Activities in the West in the 1950s to free Lithuania : the Supreme committee for the liberation of Lithuania in 1944-1950

Autor: Banionis, Juozas
Jazyk: litevština
Rok vydání: 2007
Předmět:
World Lithuanian Community
Deportuotojų iš Lietuvos bendruomenė
Lithuania's independence
Vykdomasis komitetas
Atlantic Charter
Pabėgėliai / Refugees
Šalies nepriklausomybė / National independence
Pasaulio lietuvių bendruomenė
Soviet occupation
Supreme Committee for the Liberation of Lithuania
Lietuva (Lithuania)
Vyriausias Lietuvos išlaisvinimo komitetas (VLIK)
Lithuanian emigration
Tremtis. Tremtiniai / Deportees. Exile
Lithuanian emigrees
vyriausybė egzilyje
Tarptautiniai santykiai / International relations
Vyriausiasis Lietuvos išlaisvinimo komitetas
VLIK
Vokietija (Germany)
Lietuvių išeivija
Vakarų Vokietija
Pokaris
Tarptautiniai konfliktai. Karai / International conflicts. Wars
Postwar period
16th February 1944 Declaration
Case for the liberation of Lithuania
Diplomatija / Diplomacy
Ezecutive Council
Vakarai
West Germany
Lietuva
Emigrantai. Išeivija. Egzodas / Emigrants. Diaspora
Lietuvių emigrantai
Migracija / Migration
Zdroj: Genocidas ir rezistencija 2007, 1 (21), p. 80-104.
ISSN: 1392-3463
Popis: Tai ankstesniojo straipsnio tęsinys, jame toliau atskleidžiamos Lietuvos laisvinimo veiklos Vakaruose užuomazgos, kilimas ir plėtotė penktajame dešimtmetyje. Pirmojoje dalyje buvo kalbama apie Amerikos lietuvių tarybą (ALT). Antrojoje dalyje parodoma Vokietijoje atsikūrusiu Vyriausiojo Lietuvos išlaisvinimo komiteto (VLIK'o) politinė veikla, jo parama organizuojantis lietuvių karo pabėgėliams - politiniams tremtiniams į Lietuvių tremtinių bendruomenę (LTB), Pasaulio lietuvių bendruomenės (PLB) pirmtakę. Reestablished in West Germany on 8 April 1945, the Vyriausiasis Lietuvos išlaisvinimo komitetas (VLIK, the Supreme Committee for the Liberation of Lithuania), which was originally an anti-Nazi organisation, became anti-Soviet. It consisted of political parties in the Seimas in Lithuania and resistance movements formed in occupied Lithuania, with two blocs: Christian and anticlerical. The VLIK made changes to the 16 February 1944 Declaration and published the Wtirzburg Protocol on 3 July 1945. According to this, the political system in liberated Lithuania was to be created on the basis of the 1922 Constitution. In the guidelines for its liberation, which were based on the principles of the Atlantic Charter, much hope was placed on the pending Peace Conference. Between 1944 and 1950, one of the most important aims of the VLIK was to organise a Lithuanian government in exile (originally an executive body performing the functions of a government). To this aim, relations with the Lithuanian Diplomatic Service (LDT) were to be regulated. Meetings between the two institutions were held. Following the 21-26 July 1946 meeting in Bern, an Executive Council (VT), a political body with government functions, was formed. The Executive Council formed on 12 October 1946 did not perform any functions. In 1947, following the resignation of its chairman and the head of the foreign service, a new council was formed. It participated successfully in the sphere of Lithuania's liberation. At the Paris meeting on 5-15 August 1947, the issue of Lithuania's liberation and the continuing armed resistance in the occupied country were discussed widely. The role of the VLIK and the Executive Council in the liberation process was marked, although an agreement between the two institutions was not reached. A decision to seek "closer and more perfect cooperation" was reached. Promoting the case for the liberation of Lithuania in the West and striving to form a government in exile, the VLlK worked out and sent memoranda and statements to the leaders of the USA, Great Britain and other large countries. The documents stressed the hopes for the freedom of the Lithuanians, expressing at the same time concern about the situation in the occupied country, i.e., the armed resistance, mass deportations, and the fate of refugees in the West. In the second half of the 1940s, on the initiative of the VLIK and with the approval of the ALT, the issue of organising political deportees came to the fore. On 3 March 1946, a Community of Lithuanian Deportees was established in Hanau, with the functions of upholding the national identity and education. Shortly afterwards, at a political conference of Lithuanian deportees, it was noted that the Community of Lithuanian Deportees should join the liberation activities and it had to "get ready for rebuilding Lithuania". Before political refugees scattered all over the free world, the Lithuanian Charter was published on 14 June 1949. This document laid an ideological basis for patriotically minded Lithuanian emigres, and provided premises for the formation of Lithuanian communities in different countries in the 1950s, which later united into the World Lithuanian Community.
Databáze: OpenAIRE