Gryn ✌ Profile picture
Jun 14 16 tweets 6 min read Read on X
So the Xitter algorithm is hiding posts about the deportations of people from the occupied Baltics by the s0viets (ru🐍🐍ians) that began today and continued from 1940 to 1953.
Well guess what?
Here’s a thread about it!
I promise you’ll find at least some facts you didn’t know 🧵 Image
There were two types of people that our dear neighbours from the east deported once they signed the secret agreement with the nazis (Molotov-Ribentrop Pact): regular deportees who were deported, often with the whole family, and dropped off in Siberia, and political prisoners 🧵
Political prisoners were those who actively resisted soviet occupation, they were sent to soviet concentration camps (gulags).
But often charges were made up and you were sent there just because. It was very common.
Here’s my grandma, 24, before being sent to a gulag for 7 yrs 🧵 Image
The russification of occupied territories of Ukraine that we see today is an old ru tradition, going back to the USSR, the russian empire, and earlier.
Mass killing and deportation of people and bringing russians to replace them is something russia was never made to answer for 🧵 Image
Living conditions in Siberia were extremely harsh, whichever group of deportees you belonged to.
People were simply dropped off the train in the middle of nowhere, and had to build houses and find food by themselves.
That is, if you even survived the journey. Many did not.🧵
Left photo: my relative, holding the baton, celebrating victory in the Lithuanian Athletics Championship of 1937, with her teammates.
Right photo: Lithuanian deportees in Siberia post 1940 occupation.🧵
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Baltic people were always mostly agricultural nations, and had an extremely strong relation to their land, going back to the Baltic pagan religion, many elements of which are still part of the Baltic identity.
Soviet deportations tore the very fabric of this identity.🧵
Recommended reading: Between Shades of Gray, a New York Times best seller novel by Lithuanian-American novelist Ruta Sepetys 🧵
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Between_S…
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Recommended watching: In the Crosswind, a film by Estonian director Martti Helde.
🧵
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_the_Cr…
Since 2006, a project called Mission Siberia (Misija Sibiras) was organised in Lithuania 🇱🇹.
Every year, a group of young people was selected and travelled by train to the places where Lithuanian people had been deported🧵

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The goal was to gather information about those deported, those who died, went missing, or even still live somewhere in Siberia.
Also, to keep the memories alive by engaging the young generation.
Participants would tidy up abandoned Lithuanian cemeteries and pay their respects🧵 Image
In 2021, a year before the full-scale russian invasion in Ukraine 🇺🇦, Mission Siberia stopped organising the expeditions because 🇷🇺 became too hostile.
During 15 years over 14000 young Lithuanians applied for the project, and over 200 of them got to travel to Siberia🧵 Image
Over 170 places where Lithuanians had been deported were visited in the territory of present-day russia, but also in Tajikistan and Kazakhstan.
Misija Sibiras was a unique project that gathered a lot of important historical information in russia. This is not possible anymore.🧵 Image
Later in 2021 Putin ordered to close Memorial, the oldest human rights organisation in russia.
Founded in late 1980s, its goal was to document political repressions in the Soviet Union and build a database of victims of the Great Terror and gulag camps

🧵en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memorial_…
Once again, russians are supposed to forget the past and erase from memory all the crimes they participated in.
Then, crimes against humanity and genocide can be committed without a single pang of conscience.
We are seeing it now... again.
#SlavaUkraini
#GeorgiaIsEurope Image
P.s. A fantastic thread on this topic, highly recommended:

