Reflections on Cultural Maintenance,
Innovation and Change
in the Latvian Community
By: Solveiga Miezitis
From: Polyphony Summer 1984 pp. 115-116
© 1984 Multicultural History Society of Ontario
The Toronto Latvian comrnunity numbers about 8,000 and is now
entering into its third generation of immigrant status. Although the numbers
of active participants in the ethnic community life have reduced tenfold
and the youth are intermarrying outside their ethnic group at the rate of
5 to 1, the process of cultural transmission and maintenance within the
community continues to follow the patterns of transplantation, rebellion
and rediscovery exhibited by the previous generation of immigrants. The
following comments relate to the process of cultural maintenance, innovation
and institutional change within the Latvian community and its influence
on second-generation immigrant youth.
During the past ten years I have had the opportunity to take part in interviews
and intensive group discussions about socialization experiences in the home
and community and their impact on the ethnic identification of second-generation
Latvian youth in North America, Europe and Australia. Five years ago I conducted
an interview study with sixty second-generation Latvian immigrant youths
who grew up in Toronto. Half of the group was still actively involved in
the Latvian community while the other half had dropped out or was only minimally
involved. Depending on their perceptions, the interviewees can be categorized
into three main groups-the ''automatic" Latvian, the rebels and the
creative self-expressionists. Although rediscovery can be experienced by
members of all three of these groups, it is more common among the creatives.
The active youth most frequently describes himself as an "automatic"
Latvian. The automatic Latvian comes from a family that speaks Latvian at
home and spends most of its leisure time in community activities. The parents
have a strong bond with their children and have been able to transmit their
values and traditions to their offspring. The automatic active Latvian started
attending Latvian heritage school around four years of age, began going
to Latvian summer camp at around six, joined Latvian cubs or brownies at
seven, and/or joined a Latvian cultural or social activity as a child or
adolescent. As a teenager he continued his education at the Latvian high
school in Toronto on Friday evenings and/or at one of the three summer high
schools in the United States. These high schools feature a heritage language
program, courses in history, geography and culture, as well as practical
activities in folk arts and crafts, singing and folk dancing. The local
high school also provides opportunities for socializing at dances, on trips
and social evenings. Perhaps the most important socializing occurs during
the informal banding together after school hours in local restaurants, or
friends' homes. During their teens some continue to participate in Latvian
boy scout or girl guide activities, others join sports activities, theatre
groups, choirs, musical and folk-dance groups. Folk-dancing is the most
popular of the cultural activities for youth. They enjoy dancing together
at weekly rehearsals and show off their skill and costumes in local performances,
as well as international events. Even those young people who feel only marginally
connected to the community and whose language fluency may be limited can
experience a sense of belonging to the dance groups.
But not everyone grows up as an automatic Latvian. Some find their way into
the Latvian community only at a later stage. During college years there
is the further opportunity to join one of a dozen sorortities or fraternities
and to take an active role in the Latvian Youth Association which organises
various social and cultural activities-congresses and dances-as well as
political seminars, rallies and demonstrations that may take them as far
afield as Helsinki and Madrid to express their protest against the subjugation
of the Baltic states. Active youth also travel to other Latvian centres,
and an increasing number visit relatives in Latvia. Travel is important.
It widens one's perspective and brings new friends. When asked about their
Latvian "peak experiences," most young people talk about their
participation at a Latvian Song Festival. Singing in the choir or folk-dancing
in an arena with one thousand other Latvian youth from around the world
heightens their sense of belonging and ethnic pride. Song festivals take
place yearly in Australia and the United States and less frequently in Europe
and Canada.
Every four years Toronto hosts a festival that draws up to 15,000 spectators
and close to 2,000 participants in a gala of music, dance, arts, crafts
and social events. The next Latvian Song Festival will take place in Toronto
in 1986. Another peak experience for many college-age youth is a trip to
a Latvian Cultural Seminar-a yearly event in North America that usually
draws together about one hundred youth and some forty high-powered resource
people from all over the continent, as well as a few from abroad. These
seminars feature an intense ten-day immersion program in Latvian language
and culture with a choice of specialization in literature, history, social
and political studies, music, workshops in arts and crafts, drama, vocal
and instrumental music and folk-dance. The participants are particularly
impressed with the intensity of involvement and the professional quality
of these programs. Many a youth has rediscovered his ethnic roots during
one of these Latvian immersion experiences.
Some of the automatic Latvians continue to participate in community life
in the role of heritage teacher, scout leader, counsellor or youth organiser.
The rebels, who do not experience a sense of belonging and satisfaction
from active participation in these traditional activities, tend to drop
out usually in their early teens when family influence lessens although
some of these rebels may reappear on the scene later as potential rediscoverers.
Rediscovery is not the prerogative of rebels alone. Automatic Latvians and
ethnically indifferent youth may rediscover their heritage and find that
their cultural background can bring new meaning to their lives particularly
when it provides encouragement and enrichment for their creative self-expression.
