#Lithuanian SSR
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
easternblocrelics · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Kaunas Polytechnic Institute, Radioelectronics Department Kaunas, Lithuanian SSR 1970s
134 notes · View notes
thererisesaredstar · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Exhibition celebrates the 50th anniversary of the October Revolution & achievements of the Lithuanian S.S.R. (1967)
22 notes · View notes
venturesomescout · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
73 notes · View notes
mypastnow · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
"Summer" photo by Aleksandras Macijauskas, Lithuanian SSR, 1982.
9 notes · View notes
legacysat · 16 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Stereo tape recorder Elfa-332, Vilnius electrical engineering plant Elfa. Lithuanian SSR, 1980
159 notes · View notes
komsomolka · 3 months ago
Text
it's saddening to see lithuania and other baltic states after capitalist restoration regressing back to old exploitative relationship with west european imperialists especially germany which did so much harm to lithuanian people in particular.
germany setting up it's first military base abroad since wwii in LITHUANIA?! this makes me sick to my core.
128 notes · View notes
nameinconcept-blog · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Photos of Soviet Lithuania from the Soviet Ukrainian photo book "Song of Our Native Land" a book dedicated to the 60-year anniversary of the USSR. 1982
"Vilnius, the capital city of the Lithuanian SSR"
"The picturesque land of Lithuania"
"Digging for amber in Palanga"
"Old architectural monuments"
"Song festival"
11 notes · View notes
itsslowsonic · 22 days ago
Text
Can Communism/Socialism Save America?
Everyone knows Fascism is bad, right? But most people don't know that Fascism and Communism are just two sides of the same coin. Fascism and Communism are all based on dictatorship. Did the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NAZI) allow other parties as their competitors? Did the Soviet Communist Party allow other parties to be their competitors? Does the Chinese Communist Party allow other parties to be their competitors? Do you want democracy or dictatorship? Do you want only one voice in your country? Do you want Collectivism that ignores or sacrifices any individual at any time as needed?
Can Communism/Socialism save Czechoslovakia? The Czechoslovakian Communist Party failed (1960 - 1990).
Can Communism/Socialism save East Germany? The Socialist Unity Party of Germany failed (1949 - 1990).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Hungarian People's Republic? The Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party failed (1949 - 1989).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Socialist Republic of Romania? The Romanian Communist Party failed (1947 - 1989).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Polish People's Republic? The Polish United Workers' Party failed (1947 - 1989).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Armenia failed (1920 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic? The Azerbaijan Communist Party failed (1920 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Byelorussia failed (1920 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Estonia failed (1940 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Georgian Communist Party failed (1921 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Kazakhstan failed (1936 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Kirghizia failed (1936 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Latvia failed (1940 - 1990).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Lithuanian Communist Party failed (1940 - 1990).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Council of People's Commissars of the Moldavian SSR failed (1940 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Tajikistan failed (1929 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Turkmenistan failed (1925 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Uzbekistan failed (1924 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic? The Communist Party of Ukraine failed (1919 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic? The Soviet Communist Party failed (1917 - 1991).
Can Communism/Socialism save America?
Do you still need more proof to prove that Communism/Socialism did never and will never work?
Do you want to prove all animals can live without oxygen?
Do you really want to use your future and every American's future to experience the Communism/Socialism life to prove that Communism/Socialism cannot save America?
4 notes · View notes
unhonestlymirror · 2 months ago
Text
I blame hetalia for real Lithuanians discriminating against real Belaruthians. "Lietbel" sounds very similar to "Litbel" which was for "Lithuanian-Belorussian SSR", so it triggers hurtful memories of russian occupation in Lithuanians and Belaruthians.
4 notes · View notes
marykk1990 · 1 year ago
Text
My next post in support of Ukraine is:
Next site, we're visiting the city of Chervonohrad in Lviv Oblast. The city was part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth when it was founded in 1692 under the name Krystynopol. In 1772, it became part of the Habsburg Empire. During the interwar period between WWI & WWII, it was part of the Second Polish Republic, and then later, it was part of the Polish People's Republic. In 1951, it became part of the Ukrainian SSR and was renamed Chervonohrad. The founder of the city, Voivode Feliks Kazmirierz Potocki, had named the city after his wife, Krystyna Lubomirska. Voivode is a title for a military leader or warlord. During WWII, in 1942, the Jews of the city were deported to Belzec extermination camp. It was a camp built by the SS explicitly to kill Polish Jews. In August 1990, Chervonohrad became the first city in the soviet union to remove a monument to Vladimir Lenin. Something tells me Chervonohrad doesn't want to be a part of muscovy.