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More from @gryn_a

Apr 20
Fellas and friends, could you tell us how much the events in Georgia 🇬🇪 during the past 5 days are being covered by your local media?
TV, radio, newspapers, news websites.
Because what I'm seeing is that these incredibly important, Maidan-like events get almost zero attention🧵 Image
I just can't feckin believe it.
Groundbreaking events in Europe's history are unfolding right under out noses, yet what headlines do I see right now?
Local political squabbles.
Debates about LGBT issues.
Spring 2024 fashion trends.
Chaos in Equador.
Um... Hello?!?!?🧵 Image
I'm sure that all fellas would agree: NAFO, although primarily meant to support Ukraine, stands firmly with anyone suffering from russian aggression, and supports Georgia in its fight for democracy and its future in Europe.
So here's what I'd like to ask all of you.🧵 Image
Read 5 tweets
Apr 17
The feeling of betrayal is not new to us in the Baltics.
It triggers a strong dejavu.
In the 20th century, the Western world rushed to get rid of the nazi disease, but not the soviet one.
Communism was never universally condemned.
This was an extremely costly mistake.🧵 Image
In Lithuania, the armed resistance was holding on for 10 (!!!) years after the soviet occupation, hoping against hope for foreign help.
russians would throw bodies of murdered resistance fighters on the streets of towns and watch passers by.
If anyone shed a trear...🧵 Image
...they were arrested because they were likely family members or friends, tortured and shipped off to Siberia.
Just like Ukrainians today, Lithuanians, including many members of my family, fought and died to protect our country from the murderous psychopaths from the east.🧵 Image
Read 9 tweets
Mar 11
At the request of people who didn’t know about Mantas Kvedaravičius and his last days, here’s a new thread.
It’s long. May this become witness to Mantas’ life and work, and to the incredible courage of his Ukrainian fiancee Hanna Bilobrova as well as people of Mariupol.🧵 Image
Hanna and Mantas had met during his earlier film project, they were to get married in September 2022.
On March 3 they were working on a film in Uganda, Mantas decided to go to Mariupol. Hanna insisted
on going with him.🧵 Image
About his first documentary on Mariupol (2016) Mantas said that he was interested in people who live in a place permeated by the feeling of war.
Let’s not forget: war in Ukraine didn’t begin in 2022, but in 2014. However, at the time it wasn’t acknowledged by most of the world.🧵
Read 25 tweets
Mar 11
Today, when Ukrainians and friends are celebrating the well-deserved Oscar for @20DaysMariupol, I'd like to remind the world of another filmmaker who was there, but sadly did not make it out alive.
He was in Mariupol, making a film too.
His name was Mantas Kvedaravičius 🧵 Image
@20DaysMariupol The Lithuanian 🇱🇹 filmmaker, anthropologist, and archaeologist known for war reporting in hostile areas.
Mantas held a Masters degree in Social and Cultural Anthropology from Oxford University and a PHD in Social Anthropology from Cambridge University 🧵
@20DaysMariupol He had made a film about Mariupol in 2016, and when russians invaded in 2022, he went back, to the people he knew and loved, to document what was happening.
In '20 Days in Mariupol' the crew says they're the only international media people left, but Mantas was there too. 🧵 Image
Read 5 tweets
Jan 12
This is me as a little pup, aged 5. My little sister is almost 3.
It’s January 1991, and we are in Vilnius, Lithuania 🇱🇹
Something scary is about to happen on this day.
Walk with me on this journey through old memories… 🧵 Image
It’s January 11, a very cold and snowy day.
I’m with my mother near the Vilnius Press House. We are standing very close to where this picture was taken.
It’s so cold, I can’t feel my toes.
Trucks with full of russian soldiers arrive. 🧵 Image
The previous March, Lithuania decided to end its illegal occupation and declared independence from the soviet union, the first republic to do so.
The soviet union decided to react with force.
The soldiers now start beating people with the butts of their rifles. 🧵 Image
Read 22 tweets
Jan 11
❗️War will (probably) happen.❗️
It's the headline of the newest article by Lithuanian 🇱🇹 journalist Rimas Bružas.
I'm taking the liberty of translating and sharing a few main thoughts from the article because I think they deserve international attention. 🧵 Image
1) It's becoming impossible for the russian government to hide the difference of the quality of life in russia and in the West, and to explain the superiority of the West in every possible area.
Reality contradicts the quickly dissolving myth of the "Great Russian Nation". 🧵
2) The regime knows this means the end of the "russian world", but it simply cannot allow this. Tension within the russian society has reached the highest point and there's an urgent need to "let off steam" before the country implodes. 🧵
Read 10 tweets

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