
| Baltic’s Onetime Rulers Have Shrunk to a Handful
By Michael Spechter (NY Times, Dec. 4, 1997) Riga, Latvia – The torturous events of the 20th century don’t
interest
her much. She holds no views on nationalism. She has always been bored
by crusades and movements. But more than most people in the word today,
Pauline Klavina lives with the burden of history. That is because at
the age of 80, Mrs. Klavina is one of the last Livonians. When she dies
she
will take to her grave much of a heritage that has been alive –and at
times It is hard to imagine now, looking into her frail,
fading eyes,
that Livonians once ruled the icy seas around the Baltic countries,
sweeping down
more than a millennium ago from Finland through what is now Estonia and
Latvia.
“There are at least four of us left,” she said, referring to
people who consider Livonian their native language. “There may be more.
I like
to think we will all make it past the year 2000 –into one more era. But
I prefer
not to think about the end.” Yet even she knows that the end is surely near.
Languages depend,
of course, on the vitality of the people who speak them. And in this
era
of superpowers, telephones, the global village and economic
integration,
they are vanishing at a rate that has never been matched. More than 6,000 languages are spoken in the world today,
but
linguists say that within a generation at least half of them will be
gone. “The
world is getting very small, and these cultures are the victims,” said
Kersti
Boiko, head of the Finno-Ugric language program at the University of
Latvia. Linguistically, Livonian is related to northern tongues like
Estonian,
Finnish, Voltish and Karehar. “Of course, Finnish and Estonian will
remain,”
she It is a hrash sentence, but this is not the first
century in
which the power of individual languages atrophied. Latin speakers once
ruled the world,
so who should care about the disappearance of a moribund fishing
culture
that started its decline more than 400 years ago when the Russian Navy
vanquished it in the brutal Livonian Wars? This is, after all, a nation
that had its finest days in the 12th century, during the era of the
Teutonic knights. “I have never understood,” said Mara Zirnite, a researcher in
cultural
history at the Latvian Academy of Sciences, “why it is more important
to save
the tiger than to save a culture which has been on earth for thousands
of years. That just never made sense to me.” Mrs. Zirnite is working on an oral and photographic
history project
in an attempt to preserve what she can of Livonia in today’s Latvia.
“Cultures
are not like restaurants or even people,” she said. “For humans it is
simple: you are born, you die and then you are gone. But cultures can
live
forever. Why should we have to go aound searching for the shards of a
society
as if it were ancient pottery? But once a language is gone, that is
what
we have to do.” Livonians have always been sea people. Their folk
calandar divided
the year into two parts: the time for fishing and the period when the
seas
were rough, to make nets. Their marshy land was poor, and farming was
nearly impossible. Their myths involve boats and brave men fighting
towering waves. Historically, there were two Livonias. One was a proonce
of medieval Germany, and it encompassed present-day Latvia and Estonia.
By the
16th dentury it had been defeated as a power. Since then, and
particularly
under the Soviets, there has been nohing but retrenchment. Today
Livonia
is the descriptive term for a 50-mile strip of land along the coastal
region
of northwestern Latvia. Uldis Balodis, a Latvian living in the United States who
ha studied
the culture, says that about 2,000 people live there, but nion consider
Livonian their native language. And that is why most experts believe
that the culture is in peril. Mrs. Zirnite is doing everything possible to preven the
day when
Livonia disappears. She offers a class in its culture and has
encouraged young people of Livonian ancestry to try to study the
language. The Soviet Union did much to hasten the death of Livonia
by moving
many of its people from their coastal villages and by forbidding
the
language to be taught in schools. Since the end of Soviet power, Latvia
has helped
to reestablish the heritage. Every summer there is a Livonian folk camp
attended by about 10 children in the town of Marzirbe, on the northwest
coast. There are feasts and gatherings and classes and traditional
games, “It is hard,” said renate Blumberga, 26, a student of
Livonian
history and language. Ms. Blumberga speaks only a little of the
language, but she
is determined to learn more. She and a few of her friends –all of
Livonian heritage- study with Ms. Boiko. “I have decided that if I can
to
something to keep this language living,” Ms. Blumberga said, “it will
be a
worthwhile goal.” Mrs. Klavina certainly agrees. Speaking in Latvian, she says that sometimes even she loses the ability to talk in her native language. Since her husband died 30 years ago, the opportunities for casual conversation are few. But she still dreams in Livonian, she insists, and she willingly recites her poetry in the language as well. You can almost hear the loss in rhythms of her sad speech.
“My language is the tongue of
the sea. |