June deportation
memorial 2025

14. June 1941

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INSTALLATION "WAGON OF TEARS"

The "Wagon of Tears" installation is inspired by the cattle cars used by the Soviet regime to deport people from Estonia to remote regions of Russia. On the sides of the wagon, a graphic novel provides a concise and visual overview of the tragic events of the June 14, 1941 deportations.
 

The Estonian Institute of Human Rights Institute's picture story of the June deportation, along with its antecedents and aftermath, provides a strong and emotional portrayal of one of the darkest moments in Estonian history. The images, based on Veiko Tammjärv's historical photographs, are expressive and powerful, with the sparse and contrasting use of color enhancing the impression of the tragedy. Accompanying texts briefly and factually explain the historical background, helping to place the events in a wider context. In the comic, both the deporters and their victims, including well-known historical figures and ordinary people caught in the wheels of history, are given a voice.

The picture story of the June deportation can be seen at Tammsaare Park in Tallinn from 14.06-16.06.2025

Graphics: Veiko Tammjärv
Texts: Estonian Institute of Human Rights

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Schedule


This year marks 84 years since the June deportations, when Soviet authorities sent thousands of innocent people from Estonia to Siberia.

We remember the victims of this grave crime
at an official ceremony.

On June 14 at 4:00 PM, a memorial ceremony will be held at the Maarjamäe Memorial for the Victims of Communism, followed by the traditional open-air concert.

3:30 PM – 3:50 PMUnveiling of new name plaques in the corridor of the memorial’s
Wall of Remembrance.

3:50 PM A wreath will be laid at the Officers’ Memorial by a representative of
the Ministry of Defence.

4:00 PM – 5:00 PM Memorial ceremony in the “Home Garden” of the memorial.

5:00 PM – 5:45 PM Continuation of the memorial ceremony in the “Home Garden.”
Musical interludes will be performed by the Tallinn Boys’ Choir
under the direction of Lydia Rahula.

Various commemorative events will take place across Estonia on this remembrance day.

ESTONIAN VICTIMS OF COMMUNISM 1940–1991

14.06.1941

June 14, 1941, was a warm and sunny Saturday, the 24th week of the year. In the early hours, before sunrise, a knock was heard on the doors of thousands of homes across Estonia. The operation was planned to begin at dawn, with the sun rising between 4:30 and 5:30 in mid-June. However, in many places, the action was already over by then.
During that short summer night, 10,205 people were torn from their homes and deported thousands of kilometers away to Siberia in animal wagons, without any trial. Among the victims were 132 children under the age of one, including those born in the wagons, 1,378 children up to seven years old, and 15 people over 80 years old, the oldest being 87. Most of the young children and elderly died within the following year, many during the long journey in the animal wagons.

Deportees were officially allowed to take up to 100 kilos of personal belongings per family. In practice, everything depended on the local operative group, composed of Chekists, militiamen, and communist youth. They decided what could be taken, often allowing very little or nothing at all.

The mass crime committed by the Communists on June 14, 1941, was no accident. Deportations in the three Baltic states, Poland (conquered a year earlier), and a week before the outbreak of the German-Soviet war in Moldova, Western Ukraine, and Western Belarus, were typical of the Soviet Union's destructive treatment of subjugated nations. The goal was to destroy the elite of the subjugated people and create a totalitarian communist society of frightened citizens. The groups targeted for extermination were labeled "socially dangerous elements" by Soviet ideology.

People were shocked, as all this had seemed impossible just a day before, given the bright recent past. The demolition of the previous world began with the destruction of the Estonian state, but few had anticipated the massive brutality of the new regime. The enemy knew where to start: without their own country, the people had no one to demand even the most basic human rights, including the right to a homeland.

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