Soviets Publish Secret Hitler Pact". The San Francisco Chronicle.
  5. ^ a b c Conradi, Peter (18 August 1989). "Hundreds of Thousands to Demonstrate in Soviet Baltics". Reuters News.
  6. ^ Senn (1995), p. 33
  7. ^ a b Dejevsky, Mary (23 August 1989). "Baltic Groups Plan Mass Protest; Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia's Struggle for Independence". The Times.
  8. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), p. 336
  9. ^ Senn (1995), p. 91
  10. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), pp. 317, 326
  11. ^ Conradi, Peter (16 August 1989). "Lithuania's Communist Party Considers Split from Moscow". Reuters.
  12. ^ a b Fisher, Matthew (16 August 1989). "Moscow Condemns 'Hysteria' in Baltics". The Globe and Mail.
  13. ^ Blitz, James (16 August 1989). "Moscow Voices Growing Concern Over Ethnic Conflict". Financial Times. p. 2.
  14. ^ Senn (1995), p. 30
  15. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), p. 330
  16. ^ Ashbourne, Alexandra (1999). Lithuania: The Rebirth of a Nation, 1991–1994. Lexington Books. p. 24. ISBN 0-7391-0027-0.
  17. ^ a b c Laurinavičius (2008), p. 334
  18. ^ a b "Soviet party leaders accept Baltic demand". Houston Chronicle. Associated Press. 17 August 1989.
  19. ^ Vardys, Vytas Stanley; Judith B. Sedaitis (1997). Lithuania: The Rebel Nation. Westview Series on the Post-Soviet Republics. Westview Press. pp. 150–151. ISBN 0-8133-1839-4.
  20. ^ Remnick, David (19 August 1989). "Kremlin Acknowledges Secret Pact on Baltics; Soviets Deny Republics Annexed Illegally". The Washington Post.
  21. ^ Senn (1995), p. 66
  22. ^ a b c Fein, Esther B. (24 August 1989). "Baltic Citizens Link Hands to Demand Independence". The New York Times.
  23. ^ a b Dobbs, Michael (24 August 1989). "Huge Protest 50 Years After Soviet Seizure". The San Francisco Chronicle.
  24. ^ Anušauskas (2005), p. 617
  25. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), p. 326. Full text 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ a b Dobbs, Michael (24 August 1989). "Baltic States Link in Protest 'So Our Children Can Be Free'; 'Chain' Participants Decry Soviet Takeover". The Washington Post.
  27. ^ a b Imse, Ann (27 August 1989). "Baltic Residents Make Bold New Push For Independence". Associated Press.
  28. ^ a b Alanen (2004), p. 100
  29. ^ a b Alanen (2004), p. 78
  30. ^ a b Lodge, Robin (23 August 1989). "More than Two Million Join Human Chain in Soviet Baltics". Reuters News.
  31. ^ a b (PDF). Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian National Commissions for UNESCO. 17 August 1989. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  32. ^ a b c d Senn (1995), p. 67
  33. ^ [“People's Front Museum expositions "Awakening - LTF - Independence" realization of an artistic solution”]. www.ltfmuz.lv. Archived from the original on 2013-12-26. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 July 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  35. ^ a b c d e Imse, Ann (23 August 1989). "Baltic Residents Form Human Chain in Defiance of Soviet Rule". Associated Press.
  36. ^ a b Lodge, Robin (23 August 1989). "Human Chain Spanning: Soviet Baltics Shows Nationalist Feeling". Reuters News.
  37. ^ Dobbs, Michael (27 August 1989). "Independence Fever Sets Up Confrontation". The Washington Post.
  38. ^ "Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia". csb.lv. Retrieved 22 September 2010.[permanent dead link]
  39. ^ "Pravda chides Baltic activists". Tulsa World. Associated Press. 24 August 1989.
  40. ^ Misiunas, Romuald J.; Rein Taagepera (1993). The Baltic States: Years of Dependence 1940–1990 (expanded ed.). University of California Press. p. 328. ISBN 0-520-08228-1.
  41. ^ Fein, Esther B. (27 August 1989). "Moscow Condemns nationalist 'Virus' in 3 Baltic Lands". The New York Times.
  42. ^ a b Remnick, David (27 August 1989). "Kremlin Condemns Baltic Nationalists; Soviets Warn Separatism Risks 'Disaster'". The Washington Post.
  43. ^ a b Laurinavičius (2008), p. 347
  44. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), p. 350
  45. ^ a b Senn (1995), p. 69
  46. ^ Hines, Cragg (29 August 1989). "Bush Urges Restraint in Baltics Dealings". Houston Chronicle.
  47. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), pp. 351–352
  48. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), p. 352
  49. ^ Senn (1995), p. 70
  50. ^ Laurinavičius (2008), p. 361
  51. ^ Winfrey, Paul (25 September 1989). "Flaws in Soviet Plan to End Strife: Moscow's Attempt to Cope with Nationalist Turmoil". Financial Times.
  52. ^ Taagepera, Rein (1993). Estonia: Return to Independence. Westview Series on the Post-Soviet Republics. Westview Press. p. 157. ISBN 0-8133-1703-7.
  53. ^ Plakans, Andrejs (1995). The Latvians: A Short History. Studies of Nationalities. Hoover Press. p. 174. ISBN 0-8179-9302-9.
  54. ^ Katell, Andrew (22 August 1989). "Baltics Call Soviet Annexation a 'Crime,' Equate Hitler, Stalin". Associated Press.
  55. ^ Senn (1995), p. 155
  56. ^ Senn (1995), p. 78
  57. ^ Rasmi, Adam (23 August 2019). "Hong Kong emulates a human chain that broke Soviet rule". MSN.
  58. ^ "Thirty-Five Documentary Properties Added to UNESCO's Memory of the World Register". ArtDaily.org. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  59. ^ "The Baltic Way – Human Chain Linking Three States in Their Drive for Freedom". UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 2021-07-21. Retrieved 2009-12-14.

References

External links

  • Summary by the three countries' National Commissions for UNESCO
  • Footage of the Baltic Way with soundtrack of the Lithuanian independence song Pabudome ir kelkimės
  • Documentary Baltijos kelias by the Lithuanian Television
  • , a virtual gallery hosted by the Government of Lithuania

baltic, this, article, about, political, demonstration, cycle, race, baltic, chain, tour, mathematical, contest, mathematical, contest, lithuanian, baltijos, kelias, latvian, baltijas, ceļš, estonian, balti, kett, baltic, chain, also, chain, freedom, peaceful,. This article is about the political demonstration For the cycle race see Baltic Chain Tour For the mathematical contest see Baltic Way mathematical contest The Baltic Way Lithuanian Baltijos kelias Latvian Baltijas cels Estonian Balti kett or Baltic Chain also Chain of Freedom 1 was a peaceful political demonstration that occurred on 23 August 1989 Approximately two million people joined their hands to form a human chain spanning 690 kilometres 430 mi across the three Baltic states of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania which at the time were occupied and annexed by the USSR The central government in Moscow considered the three Baltic countries constituent republics of the Soviet Union The Baltic WayPart of Singing Revolution and Revolutions of 1989The Baltic Way The human chain connecting the three Baltic capitals Tallinn Riga and Vilnius Date23 August 1989 33 years ago 1989 08 23 LocationEstonia Latvia and Lithuania three countries occupied by the Soviet Union Also known asBaltic Chain of FreedomCause50th anniversary of the Molotov Ribbentrop PactParticipantsAbout 2 million peopleOutcomeIndependence of the three countries was regained by August 1991The demonstration originated in Black Ribbon Day protests held in the western cities in the 1980s It marked the 50th anniversary of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact in which Poland Finland Estonia Latvia Lithuania and Romania were as spheres of influence divided between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany The Soviet Nazi pact led to the outbreak of World War II in September 1939 and the Soviet invasion and occupation of the Baltic countries in June 1940 The 1989 event was organised by the Baltic pro independence movements Rahvarinne of Estonia the Tautas fronte of Latvia and Sajudis of Lithuania to draw global attention by demonstrating a popular desire for independence and showcasing solidarity among the three nations It has been described as an effective publicity campaign and an emotionally captivating and visually stunning scene 2 3 The event presented an opportunity for the Baltic activists to publicise the Soviet rule and position the question of Baltic independence not only as a political matter but also as a moral issue The Soviet authorities responded to the event with intense rhetoric 2 but failed to take any constructive actions that could bridge the widening gap between