New CD a showcase of music from southern Kurzeme

The new folk music CD, Sventava, features Māris Muktupāvels, kokle player and member of the post-folk ensemble Iļgi, along with many friends, performing songs from the Kurzeme region of Latvia. The album, released by MGM Projekti (MGM 001), brings together a wide variety of Latvian musicians to perform these songs.

According to the liner notes, many of these songs are sung by Latvians in the village of Sventāja, which is actually in Lithuania (between Liepāja in Latvia and Klaipėda in Lithuania). The songs were compiled during a folklore ‘expedition’ to the village by Ilmārs Mežs in the 1980s, and these are new arrangements by Muktupāvels.

Joining Muktupāvels are other Iļģi members like Gatis Gaujenieks, Ilga Reizniece, Egons Kronbergs, as well as other well-known musicians such as Ainars Mielavs, Uģis Prauliņš, and Valdis Muktupāvels.

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Egils Kaljo is an American-born Latvian from the New York area . Kaljo began listening to Latvian music as soon as he was able to put a record on a record player, and still has old Bellacord 78 rpm records lying around somewhere.

Garezers to celebrate its 50th anniversary in July, 2015

Garezers 50 weekend will be a 4-day celebration, including a variety of musical performances featuring talent from North America and Latvia, a feature film, athletic events, fireworks show, cooking competition and other entertainment. The Latvian Center’s history will be commemorated with a formal church service. “What is Garezers? … I am Garezers!” is the theme of the anniversary. The Celebration and associated fundraising campaign will help to secure the future growth and development of the Center.

Celebration Committee Chair Franz Bauer of Cleveland, OH said, “Everyone is invited to be a part of this huge milestone for what now has become a global community of people who love Garezers. The 50th Anniversary is going to be an event that everyone, no matter what their age, will enjoy.”

The Latvian Center Garezers is the largest gathering place for the Latvian community outside of Latvia, as well as the largest summer tourist destination in the Three Rivers, MI area. Its mission is to provide a meeting place for Latvians of all ages, to raise and educate Latvian youth, to strengthen the Latvian language, culture and spiritual values, to promote the Latvian heritage and develop links with Latvia.

Garezers, formerly Camp Lone Tree, was purchased by the Latvian community from a Chicago Girl Scout troupe in 1965. During the ensuing 48 years, hundreds of volunteers have helped to maintain the beautiful landscape of more than 250 acres, including rustic buildings, lakefront and woods, and to develop the programs and infrastructure that now draw several hundred campers and over one thousand visitors each summer.

The Center will be organizing several fundraising events leading up to the Celebration. In order to ensure the success of the event, Garezers will seek sponsors, donors and volunteers. There will be opportunities for advertising, as well as for service providers, as the Center prepares for the many guests who will attend the festivities. Garezers is currently accepting entries for the Celebration’s logo design.

More information about the 50th Anniversary Celebration can be found on the Garezers website http://www.garezers.org, by joining the Garezers Facebook page, or by contacting Celebration Committee Chair Franz Bauer –  garezers50@garezers.org.

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Obtaining Latvian Citizenship

Since October 1 of this year, the Republic of Latvia has once again been allowing Latvians abroad to obtain Latvian citizenship without giving up their original citizenship. This was possible in the early 1990s, but not afterward. Now it is possible once again.

The process is open to people who were citizens of Latvia prior to June 17, 1940 (the start of the Soviet occupation) and to their children and grandchildren, provided that the original citizens departed from Latvia after the occupation began and could not return to Latvia because of it (the process is different for those who have ancestors who left Latvia during the interwar period or even earlier, but I will assume that most readers of Latvians Online do not fall into that category).

In order to obtain citizenship, you can visit the Citizenship and Migration Board in person in Rīga should you happen to be visiting, or you will have to contact the Latvian Embassy in your country of residence. You will have to submit an application for citizenship. The relevant application form can be found on the homepage of the Citizenship and Migration Board.

The homepage offers an English version, so if you don’t speak Latvian, you can still take a look. Latvian language skills are not necessary for émigré Latvians and their successors to obtain citizenship, as is the case for those who seek naturalisation in Latvia, so that is no worry for you. You will, however, need to provide personal identification, as well as evidence that you have ancestors who were citizens of independent Latvia prior to World War II. If you have your father or mother’s birth certificate, that will be sufficient. If not, you may seek information from Latvia’s state archives, which have census records and other documents that may be of use. Please note that in some cases, the relevant documents will have to be notarised (the homepage goes into detail about this). If you have children, once you have obtained citizenship, they will only need to fill out the application form and present personal identification to do the same.

If you live far away from the Latvian Embassy in your country, contact it anyway, because the Citizenship and Migration Board says that embassies are organising field trips to locations where Latvians live in order to help with the citizenship issue. Perhaps the embassy in your country is planning to do so in the foreseeable future. Of course, you may also submit documents to the embassy by mail, though perhaps you will not wish to send your passport in the mail, lest it be lost on the way.

Another source of information about this may be your country’s central Latvian organisation such as the American Latvian Association in the United States, because they will surely have collected all of the information that is needed.

What are the benefits of Latvian citizenship for you? Of course, there is the symbolic element of wishing to be linked to your fatherland and to have a document which testifies to this. In practical terms, a Latvian passport will allow you to travel freely in the countries which are part of the European Union’s Schengen system without having to show your passport on the relevant borders (though, of course, you will have to present it when entering the zone). Also, you will be able to vote in Latvian elections, though only in national, not local ones, because local elections, of course, depend on your place of residence. I would like to say that if you do not regularly follow political and social events in Latvia, you might refrain from voting in parliamentary elections, because you will not be aware of the issues that are of importance or the things which political parties that are seeking election are saying about them, but the possibility is there nonetheless.

Above all, there are comparatively few Latvians in the world, and Latvia is happy to welcome one and all. The Latvian passport will allow you and your children to travel freely to Latvia, and that is something that is to be recommended for every single person of Latvian origin, much as a trip to Mecca is strongly recommended for every Muslim in the world. Perhaps your children will someday wish to study at a Latvian university (though in that case, of course, they will require excellent Latvian language skills), and citizenship will make that easier (and in many cases less expensive), as well. One way or another, please check out the opportunity. I do believe that you will be glad that you did.

Kārlis Streips was born in Chicago, studied journalism at the University of North Illinois and University of Maryland. He moved to Latvia in 1991 where he has worked as a TV and radio journalist. He also works as a translator and lecturer at the University of Latvia.