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Maili Malvre

Interview

Maili Malvre tells the story of her family’s escape during the June Deportation of 1941. Fearing the Soviet repressions her family was forced to flee to Germany in 1944. Later like many other Estonians they ended up in the USA. In the new society everyone, even those who previously had high societal status, had to start from the bottom.

  • 2014
  • Maili Malvre
  • Uve Poom
  • June deportation 1941
  • Escape to the West
  • DP camps
  • UNRRA
  • Foreign Estonians
  • German occupation
  • March bombing 1944
  • Singing Revolution
  • Second Soviet Occupation of Estonia
  • Andres Tamm
  • Edgar Kigaste
  • Roman Tavast
  • Raul Tavast
  • Konrad Adenauer
  • Peter Megler (Mägler)
  • Karl Lipping
  • Olavi Malvre
  • Hjalmar Mäe
  • Kalju Alaküla
  • Vaike Vahi
  • Richard David
  • Lydia Vahtra
  • Mati Lepik
  • Inge Rütman (Taal)
  • Rein Kirsimägi
  • Andres Taul
  • Kadriorg
  • Tõravere
  • Hagenhof
  • Boizenburg
  • Göttingen
  • Boston
  • Corcoran
  • Fowler
  • Fresno
  • Tallinn
  • Helsinki
  • Saint Petersburg
  • Moscow
  • Kyiv
  • Chernobyl
  • Pühajärve

Seotud lood

Maili Malvre

The war took homeland along with the social position

"Gone with the war"

educational film

"My Gulag", Lev Netto recollections

Documentary

Fleeing: Departure Into the Unknown

Documentary

Deportation of 1941 and 1949 in Valgamaa

In between Two Names

Documentary

Eesti Mälu Instituut

SA Eesti Mälu Instituut

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