Throughout history since the days of the crusaders the objectives of the Germans and Russians has been to get rid of these Baltic cultures. It was slay them – that happened with the Old Prussians, enslave them – we did their dirty work for centuries under duress, and assimilate them leaving as little trace as possible that such Baltic cultures ever existed so that they may never rise again. The lack of a unified political front from day one subjugated Latvians for centuries to come.
Many culturally, patriotically and nationalistically minded Latvians – Kārlis Ulmanis amongst them—recognized the plight of the fragmented Latvians and managed to unify these disarrayed Latvians into a country called Latvia. That was a start in 1918 but it hardly resembled an overnight adhesion of a collective unity under their newfound freedom. It was a democracy in name only, a political imperfection that was a weakness and a hangover from our tribal days. We experienced that from 1920 through 1934. The question remained did we want to have a Latvian culture or should we just allow our culture to disintegrate under German and Russian interests and pressures to absorb the Latvian lands. This was no novelty to the Latvian political leadership, as Zigfrīds Meierovitzs predicted World War II in 1922. It was bound to rip the Latvians apart without leaving a strong cultural core foundation.
All this may be chicanery to Pēteris Cedriņš, but Kārlis Ulmanis raised the psychological consciousness of Latvians as a nation. There were no half-way solutions. Sacrifices and hard decisions had to be made. While Ulmanis did many things wrong and not to the liking of everyone, the issue remained do we want to exist as a nation or do we simply throw up our hands and become lackeys and underdogs of Germany, Russia or split between both. The entire Latvia could have gone the way of Abrene, where today there is no trace of Latvian spirit and culture.
Even foreign historians have acknowledged that it was this Latvian consciousness that allowed Latvians to survive the occupation and established a unified Trimda with an unyielding cause to see Latvia regain its independence. It was this same Latvian consciousness that allowed the Latvians to rise up from the rubble of the Soviet Union as it disintegrated.
As a trade-off, I wonder if the books that were speculated as taken off the shelves and a hypothetical breakaway Republic of Latgale would have strengthened the Latvian consciousness to the level that Latvia today is once more a free nation with its own self-determination.
Cheers, Ivars
