Latvian music academy names pianist Ozoliņš honorary professor

Latvian-Canadian pianist Arturs Ozoliņš has been named a honorary professor of the Rīga-based Jāzeps Vītols Latvian Academy of Music, which last year marked its 90th anniversary.

The academy announced the selection Sept. 7. Ozoliņš, who studied in Toronto, Paris and New York, is to receive the honor during the academy’s 91st anniversary concert, which is scheduled Jan. 11. Ozoliņš was chosen, according to a press release from the academy, for his work in popularizing Latvian music and for his unrelenting pride in his Latvian heritage.

Ozoliņš becomes the 33rd honorary professor chosen by the academy, which is the only higher education institution in Latvia devoted to music, according to school’s website. Other recently named honorary professors include composer Pēteris Vasks, conductor Mariss Jansons and pianist Vilma Cīrule.

The 64-year-old Ozoliņš was born in Lübeck, Germany. His parents were World War II refugees from Latvia. From Germany, the family moved to Argentina, but when Ozoliņš was 12 they resettled to Canada. According to the Canadian Encyclopedia of Music, at age 14 Ozoliņš was chosen by conductor Walter Susskind to perform a concerto with the National Youth Orchestra. In the 1960s he studied with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and with Nadia Reisenberg at New York’s Mannes College of Music. Ozoliņš also studied with Vlado Perlmuter in Paris.

The encyclopedia describes Ozoliņš as “a champion of Latvian piano music in Canada and abroad” and notes that he has recorded works by Latvian composers Jānis Medins and Tālivaldis Ķeniņš.

Ozoliņš has performed many times with orchestras in Canada and the United States, as well as in France, Russia, Australia, Lithuania and Latvia.

In 1981, Ozoliņš won the Juno Award, presented by the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, for the best classical music recording. In 2002, the Latvian Ministry of Culture honored Ozoliņš with a Great Music Award (Lielā mūzikas balva) for his performance in Rīga of piano music by composer Lūcija Garūta as well as for his work in popularizing Latvian music around the world. Ozoliņš also has been awarded the Order of Three Stars, Latvia’s highest civilian honor.

LNAK izsludina Abrenes vēstures konkursu jauniešiem

Ar mērķi padziļināt latviešu jauniešu zināšanas par Abrenes novadu, Latviešu Nacionālā Apvienība Kanadā (LNAK) ir izsludinājusi globālu vēstures konkursu “Piemini Abreni”.

Kā ziņots LNAK mājas lapā, konkursa dalībniekiem līdz 2011. gada 1. jūlijam jāsagatavo un jāiesniedz raksts par Abreni, “pētot tā vēsturi senatnē un apzinot tā pazaudēšanas apstākļus; veidot personīgo domu un viedokli par notikumiem Latvijas vēsturē, saistībā ar Abreni.”

Ar 1920. gada miera līgumu starp Latviju un Krieviju, Abrenes novads tika piešķirts Latvijai. Bet 1944. gadā, pēc tam, kad Padomju Savienība otrreiz okupēja Latviju, PSRS novadu piešķira Krievijai. Ar 2007. gadā noslēgto robežlīgumu starp Latviju un Krieviju, Latvija atteicās no Abrenes.

LNAK konkursā ir divas dalībnieku grupas: I. grupa jauniešiem no 14 līdz 17 gadiem un II. grupa jauniešiem no 18 līdz 24 gadiem. Katrā grupā par labākiem rakstiem tiks piešķirtas trīs godalgas: 1. vietai LVL 1000, 2. vietai – LVL 500, bet 3. vietai – LVL 250.

Darbus vērtēs publiciste Ilga Breikša, vēsturnieks Jānis Mežaks un literāte Inta Purva. Konkursa rezultātus paziņos 2011. gada 18. novembrī.

Ar konkursa noteikumiem iespējams iepazīties LNAK mājas lapā, lnak.org.

Passport project serves 1,247 citizens

More than 1,200 citizens abroad applied for new or renewed their Latvian passports in a project that brought mobile processing stations to the United States, Canada and Australia during July and early August, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has announced in Rīga.

The project was coordinated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of the Interior’s Office of Citizenship and Migration Affairs (Pilsonsības un migrācijas lietu pārvalde, or PMLP). It was designed to serve Latvian citizens abroad in advance of the Oct. 2 parliamentary election, especially those who live a great distance from Latvian embassies.

Although the effort did not serve the 1,800 citizens the ministries had expected, the project brought in LVL 67,000 in state and consular fees.

In all, 1,247 citizens were processed by representatives using the mobile passport stations. Of those, 709 were in the U.S., 346 in Australia and 192 in Canada.

Three pairs of representatives, with one from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and one from the PMLP, visited the three countries.

They brought with them a processing station that allowed the representatives to take passport photographs and to record fingerprints. In the U.S., the processing station was brought Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York and Seattle. In Canada, the representatives visited Edmonton, Toronto and Vancouver. Australian cities visited were Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney.