Priit Vesilind to sign his new book Singing Revolution in Toronto
Kommentaarid on kirjutatud EWR lugejate poolt. Nende sisu ei pruugi ühtida EWR toimetuse seisukohtadega.
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Anonymous15 Apr 2008 11:24
What is the cost of the book?
Kuidas, palun?!18 Apr 2008 22:09
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ran a story on Mr. Vesilind (http://www.post-gazette.com/pg.... I find this passage very disturbing, almost critical of Estonians abroad during the Soviet era:

Mr. Vesilind said he knows many native Estonians who settled in big cities, and he thinks he was better off. "So many of my father's friends felt that they had to stay ethnic Estonians," something they could do in the anonymity of New York or Chicago with other Estonians around them. "It was like they had one foot in America, but they never really put the other foot down. They were sort of living half-lives."

I'm sorry Mr. Vesilind, but my family was one of those who "had one foot in [North] America" but "never really put the other foot down." I'm grateful to them for doing so, and raising me in the most Estonian household tradition they could.
Maxim.19 Apr 2008 14:23
Vesilind makes a good point in that many Estonians wished they had been full-blooded Estonians, but they couldn't escape the truth that Estonians who lived in the territorial space of Estonia (otherwise known as the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic) have always had a greater moral claim to the rights of being fully-fledged Estonians. Estonians abroad were merely a half-way house, trying their best in forging a better deal for their brothers back home. Many couldn't stay the distance because of political qualms about the nature of Soviet Estonia. In the end the children borne out of the hard won battle for freedom won their share, and have given democracy their best shot in spite of shortcomings of their own making. If the strength of building a new Estonia were left to the whims of Estonians living abroad, then it is highly probable that Estonia as a state wouldn't be in existence anymore, since most Estonians abroad prefer not to live in Estonia, but do for some strange reason like to call themselves Estonian. It just doesn't add up, but then again we're not talking about the State of Israel, are we.
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