the Baltic republics and the rest of the Soviet Union Seven months after the protest Lithuania became the first Soviet republic to declare independence The 23 August 1939 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact divided the Baltic States Finland Estonia Latvia Lithuania into German and Soviet spheres of influence German copy Poster denouncing the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact After the Revolutions of 1989 23 August has become an official remembrance day both in the Baltic countries in the European Union and in other countries known as the Black Ribbon Day or as the European Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism Contents 1 Background 1 1 Baltic stance 1 2 Soviet response 2 Protest 2 1 Preparation 2 2 Human chain 2 3 Immediate aftermath 3 Evaluation 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBackground EditBaltic stance Edit The Soviet Union denied the existence of the secret protocols to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact even though they were widely published by western scholars after surfacing during the Nuremberg Trials 4 Soviet propaganda also maintained that there was no occupation and that all three Baltic states voluntarily joined the Union the People s Parliaments expressed people s will when they petitioned the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union to be admitted into the Union 5 The Baltic states claimed that they were forcefully and illegally incorporated into the Soviet Union Popular opinion was that the secret protocols proved that the occupation was illegal 6 Such an interpretation of the Pact had major implications in the Baltic public policy If Baltic diplomats could link the Pact and the occupation they could claim that the Soviet rule in the republics had no legal basis and therefore all Soviet laws were null and void since 1940 7 Such a position would automatically terminate the debate over reforming Baltic sovereignty or establishing autonomy within the Soviet Union the states never de jure belonged to the union in the first place 8 This would open the possibility of restoring legal continuity of the independent states that existed in the interwar period Claiming all Soviet laws had no legal power in the Baltics would also cancel the need to follow the Constitution of the Soviet Union and other formal secession procedures 9 In anticipation of the 50th anniversary of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact tensions were rising between the Baltics and Moscow Lithuanian Romualdas Ozolas initiated a collection of 2 million signatures demanding withdrawal of the Red Army from Lithuania 10 The Communist Party of Lithuania was deliberating the possibility of splitting off from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 11 On 8 August 1989 Estonians attempted to amend election laws to limit voting rights of new immigrants mostly Russian workers 12 This provoked mass strikes and protests of Russian workers Moscow gained an opportunity to present the events as an inter ethnic conflict 13 it could then position itself as peacemaker restoring order in a troubled republic 14 The rising tensions in anticipation of the protest spurred hopes that Moscow would react by announcing constructive reforms to address the demands of the Baltic people 15 At the same time fears grew of violent clampdown Erich Honecker from East Germany and Nicolae Ceaușescu from Romania offered the Soviet Union military assistance in case it decided to use force and break up the demonstration 16 Soviet response Edit On 15 August 1989 in response to worker strikes in Estonia Pravda the official daily newspaper of the Soviet Union published sharp criticism of hysteria driven by extremist elements pursuing selfish narrow nationalist positions against the greater benefit of the entire Soviet Union 12 On 17 August the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union published a project of new policy regarding the union republics in Pravda However this project offered few new ideas it preserved Moscow s leadership not only in foreign policy and defense but also in economy science and culture 17 The project made few cautious concessions it proposed the republics the right to challenge national laws in a court at the time all three Baltic states had amended their constitutions giving their Supreme Soviets the right to veto national laws 18 and the right to promote their national languages to the level of the official state language at the same time the project emphasised the leading role of the Russian language 17 The project also included law banning nationalist