TIME Europe

The Mark of History
TIME talks with Vaira Vike-Freiberga, President of Latvia


BY JEFF CHU Davos


JANUARY 27  
world economic forum
Who would have thought that less than a year after Vaira Vike-Freiberga moved back to her native Latvia, she would be President of the country? Vike-Freiberga had lived abroad for more than four decades, charting a brilliant course through Canadian academia and traveling the world as a lecturer to Latvians in exile. She returned home in the autumn of 1998 to head the Latvian Institute, charged with raising the nation's profile around the world. In June 1999, the Latvian Parliament tapped her as head of state. She is the first woman to hold such a position in Central and Eastern Europe.

President Vike-Freiberga spoke with TIME's Jeff Chu at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Below, excerpts from the President's comments, on everything from Latvian relations with Russia to meeting Oprah Winfrey.

On her personal life journey:

I was born in Latvia. I left three days before the Russian Army took Riga in October 1944 with my parents, who fled the Communist occupation. They witnessed the first Soviet occupation in 1940-41, with the destruction of the Latvian structures ... My mother said they arrived with this ideological framework, which said that everything the Latvians had done before was wrong . Everything that independent Latvia had tried to do was bourgeois and reactionary and fascist and wrong. The Russians were going to come and orders were going to come from Moscow. They were going to teach Latvians how to think, how to read, how to act, how to paint, how to sing, what to sing and so on. My parents felt like they couldn't live in this system and they left.

We had some fairly difficult times as refugees passing through Poland and Germany. I started schooling in Latvian refugee camps in Germany . My parents [then] went to French Morocco . [In 1954] we emigrated to Canada because we happened to be in touch with some people we shared a room with in the refugee camp. In the refugee camp, we were 20 people to a room in double-tiered bunks. You get to know people very intimately, so that friendships are kept up and they wrote to us saying, "Life is hard in Canada. But if you work hard, you can get ahead. So why don't you come here?"

I arrived in Canada at the age of 16 and basically got my higher education there. I had a career as a university professor and a scholar, but was involved in Latvian affairs throughout. I turned some of my research to Latvian heritage. As a psycholinguist, I started analyzing folklore and that allowed me to keep in touch not just with my family back in Latvia but also with a lot of artists and intellectuals. I went back [to Latvia] very early in 1969 because of academic contacts. At that time, very few people were allowed [to go back]. Emigres were still on the blacklist .

I also spent a number of years just traveling around the world not just as a scholar and scientist but also as a public speaker to Latvian communities . We used to have these camps for youth of Latvian origin . We invited professors and artists and architects and so on-people with careers in the West-with some knowledge of Latvian language, history and culture to give lectures to these young people. So I lectured all across North America, in South America, in Australia, in Europe.

[I]n 1998, I received an offer that I felt I couldn't refuse, and that was to head a Latvian Institute, which was then being founded. [T]wo things happened to coincide: this opportunity to close up my career as an academic [by taking early retirement] and to take up the challenge of creating the Latvian Institute, on the model of the Swedish Institute or the Estonian Institute, which are the institutions to give information to the world about the country.

On the importance of a forum like Davos and meeting famous people:

It's the contacts. It's the opportunity to meet so many people in one location. It's rather like the Millennium Summit last fall in New York, which I found tremendous for the opportunity it gave to meet such an extraordinary number of heads of state and government in one place and in such a short period of time . The contacts at, say, dinner or sitting in a luncheon or meeting in a hallway or chatting over coffee-this daily exchange is extraordinary in getting to know people . [Y]ou have an extraordinary assemblage of people who are influential in economics and finance but also personalities from the arts world. I mean, Paulo Coelho, whom I had the pleasure of running into twice in the setting here-it's marvelous to meet someone you admire, someone who's being translated into Latvian and being very much loved and admired in Latvia as well. I met Oprah Winfrey here, for heaven's sakes! I got a hug from Oprah Winfrey, and it's not something I get every day! The day she wants to extend to Eastern Europe, she'll see she already has her foot in the door!

On Riga's relations with Moscow:

We are in a state of suspended hope of improvement. We have been saying for the last few months that there may be some hopeful signs that our relations will improve shortly. I guess we've been saying that for a little while, but I think that's still the state of affairs. We keep getting signals that there's goodwill on the part of Russia to improve relations, to engage in dialogue.

On the role of history in Latvian-Russian relations:

I think it will impact them as much as we wish them to do so. The history is very grim. Latvia was occupied for 50 years. The Latvian people suffered a great deal. They suffered a great deal of oppression. There was a great influx of Russian-speaking population who were quite obviously being treated as first-class citizens as opposed to the colonized locals.

On the Russian minority in Latvia:

These people, now having lost their privileges, are bitter about it and feel that by being asked to integrate as a minority in Latvia, their rights are being infringed on. After all they were the master race, the conquering race, the ones who came to bring truth to Latvia, to teach them how to live, how to breathe, how to do everything. And now they're being told, "You have to learn Latvian." . They're absolutely shocked silly that they should be asked to learn this language spoken by such a small number of people in the world, since they speak Russian . They used to be in what was basically a colony of Russia. Now they're in a sovereign state, an independent state, a Latvian state with Latvian as the state language, with an orientation to the West, an orientation to the European Union and an orientation to NATO.

Interestingly enough, the Russian-speaking community living in Latvia is in favor of us joining NATO. The percentage of approval is over 50% among them as well . [O]ur joining NATO will increase stability in the region, will increase investor confidence and would be good for business. Many of these people are active in business and they see that it would be to their advantage to have that situation.

On Latvia's stance in the global community and opportunities in the future:

[Latvia] stands for the desire of small nations to have their independence so that they can live their lives by deciding, on their own, how to structure their society by keeping their language, maintaining their own culture, and preserving their heritage and identity. But we want to do so by integrating with the European Union as a community of nations, a defender of democratic values. That's the model we want to follow. We want to follow the economic success of western Europe. We want to join the modern world. We want to become high-tech-oriented. We already have highly educated population, scientifically and mathematically trained. We want to get onto the New Economy bandwagon even as we keep developing and restructuring our old economy, on which, of course, in the 10 years since independence, we have had to work very hard. We now have a functioning free market economy in Latvia and we're certainly hoping to keep improving it so that we can raise our standard of living and be at the forefront of new developments in this new century.


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