Yesterday I finally made it to The Estonian History Museum in Pirita, somewhere I've been meaning to since I first came to Estonia. I actually went there when I was studying in Tallinn, but it was closed, and have never made it back until now. The museum had a good exhibit on the 90 years of the Estonian Republic, but what most interested me was the Soviet statues placed around the back of the museum. Far out of sight, without any signage, you can see Lenin, Stalin and a range of more obscure Estonian communists dumped in random piles.
This is the sort of thing that many tourists would love to see, but Estonians just don't realise it's value. We got talking to a security guard, who said that there are plans to place them all in a park nearby, but they are just waiting for funding from the government. The security guard was there because one Estonian activist has recently removed some Soviet monuments and dumped them there. This is risky business given the consequences of moving statues in Tallinn in the recent past!
This is typical of Estonia's complete lack of interest in preserving their Soviet past. I know it wasn't a pleasant time, but it is a part of their history, and for me its sad that the country sweeps its communist past under the carpet.
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