and chauvinist organisations which could be used to persecute pro independence groups in the Baltics 18 and a proposal to replace the Treaty on the Creation of the USSR of 1922 with a new unifying agreement which would be part of the Soviet constitution 17 On 18 August Pravda published an extensive interview with Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev 19 chairman of a 26 member commission set up by the Congress of People s Deputies to investigate the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact and its secret protocols 4 During the interview Yakovlev admitted that the secret protocols were genuine He condemned the protocols but maintained that they had no impact on the incorporation of the Baltic states 20 Thus Moscow reversed its long standing position that the secret protocols did not exist or were forgeries but did not concede that events of 1940 constituted an occupation It was clearly not enough to satisfy the Baltics and on 22 August a commission of the Supreme Soviet of the Lithuanian SSR announced that the occupation in 1940 was a direct result of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact and therefore illegal 21 It was the first time that an official Soviet body challenged the legitimacy of the Soviet rule 22 23 Protest EditPreparation Edit In the light of glasnost and perestroika street demonstrations had been increasingly growing in popularity and support On 23 August 1986 Black Ribbon Day demonstrations were held in 21 western cities including New York Ottawa London Stockholm Seattle Los Angeles Perth and Washington DC to bring worldwide attention to human rights violations by the Soviet Union In 1987 Black Ribbon Day protests were held in 36 cities including Vilnius Lithuania Protests against the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact were also held in Tallinn and Riga in 1987 In 1988 for the first time such protests were sanctioned by the Soviet authorities and did not end in arrests 7 The activists planned an especially large protest for the 50th anniversary of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact in 1989 It is unclear when and by whom the idea of a human chain was advanced It appears that the idea was proposed during a trilateral meeting in Parnu on 15 July 24 An official agreement between the Baltic activists was signed in Cesis on 12 August 25 Local Communist Party authorities approved the protest 26 At the same time several different petitions denouncing Soviet occupation were gathering hundreds of thousands of signatures 27 The organisers mapped out the chain designating specific locations to specific cities and towns to make sure that the chain would be uninterrupted Free bus rides were provided for those who did not have other transportation 28 Preparations spread across the country energising the previously uninvolved rural population 29 Some employers did not allow workers to take the day off from work 23 August fell on a Wednesday while others sponsored the bus rides 28 On the day of the event special radio broadcasts helped to coordinate the effort 26 Estonia declared a public holiday 30 The Baltic pro independence movements issued a joint declaration to the world and European community in the name of the protest The declaration condemned the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact calling it a criminal act and urged declaration that the pact was null and void from the moment of signing 31 The declaration said that the question of the Baltics was a problem of inalienable human rights and accused the European community of double standards and turning a blind eye to the last colonies of Hitler Stalin era 31 On the day of the protest Pravda published an editorial titled Only the Facts It was a collection of quotes from pro independence activists intended to show the unacceptable anti Soviet nature of their work 32 Diagram assigning each city and town a stretch of the road to cover People carried portable radios to coordinate the efforts and badges to show unity of the three states Traffic jam on the A2 highwayHuman chain Edit Airplane flying over the human chain Baltic Way demonstration in Siauliai Lithuania The symbolic coffins decorated with national flags of the three Baltic countries and placed under the flags of Nazi Germany and Soviet Union The chain connected the three Baltic capitals Vilnius Riga and Tallinn It ran from Vilnius along the A2 highway through Sirvintos and Ukmerge to Panevezys then along the Via Baltica through Pasvalys to Bauska in Latvia and through Iecava and kekava to Riga Bauska highway Ziepniekkalna street Mukusalas street Stone bridge Kalku