#StandWithUkraine
#SlavaUkraïni 🇺🇦🌻
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Here's another pic of Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Olena Zelenska from happier times. I love their smiles in this pic. I hope all Ukrainians can smile like that again soon!
#StandWithUkraine
#SlavaUkraïni 🇺🇦🌻
Tumblr media
14 notes · View notes
blocpulp · 4 months ago
Text
Pavel Klushantsev - Moon (Lithuanian SSR, USSR, 1976)
artist: E. Voishvillo, Yulia Kiselyova
Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
flagwars · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
10 notes · View notes
thererisesaredstar · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Do not destroy the landscape (ca. 1980s)
30 notes · View notes
pargolettasworld · 1 year ago
Video
youtube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36LAQw7bfUM
Slonim is one of those towns that moved countries over time as borders shifted around it.  It’s been part of Poland, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Russia, Poland again, the Byelorussian SSR, and now independent Belarus.  For much of that time, Slonim also had a significant Jewish population, with at least ten or eleven synagogues in a relatively small town.  Most of them were murdered in the Holocaust, a fact that I’m sure will surprise absolutely nobody.
But they lived.  And while they lived, they traveled, and they loved, and they made music, and they sang.  This tune might have originated with the Jews of Slonim, or it might have come from Greece to them, or both the Greeks and the Jews of Slonim might have picked it up from a third party.  All of these stories are possible, and more than one of them might be true.  But today, we have this nigun that bears the name of Slonim, a town where once there were Jews.
4 notes · View notes
crimerecords-info · 1 year ago
Text
June 14 is the Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Communist Repression in Estonia
Tumblr media
Monument to Latvian citizens deported on June 14, 1941 (Riga). The car in which the deportees were taken out. On the stone next to it is the number of people expelled in 1941 and 1949.
In Lithuania, this date is called the Day of Sorrow and Hope, in Latvia – the Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Communist Terror, in Estonia – the Day of Mourning.
On June 14, 1941, mass deportations began in the Baltic States. In mid-May 1941, the People's Commissar of Internal Affairs of the USSR, Lavrenty Beria, agreed with Stalin on a draft resolution of the SNK and the Central Committee of the CPSU (b) "On measures to cleanse the Lithuanian SSR of anti-Soviet, criminal and socially dangerous elements" (at the stage of approval, Latvian and Estonian were added to the Lithuanian SSR).
Tumblr media
Former members of various nationalist parties, policemen, gendarmes, landlords, manufacturers, high-ranking officials, officers and criminals conducting anti-Soviet activities and used by foreign intelligence services for espionage purposes were subject to resettlement. Such people had to be arrested, their property confiscated and sent to camps for a period of five to eight years, followed by settlement for 20 years in remote areas of the USSR. Their family members (except criminals), as well as family members of those who were sentenced to capital punishment or escaped from justice and moved to an illegal position, would have been waiting for them there.
On June 14, 1941, a forced relocation operation began in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. 17.5 thousand people from Lithuania were deported to the Novosibirsk region, Kazakhstan and Komi ASSR, about 17 thousand people from Latvia – to the Krasnoyarsk Territory and Novosibirsk region, as well as to the Karaganda region of Kazakhstan, about six thousand people from Estonia – to the Kirov and Novosibirsk regions.
Tumblr media
After the end of the war, repressive policies, including forced relocations, intensified again in 1947 and noticeably intensified in 1948. In total, in 1940-1953, more than 203 thousand people were sent from the Baltic States to special settlement, including 118599 people from Lithuania, 52541 people from Latvia and 32540 people from Estonia.
Tumblr media
In Armenia, June 14 is also honored by victims of communist repression, but this day was called more politically correct there - the Day of Protection of the Rights of Innocent Convicts. This memorable date appeared in Armenia on the initiative of the Dashnaktsutyun party in memory of those repressed during the Soviet era.
*Translated using an electronic dictionary. The original text in Russian and much more on the criminal topic can be selected on the main page of the site - http://crimerecords.info/
2 notes · View notes
filingfillets · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Justinas Šeibokas / Lithuanian SSR Cooperative Unions / 1986 / Vilniaus, Lithuania
_____
sources:
photo1:
©︎ BACU
https://www.facebook.com/SocModernism/photos/a.763961350413275/1469536479855755/?paipv=0&eav=AfaxyI5tiYFW1VZr708fmtY8X2wFuWt68CxXzuiZUZikBLXO-ppy8lmuaTQdCmVHKuY&_rdr
drawing: “Architektūra sovietinėje Lietuvoje”, 2012
photo2: "Statyba ir architektūra", 1980
https://autc.lt/architekturos-objektas/?id=1474
2 notes · View notes