I would appreciate your response to my post if it wasn’t so full of distortions and just crap. It seems thoughtful on the surface but jeez you just miss the whole boat about what I’m saying about “writing Latvian history.” Where to begin when what you’ve written has given me a migraine.
What is your agenda? I just don’t see the your so-called Leitmotiv except as constant derision of things Latvian, finding the failure or the error, and feeling obligated to dwell on it out without giving the mitigating context. A prime example is not fairly portraying Ulmanis as your former Latvian President with hardly the worst mortal failings of a head of state in a world of grotesque dictators such as Hitler and Stalin, but choosing instead to constantly advance your personal agenda of Ulmanis loathing. Seeing Ulmanis through your hysterically limited view is not “writing Latvian history.” It’s like not having a perspective on Jefferson’s “shocking slaveholding,” Roosevelt’s “betrayal of Latvia,” and Kennedy’s “adulterous womanizing.” Most thoughtful people don’t unconditionally, blindly embrace any political leader. We are forced to reconcile their flaws of greater or lesser magnitude. Imagine if you had to to live with George Bush as your president, or even far worse, Vlad the Mad Putin, as your vadonis. Maybe it’s time to be really “way-futuristic,” beyond your attachment to any Vadonis-driven “multiculturalism” and “internationalism,” to embrace the “really radical” wisdom of “matriarchalism” and “nature reverence” (I hate to use the tainted word “paganism"). At the risk of really infuriating “real” conservative Latvians, maybe it’s time to clean the Latvian churches, temples, and golden domes of hypocrisy, discrimination, and using (any) god’s name to promote hatred. Maybe the underlying problem for the whole concept-gone-wrong of “head of state,” “head of church” is the outdated “male head of family” notion. Hierarchy in the home builds hierarchy in the church and state. I have no illusions about the next batch of puffing, pontificating Vadoni so Ulmanis doesn’t hold my attention. If you think yourself to be so “progressive,” why does your imagination and ancient history knowledge seem to fail you in thinking of a truly better world, one without false leaders and false gods. The ancient Balts were matriarchal and nature-respecting. Maybe it’s time for more women and fewer men like Bush, Putin, and Sarkozy, a delusionally ugly man who thinks his French charm alone won his Belle de Jour. Unfortunately, women alone are not the answer, although I certainly am voting for stand-by-your-man Hillary Clinton, since moving forward to that truly cooperative, peace-loving, Vadoni-free world can only be done in baby steps when men like you dwell on life one vadonis at a time.
Ivars Graudins did an excellent job of giving the speed-reading overview of Latvian history leading to the circumstances Latvia found itself in before WWII with Ulmanis at the helm of the ship of state. Of course, Ulmanis alone did not save or destroy Latvia. Graudins version of “Latvian history” is definitely on the right track of what Norman Davies is saying all nation’s write about themselves rather than your naked Ulmanis expose. I don’t think Norman Davies looks to Howard Zinn’s “The People’s History of the United States.” It’s not the personal anecdotes of Legionnaires that conveys the important history of Latvia’s soldiers under German occupation. The Vietnam War was a U.S. national tragedy but a greater tragedy was abandoning the U.S. soldiers who fought in a war that the U.S. “vadoni” led them to and the American nation “supported.” I hate war, don’t believe in solving conflicts by fighting wars, but if you ask your people to fight, then you don’t abandon them to your enemies history, like the Latvian nation has abandoned the Latvian Legionnaires to a German-occupier identity and Russian-propaganda name-calling and insults. Not writing this history for the Latvian people and historians like Norman Davies is a cowardly blot on the Latvian nation.
At this point, one needs to decide whether the existence of more-or-less ethnic Latvians in this big world is important to support, whether the Latvian language as a viable language and the spoken state language of Latvia is important to support, and whether the Latvian culture is worth preserving and affirmatively promoting as the dominant culture in Latvia. My politics in the U.S. can afford to be free and unrestrained. I can afford to experiment and be immature. America won’t be harmed by my personal indulgence. My politics in Latvia factor in the survival of the Latvian people, the Latvian language, and the Latvian culture. The damage to Latvia and the Latvians during the half-century, multi-generational Soviet/Russian occupation can never be compensated. It’s self-respect that demands admission of the moral wrong. The interuption to a Latvian way of life, to a Latvian growth and progress may be fatal. The deformation to the Latvian sense of self, to the valuing of the Latvian language, to the pride in the beauty of the Latvian culture, to the cherishing of the wisdom of the matriarchal dainas, to the beautiful Latvian environment - may just be too severe to undo. Latvians have to believe in the world value of Latvians and Latvia, to be emotionally attached to Latvia and proud to be Latvian, like the French, Germans, and Russians. Otherwise, there really is no reason for this tiny state and minor culture and barely-spoken language to survive if not for its own need. The world won’t really miss Latvia but Latvians probably will when it’s too late. Russia and Russians can hardly wait to have more space in which to live as Russians and speak their beloved Russian.