street Brivibas s street and then along road A2 through Vangazi Sigulda Ligatne Murnieki and Drabesi to Cesis from there through Lode to Valmiera and then through Jeci Lizdeni Renceni et Oleri Rujiena and koni to Estonian town Karksi Nuia and from there through Viljandi Turi and Rapla to Tallinn 33 34 The demonstrators peacefully linked hands for 15 minutes at 19 00 local time 16 00 GMT 5 Later a number of local gatherings and protests took place In Vilnius about 5 000 people gathered in the Cathedral Square holding candles and singing national songs including Tautiska giesme 35 Elsewhere priests held masses or rang church bells Leaders of the Estonian and Latvian Popular Fronts gathered on the border between their two republics for a symbolic funeral ceremony in which a giant black cross was set alight 30 The protesters held candles and pre war national flags decorated with black ribbons in memory of the victims of the Soviet terror Forest Brothers deportees to Siberia political prisoners and other enemies of the people 23 35 In Moscow s Pushkin Square ranks of special riot police were employed when a few hundred people tried to stage a sympathy demonstration TASS said 75 were detained for breaches of the peace petty vandalism and other offences 35 About 13 000 demonstrated in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic which was also affected by the secret protocol 36 A demonstration was held by the Baltic emigre and German sympathizers in front of the Soviet embassy in Bonn then West Germany Measure 37 Estonia Latvia LithuaniaTotal population 1989 1 6M 2 7M 3 7MIndigenous population 1959 75 62 79 Indigenous population 1989 61 52 38 80 Most estimates of the number of participants vary between one and two million Reuters News reported the following day that about 700 000 Estonians and 1 000 000 Lithuanians joined the protests 36 The Latvian Popular Front estimated an attendance of 400 000 39 Prior to the event the organisers expected an attendance of 1 500 000 out of the about 8 000 000 inhabitants of the three states 35 Such expectations predicted 25 30 turnout among the native population 29 According to the official Soviet numbers provided by TASS there were 300 000 participants in Estonia and nearly 500 000 in Lithuania 35 To make the chain physically possible an attendance of approximately 200 000 people was required in each state 5 Video footage taken from airplanes and helicopters showed an almost continuous line of people across the countryside 22 In Estonia In Latvia In LithuaniaImmediate aftermath Edit Matters have gone far There is a serious threat to the fate of the Baltic peoples People should know the abyss into which they are being pushed by their nationalistic leaders Should they achieve their goals the possible consequences could be catastrophic to these nations A question could arise as to their very existence Declaration of the Central Committee on the situation in the Soviet Baltic republics 26 August 40 On 26 August 1989 a pronouncement from the Central Committee of the Communist Party was read during the opening 19 minutes of Vremya the main evening news program on Soviet television 41 It was a sternly worded warning about growing nationalist extremist groups which advanced anti socialist and anti Soviet agendas 42 The announcement claimed that these groups discriminated against ethnic minorities and terrorised those still loyal to Soviet ideals 42 Local authorities were openly criticised for their failure to stop these activists 32 The Baltic Way was referred to as a nationalist hysteria According to the pronouncement such developments would lead to an abyss and catastrophic consequences 27 The workers and peasants were called on to save the situation and defend Soviet ideals 32 Overall there were mixed messages while indirectly threatening the use of force it also placed hopes that the conflict could be solved via diplomatic means It was interpreted that the Central Committee had not yet decided which way to go and had left both possibilities open 43 The call to pro Soviet masses illustrated that Moscow believed it still had a significant audience in the Baltics 32 Sharp criticism of Baltic Communist Parties was interpreted as signalling that Moscow would attempt to replace their leadership 43 However almost immediately after the broadcast the tone in Moscow began to soften 44 and the Soviet authorities failed to follow up on any of their threats 45 Eventually according to historian Alfred Erich Senn the pronouncement became a source of embarrassment 45 President of the United States George H W Bush 46 and chancellor of West Germany Helmut Kohl