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At present, our most significant project is the distrubution of our recently completed documentary film, Red Terror on the Amber Coast. This
film describes the Soviet's use of state sponsored terror, in the hands of the KGB and its predecessors, as as the principal means to impose Soviet rule on the Baltic Republics and their people during the years 1939 - 1953. The film focuses principally on Lithuania as an exemplar of Soviet repression from the Molotov-von Ribbentrop pac to the death of Stalin. Through iinterviews with eminent historians in Lithuan and the United States; with commentaries by President Valdas Adamkus of Lithuania and Vytautas Landsbergis, the first chief of state of free Li9thuania; and especially through vivid interviews with KGB prisoners, resistance fighters, deportees, and slave laborers - men, women and even children - who worked along the Arctic Coast, the forests of Siberia, and mines of Magadan, we picture the systematic imposing of a social collectivist, single party, police state steeped in fear and terror on democratic, western republics. present a picture of the Soviets' calculated attempts to crush the Baltic peoples, their countries and their culture. Through the willing assistance of the leading archivists iin Vilnius and Riga, we have been able to assemble extensive archival footage and still photographs from the period. All together they make up the resources necessary to tell the story of the struggle between
Stalin's police to impose a totalitarian and collectivist rule and
culture on the independent and democratic Republics, and
the struggle to resist the Soviet's forced occupation.
This
project has been undertaken by the joint team of a writer and a film-maker,
Ken Gumbert, the film-maker, and David O'Rourke, the
writer and edito rwho is also director of the Tatra Project. Each of us has a half-dozen
years experience in Eastern Europe, and each has a well-established
track-record in his own field. Ken Gumbert's film, "Saving Grace," won the 2005 Gabriel Award for the best documentary shown on national television. Both are Dominicans. David O'Rourke's books are principally in the field of cultural history.
The project has been in the works since 2001. The intervening years of on-site research and preparations led to the actual filming of interviews in June of 2006. The interviews are with partizans and survivors, leading figures in the country including Vytautas Landsbergis and President Adamkus, archival newsreel film footage,
and still photographs. Most of the film resources are
from the archives of the KGB museum and National Archives in Vilnius, and the Occupation Museum and State Film Archives in Riga. We are indebted to their talented and very professional staff, who have been most supportive of the
project.
The project has been undertaken by the
co-producers who have no Lithuanian connections, but who were startled
in the course of their
work in Eastern
Europe - Ken Gumbert working a film on the Soviet takeover in Czechoslovakia, and David O'Rourke teaching in Vilnius University - to discover th extent of the Soviets' use of terror in the Baltics and how little is known in the West about the terrible
suffering of the people in the Baltics under the Soviets. And
once with that knowledge they decided that it was both a historic and
a human story that merited the telling.
More information on the film can be found on the webpage of the production company, Domedia Productions of Newport, Rhode Island - the producer of the film. Domediaproductions.org
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This reconsturction project, inside an Orthodox church, is typical of the destruction of dhurches during the Soviet era.
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