What satisfaction does the Latvian community bring to the young? For most
young people, and especially the automatic Latvians, the community provides
a predictable social structure and friendships which satisfy their need
for belonging, as well as opportunities for participation in interesting
activities. For the rebels, the friendships often were not as satisfying,
the activities seemed too structured and traditional, and many experienced
the need to break out of a pattern that had been imposed by parental authority
and had not become integrated into their own developing sense of values.
This notion was strongly confirmed by the differing value patterns exhibited
by the active and non-active youth. 1 The actives hold values which resemble
more closely those of their parents, furthermore, they attribute more idealistic
values and a stronger cultural orientation to their parents, whereas the
non-actives perceive their parents as being more materialistic and hedonistic
in their orientation.
The ambitious and creative find that the ethnic community invites, challenges
and supports the expression of various talents to a greater degree than
society at large. It is a micro-society within the larger one with a multitude
of social organisations and activities, requiring people with leadership
abilities and talents. The community, like an extended family, provides
an interested and appreciative audience to budding artists, actors, writers
and musicians. For example, world renowned Latvian-born Canadian pianist
Arturs Ozolins won recognition at a Latvian Youth Festival held in Toronto
in 1959. Latvian actress Skaidrite Leja, best known for her role in the
acclaimed Canadian production of "Paper Wheat," began her acting
career on the ethnic community stage. She continues to express her ethnic
influence through her work with Amberlights Theatre, an ensemble which has
translated and produced Baltic plays in English.
The second woman in Ontario to become a Rhodes Scholar is Banuta Rubess,
a Latvian playwright and dramatist who created and produced her first controversial
social commentary on the Latvian community in her teens. She has since continued
to evoke her Latvian connection in her creative endeavours, including the
ambitious musical production "Varondarbi" (Heroica), based on
Latvian mythology, written and produced in 1979 for the Latvian Youth Song
Festival in Montreal. The music was composed by another second-generation
Latvian Canadian Dace Stauvers-Aperans. Her more recent productions focusing
on feminist themes, include "Silver Veil"-an English version of
a Latvian classic which was shown in Europe and North America-"Smoke
Damage" and "This is for You Anna."
The youth seminars bring together creative young people interested in music,
drama, literature and social organisation with resource people who help
them recognize their talents and find expression in the ethnic community
context. The most important institution which supports the expression of
young talent is the Latvian Youth Song Festival. It was originated by Martins
Stauvers a decade ago at Place des Beaux Arts in Montreal. This festival
takes place every third year in various Latvian centres in the United States
and Canada and attracts hundreds of young performers and large audiences
from all over the continent. The event features the works and performances
by young Latvian artists and encourages creative experimentation. The controversial
musical "Heroica" was commissioned by this festival. Based on
familiar Latvian mythological figures, the musical evoked images of the
Broadway production "The Wiz." Intense controversy raged around
it in the more conservative circles because of the seemingly disrespectful
transposition of traditional heroes into a modernistic saga.
SMIJ (Si Maksla ir Jauna) (This Art is New) is a Toronto-based cultural
weekend that sponsors the experimental creative endeavours of youth. Started
in 1973 by the innovative youth organiser Baiba Rubess, under the auspices
of the Latvian National Youth Association, over the past decade SMIJ has
exhibited the works of over fifty new artists and has introduced numerous
young composers, poets, film makers and musicians. This year's event featured
five art exhibits, the most noteworthy being a children's exhibit and a
special exhibit at the newly founded gallery houses in the Latvian Canadian
Cultural Centre by young Latvian artists who have won recognition on the
North American art scene. Among these are the OMNI award-winning photographer
Ints Plampe, design artist Balvis Rubess, glass artist Gundars Robez, water-colour
artist and imaginative children's book illustrator Inese Jansons, and internationally
exhibited artist Dzintars Mezulis, primarily known as a sculptor of magical
creations. The musical program featured audiovisual creations with jazz
overtones composed by Rita Strautins, Gatis Puide, Lalita Salina and Anita
Kuprise.
Finally, a creative blending of the old and the new in the more traditional
expressions of culture was presented by award-winning folk dance choreographer
and director of the Toronto Latvian Folk Dance Group Dizdancis-zig Miezitis.
His dance creations range from large-scale traditional choreography for
hundreds of dancers at a Song Festival mass performance to a fantasy ballet-"The
Kokle and the Devil" combining folk elements in music and dance. Video
illustrations from Dizdancis' thirty-fifth anniversary performance in 1983
featured creative choreography expressing ritualistic, humorous and innovative
themes in Latvian dance tradition.
The Latvian community continues to alter its traditional institutional forms
to support creative cultural activity among the young. Five years ago an
''alternate" heritage language school-Valodina-was formed to involve
parents in a more broadly defined educational enterprise, which attempts
to prepare the children for participation in the creative community. The
children participate in creative drama and musical activities and take part
in community-based cultural events as a group. Their works were seen at
the recent SMIJ exhibit. They are proud of their school and their culture.
They are a living part of it.
Solveiga Miezitis, "Ethnic Identity Development in Second Generation
Latvian Youth," report of study funded by the Multiculturalism Directorate,
Secretary of State, Ottawa, 1981.
Website design: TG Magazine, 1996