urged peaceful reforms and criticised the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 47 On 31 August the Baltic activists issued a joint declaration to Javier Perez de Cuellar Secretary General of the United Nations 48 They claimed to be under threat of aggression and asked for an international commission to be sent to monitor the situation On 19 20 September the Central Committee of the Communist Party convened to discuss the nationality question something Mikhail Gorbachev had been postponing since early 1988 49 The plenum did not specifically address the situation in the Baltic states and reaffirmed old principles regarding the centralised Soviet Union and the dominant role of the Russian language 50 It did promise some increase in autonomy but was contradictory and failed to address the underlying reasons for the conflict 51 Evaluation Edit Baltic Way Monument in Vilnius Litas commemorative coin dedicated to the Baltic Way The human chain helped to publicise the Baltic cause around the world and symbolised solidarity among the Baltic peoples 52 The positive image of the non violent Singing Revolution spread among the western media 53 The activists including Vytautas Landsbergis used the increased exposure to position the debate over Baltic independence as a moral and not just political question reclaiming independence would be restoration of historical justice and liquidation of Stalinism 54 55 It was an emotional event strengthening the determination to seek independence The protest highlighted that the pro independence movements established just a year before became more assertive and radical they shifted from demanding greater freedom from Moscow to full independence 22 In December 1989 the Congress of People s Deputies accepted and Mikhail Gorbachev signed the report by Yakovlev s commission condemning the secret protocols of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 56 In February 1990 the first free democratic elections to the Supreme Soviets took place in all three Baltic states and pro independence candidates won majorities On 11 March 1990 within seven months of the Baltic Way Lithuania became the first Soviet state to declare independence The independence of all three Baltic states was recognised by most western countries by the end of 1991 This protest was one of the earliest and longest unbroken human chains in history Similar human chains were later organised in many East European countries and regions of the USSR and more recently in Taiwan 228 Hand in Hand Rally and Catalonia Catalan Way On the 30th anniversary of the Baltic Way a 30 mile 48 km human chain called the Hong Kong Way was formed during the 2019 20 Hong Kong protests 57 Documents recording the Baltic Way were added to UNESCO s Memory of the World Register in 2009 in recognition of their value in documenting history 58 59 See also EditThe Baltics Are Waking Up Hands Across America 1986 71st anniversary of Ukrainian unification 1990 228 Hand in Hand rally in Taiwan 2004 Catalan Way 2013 Hong Kong Way 2019 Notes Edit Wolchik Sharon L Jane Leftwich Curry 2007 Central and East European Politics From Communism to Democracy Rowman amp Littlefield p 238 ISBN 978 0 7425 4068 2 a b Dreifelds Juris 1996 Latvia in Transition Cambridge University Press pp 34 35 ISBN 0 521 55537 X Anusauskas 2005 p 619 a b United Press International 12 August 1989 Baltic Deal Soviets Publish Secret Hitler Pact The San Francisco Chronicle a b c Conradi Peter 18 August 1989 Hundreds of Thousands to Demonstrate in Soviet Baltics Reuters News Senn 1995 p 33 a b Dejevsky Mary 23 August 1989 Baltic Groups Plan Mass Protest Latvia Lithuania and Estonia s Struggle for Independence The Times Laurinavicius 2008 p 336 Senn 1995 p 91 Laurinavicius 2008 pp 317 326 Conradi Peter 16 August 1989 Lithuania s Communist Party Considers Split from Moscow Reuters a b Fisher Matthew 16 August 1989 Moscow Condemns Hysteria in Baltics The Globe and Mail Blitz James 16 August 1989 Moscow Voices Growing Concern Over Ethnic Conflict Financial Times p 2 Senn 1995 p 30 Laurinavicius 2008 p 330 Ashbourne Alexandra 1999 Lithuania The Rebirth of a Nation 1991 1994 Lexington Books p 24 ISBN 0 7391 0027 0 a b c Laurinavicius 2008 p 334 a b Soviet party leaders accept Baltic demand Houston Chronicle Associated Press 17 August 1989 Vardys Vytas Stanley Judith B Sedaitis 1997 Lithuania The Rebel Nation Westview Series on the Post Soviet Republics Westview Press pp 150 151 ISBN 0 8133 1839 4 Remnick David 19 August 1989 Kremlin Acknowledges Secret Pact on Baltics Soviets Deny Republics Annexed Illegally The Washington Post Senn 1995 p 66 a b c