* Lennart Georg Meri (March 29, 1929 – March 14, 2006), was a writer, film maker and politician who served as president of Estonia from 1992 to 2001.
Early Life
He was born in Tallinn, a son of the Estonian diplomat and later Shakespeare translator Georg Meri. With his family, Lennart left Estonia at an early age and studied abroad, in nine different schools and in four different languages. His warmest memories are from his school years in Lycée Janson de Sailly in Paris. In addition to his native Estonian, Lennart Meri spoke five other languages: Finnish, French, German, English and Russian.
However, the family was in Tallinn when Estonia was occupied by the armed forces of the Soviet Union in June 1940. In 1941, the Meri family was deported to Siberia along with thousands of other Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians sharing the same fate. Heads of the family were separated from their families and shut into concentration camps where few survived. At the age of twelve, Lennart Meri worked as a lumberman in Siberia. He also worked as a potato peeler and a rafter to support his family.
Whilst in exile, Lennart Meri grew interested in the Finno-Ugric languages that he heard around him, which are related to his native Estonian. His interest in the ethnic kinship amongst the scattered Finno-Ugric family has been a life-long theme within his work.
The Meri family survived and found their way back to Estonia, where Lennart Meri graduated cum laude from the Faculty of History and Languages of the University of Tartu in 1953. The Soviet administration did not allow him to work as a historian, so Meri found work as a dramatist in the Vanemuine, the oldest theatre of Estonia, and later on as a producer of radio plays in the Estonian broadcasting industry. Several of his films were released to great critical acclaim.
Writer and filmmaker
After a trip to the Tian Shan Mountains in the Central Asia and the old Islamic centres in the Kara Kum Desert in 1958, .......
...... Lennart Meri wrote his first book, which met with a warm reception from the public. Already as a student, Lennart Meri had been able to earn his living with his writing, after his father had been arrested by the Soviet authorities for the third time. With the help of his younger brother who had been forced to leave his studies and take a job as a taxi-driver, he managed to support their mother and to complete his own studies. The film The Winds of the Milky Way, shot in co-operation with Finland and Hungary, was banned in the Soviet Union, but won a silver medal on the New York Film Festival. In Finnish schools, his films and texts were used as study materials. In 1986, Lennart Meri was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Helsinki University. He had already become a member of the Estonian Writers’ Union earlier, in 1963. In the Seventies, he was elected an Honorary Member of the Finnish Literary Society.
Tulemägede Maale (1964), To the Land of Fiery Mountains) chronicled Meri's journey to Kamchatka in the 1960s. Other members of his expedition group included geologists, botanists, a photographer, and the artist Kalju Polli. "Traveling is the only passion that doesn't need to feel shy in front of intellect," wrote Meri. Urban people still have an inner urge to see the world, hunger for nature. Meri did not underestimate the drawbacks of mass tourism but concluded that "science will liberate us from the chains of big cities and lead us back to nature."
Meri's travel book of his journey to the North-east passage, Virmaliste Väraval (1974), won him huge success in the Soviet Union. It was translated into Finnish in 1977 in the Soviet Writers series, which also introduced to Finnish readers works by the Estonian writers Mats Traat, Lilli Promet, and Ülo Tuulik. In the book Meri combined the present with a perspective into history, and used material from such explorers as Cook, Forster, Wrangel, Dahl, Sauer, Middendorff, Cochran, and others. When he sees a mountain rising against the stormy sky of the Bering Strait, he realizes that Vitus Bering (1681-1741) and James Cook (1728) had looked at the same mountain, but from the other side of the strait.
Meri's best known work is perhaps Hõbevalge (Silver White) (1976). It reconstructs the history of Estonia and the Baltic Sea region. (Estonian belongs to the Baltic-Finnic group of the Finno-Ugric languages and Estonian is closely related to Finnish and distantly related to Hungarian.) As in his other works, Meri combines documentary sources and scientific research with creative imagination. "If geography is prose, maps are iconography," Meri writes. Hõbevalge is based on a wide material of ancient seafaring, and carefully unveils the secret of the legendary Ultima Thule. The name was given in classical times to the most northerly land, reputedly six days' voyage from Britain. Several alternative places for its location have been suggested, among them the Shetland Islands, Iceland, and Norway. According to Meri, it is possible that Thule derives from the old folk poetry of Estonia, which depicts the birth of the crater lake in Kaali, Saaremaa. In the essay 'Tacituse tahtel' (2000) Meri examined ancient contacts between Estonia and the Roman empire and notes that furs, amber, and especially Livonian kiln-dried, infection free grain may have been Estonia's biggest contribution to the common culture of Europe - in lean years, it provided seed grain for Europe.
Meri founded the non-governmental Estonian Institute (Eesti Instituut) in 1988 to promote cultural contacts with the West and to send Estonian students to study abroad.
Political Activity
After more than twenty years of refusals, the Soviet administration finally gave permission for Lennart Meri to travel beyond the iron curtain in the late 1970s, and Meri persistently used the opportunities open to him in Finland to remind the Free world of the existence of Estonia. He established close relationships with politicians, journalists and Estonians who had fled from the occupation. He was the first Estonian to publicise abroad the protests against the Soviet plan of mining phosphate in Estonia, which would have rendered a third of the country uninhabitable.
In Estonia, environmental protests soon grew into a general revolt against Soviet rule: "the Singing Revolution", which was led by Estonian intellectuals. Lennart Meri’s speech "Have Estonians Got Hope" focused on the existential problems of the nation and had strong repercussions abroad. In 1991, Meri became a founding member of the Popular Front, which cooperated with its counterparts in Latvia and Lithuania. After the first non-communist-style election in 1990, Meri was appointed to the post of Foreign Minister. As Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lennart Meri’s first task was to create the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He developed around him a group of well educated young people, many English speaking, in order to establish an open communication channel to the West, and at the same time to represent Estonia more widely on the international scene. He participated in the CSCE Conferences in Copenhagen, New York, Paris, Berlin and Moscow, and the foundation conference of the Council of the Baltic Sea Countries. He also had several meetings with American and European Heads of State and Foreign Ministers, and was the first East European guest to give a presentation at NATO Headquarters in Brussels.
After a brief period as Ambassador of Estonia to Finland, on October 6, 1992 he became the 2nd President of the Republic of Estonia. Meri was the candidate of the Isamaaliit "Pro Patria" Alliance. Although, on the first ballot, Arnold Rüütel, a former leader of the Estonian Communist Party, had led with 42 per cent of the total vote, the final choice for the nomination was made by Parliament, the Riigikogu, which was dominated by the Pro Patria Alliance. During the campaingn, the nationalist right tried to bring up questions about Meri's alleged former links with the KGB. However, these allegations did not harm Meri's reputation and public image. Lennart Meri was sworn-in as the President on October 6, 1992. On September 20, 1996, he was re-elected for a second and final term.
Lennart Meri was in his second marriage. His wife Helle Meri (born in 1949) worked as an actress in the Estonian Drama Theatre until 1992. Lennart Meri’s first wife Regina Meri emigrated to Canada in 1987. Lennart Meri is survived by three children: sons Mart Meri (born in 1959) and Kristjan Meri (born in 1966) and daughter Tuule Meri (born in 1985), and four grandchildren.
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