EU Lithuania marks 30 years since split that doomed Soviet empire - Crowds in Vilnius ignored coronavirus to mark the 30th anniversary of Lithuania's independence from the Soviet Union


Lithuania on Wednesday celebrated the 30th anniversary of its secession from the Soviet Union, a move that heralded the beginning of the end of the sprawling Eurasian empire.

The Lithuanian parliament voted on March 11, 1990, to restore the independent Baltic state that had been annexed by the Soviet Union in 1940 under a secret deal with Nazi Germany.

That move, the first of its kind among the Soviet republics, launched a wave of breakaways that eventually saw the Soviet Union collapse a year later.

"Unity was the force that broke the empire," President Gitanas Nauseda told a crowd outside the parliament.

"We did not yet have passports of the Republic of Lithuania. We had just restored the name of our state and its coat of arms. But in our hearts, we already lived in a sovereign Lithuania."

The independence declaration was followed by an economic blockade and a bloody military crackdown, but Moscow finally recognised independent Lithuania in August 1991.

The Soviet Union itself was formally dissolved four months later. Lithuania firmly anchored itself in the West by joining the EU and NATO in 2004.

"Lithuania's successful defiance demonstrated to other republics that they need not bow to Moscow's pressure and bullying," Vilnius University philosopher Kestutis Girnius told AFP.

Lithuania cancelled the traditional solemn event at the parliament's historic hall -- where the independence declaration was announced -- because of the coronavirus outbreak, but thousands of people joined outdoor events across the country.

"March 11 means everything for me: freedom, joy, love, life. Everything changed," 48-year-old Rimantas Grasys told AFP in the central city of Kaunas, as an army band played nearby.

"We won the freedom to say and do what we want. It is complicated to explain that to our kids," his wife Jolanta Grasiene, 46, said as the pair joined crowds in carrying a huge tricolour national flag -- the size of three basketball courts.

Independence hero Vytautas Landsbergis, 87, who was post-communist Lithuania's first president, did not attend after his wife died on Tuesday.

Like neighbouring Latvia and Estonia, Lithuania was annexed by the Soviets during World War II and scarred by the deportation of hundreds of thousands of its people to Siberia and Central Asia in the 1940s and 1950s.

The trio remained solidly under Moscow's thumb until Kremlin leader Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985. He introduced economic and political reforms that later spiralled out of his control.

An opinion poll released on Monday by the BNS news agency showed 58 percent of Lithuanians are satisfied with the way things have gone over the last 30 years while 28 percent said they are dissatisfied.
 
Glory to the Forest Brothers.
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Great heroes who fought against Judeo–Bolshevism for the sake of all humanity. Sad that some of their successors have knuckled under the successor- NATO.
 
Glory to the Forest Brothers.
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Great heroes who fought against Judeo–Bolshevism for the sake of all humanity. Sad that some of their successors have knuckled under the successor- NATO.
Jesus Christ you fucking autist.
Tell me, what don't the jews control? What bad things have happened that the jews didn't do?
 
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Jesus Christ you fucking autist.
Tell me, what don't the jews control? What bad thing have happened that the jews didn't do?
Governments which aren't completely controlled by Jews? Obviously that would exclude things like the Bolshevik revolution and its almost entirely Jewish leadership.
 
A statistically deviant amount of the early communist leaders were of the tribe.
Look, just because Lithuanian patriots didn't hate the entire human race and loved their own people doesn't mean that anyone who supports Lithuanian patriotism isn't a dirty anti-semite.

The Simon Weisenthal Center has identified that Lithuanian nationalism is bad for the Jews.

The right of Zionists to rule over the world is clearly more important than self-determination.
 
Look, just because Lithuanian patriots didn't hate the entire human race and loved their own people doesn't mean that anyone who supports Lithuanian patriotism isn't a dirty anti-semite.

The Simon Weisenthal Center has identified that Lithuanian nationalism is bad for the Jews.

The right of Zionists to rule over the world is clearly more important than self-determination.
You and the fucking SPLC crybabies are just opposite sides of the same coin, always viewing everything through some sort of insane racial lens.
 
You and the fucking SPLC crybabies are just opposite sides of the same coin, always viewing everything through some sort of insane racial lens.
Interesting opinion, bro. Where does the SPLC get their funding from, again? I believe their boss, a mail order marketing scammer, admitted it was by scamming Yehudi retirees in Florida, but hey, that's just a fact.
 
You are aware that almost all of the Jews you are talking about were subsequently liquidated by Stalin, right? That doesn't seem very in control.
Yes, Stalin did have his good side, though it didn't come out in full force until after the war.
 
Do explain how NATO is the successor to "Judeo-Bolshevism."
The heart that beats within the Ammurrican empire is the same as that of the Soviet Union prior to the establishment of the Zionist entity and Stalin's effort to make several commissars good commissars, no matter what skin it wears on the outside.
 
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