Fein Esther B 24 August 1989 Baltic Citizens Link Hands to Demand Independence The New York Times a b Dobbs Michael 24 August 1989 Huge Protest 50 Years After Soviet Seizure The San Francisco Chronicle Anusauskas 2005 p 617 Laurinavicius 2008 p 326 Full text Archived 2011 07 23 at the Wayback Machine a b Dobbs Michael 24 August 1989 Baltic States Link in Protest So Our Children Can Be Free Chain Participants Decry Soviet Takeover The Washington Post a b Imse Ann 27 August 1989 Baltic Residents Make Bold New Push For Independence Associated Press a b Alanen 2004 p 100 a b Alanen 2004 p 78 a b Lodge Robin 23 August 1989 More than Two Million Join Human Chain in Soviet Baltics Reuters News a b The Baltic Way PDF Estonian Latvian and Lithuanian National Commissions for UNESCO 17 August 1989 Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 20 August 2009 a b c d Senn 1995 p 67 Tautas frontes muzeja ekspozicijas Atmoda LTF Neatkariba makslinieciska risinajuma realizacija People s Front Museum expositions Awakening LTF Independence realization of an artistic solution www ltfmuz lv Archived from the original on 2013 12 26 Retrieved 2013 07 10 The Baltic Way Archived from the original on 25 July 2013 Retrieved 10 July 2013 a b c d e Imse Ann 23 August 1989 Baltic Residents Form Human Chain in Defiance of Soviet Rule Associated Press a b Lodge Robin 23 August 1989 Human Chain Spanning Soviet Baltics Shows Nationalist Feeling Reuters News Dobbs Michael 27 August 1989 Independence Fever Sets Up Confrontation The Washington Post Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia csb lv Retrieved 22 September 2010 permanent dead link Pravda chides Baltic activists Tulsa World Associated Press 24 August 1989 Misiunas Romuald J Rein Taagepera 1993 The Baltic States Years of Dependence 1940 1990 expanded ed University of California Press p 328 ISBN 0 520 08228 1 Fein Esther B 27 August 1989 Moscow Condemns nationalist Virus in 3 Baltic Lands The New York Times a b Remnick David 27 August 1989 Kremlin Condemns Baltic Nationalists Soviets Warn Separatism Risks Disaster The Washington Post a b Laurinavicius 2008 p 347 Laurinavicius 2008 p 350 a b Senn 1995 p 69 Hines Cragg 29 August 1989 Bush Urges Restraint in Baltics Dealings Houston Chronicle Laurinavicius 2008 pp 351 352 Laurinavicius 2008 p 352 Senn 1995 p 70 Laurinavicius 2008 p 361 Winfrey Paul 25 September 1989 Flaws in Soviet Plan to End Strife Moscow s Attempt to Cope with Nationalist Turmoil Financial Times Taagepera Rein 1993 Estonia Return to Independence Westview Series on the Post Soviet Republics Westview Press p 157 ISBN 0 8133 1703 7 Plakans Andrejs 1995 The Latvians A Short History Studies of Nationalities Hoover Press p 174 ISBN 0 8179 9302 9 Katell Andrew 22 August 1989 Baltics Call Soviet Annexation a Crime Equate Hitler Stalin Associated Press Senn 1995 p 155 Senn 1995 p 78 Rasmi Adam 23 August 2019 Hong Kong emulates a human chain that broke Soviet rule MSN Thirty Five Documentary Properties Added to UNESCO s Memory of the World Register ArtDaily org Retrieved 31 July 2009 The Baltic Way Human Chain Linking Three States in Their Drive for Freedom UNESCO Memory of the World Programme 2021 07 21 Retrieved 2009 12 14 References EditAlanen Ilkka 2004 Mapping the Rural Problem in the Baltic Countryside Transition Processes in the Rural Areas of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania Perspectives on Rural Policy and Planning Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7546 3434 5 Anusauskas Arvydas et al eds 2005 Lietuva 1940 1990 in Lithuanian Vilnius Lietuvos gyventoju genocido ir rezistencijos tyrimo centras ISBN 9986 757 65 7 Laurinavicius Ceslovas Vladas Sirutavicius 2008 Sajudis nuo persitvarkymo iki kovo 11 osios Part I Lietuvos istorija in Lithuanian Vol XII Baltos lankos Lithuanian Institute of History ISBN 978 9955 23 164 6 Senn Alfred Erich 1995 Gorbachev s Failure in Lithuania St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 12457 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baltic Way Summary by the three countries National Commissions for UNESCO Full text of joint Baltic declaration to the world Footage of the Baltic Way with soundtrack of the Lithuanian independence song Pabudome ir kelkimes Documentary Baltijos kelias by the Lithuanian Television Photo album a virtual gallery hosted by the Government of Lithuania Stamps of the Baltic States Mail Offices commemorating the Baltic Way Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baltic Way amp oldid 1143315792, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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