Loading AI tools
Finnish organization that promotes Karelian culture and history From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karjalan Liitto (in English: Karelian Association) is a Finnish organisation that promotes Karelian culture and history. It also functions as an interest group for Karelian evacuees. As of 2023, the organization consists of 14 districts in Finland, cooperating with other Karelian movements and organisations.[1]
Karelian Association | |
Formation | 20 April 1940 |
---|---|
Purpose | Cultural institution Advocacy group |
Headquarters | Helsinki |
Location | |
Origins | Local government of Finnish Karelia |
Membership | 20,000 (2022) |
Chairman | Martti Talja |
Federal Council | |
Website | https://www.karjalanliitto.fi/ |
The association was established by Karelian local governments, parishes and provincial organizations on 20 April 1940, immediately after the Winter War. The chief aim was to attend to the interests of Karelians who had lost their homes.
By the 1960s, the organization started to focus on preservation of the Karelian culture, by that point most of the economic and social problems faced by resettled Karelians were addressed.[2]
The Karelian Association has close ties to the Finnish government and the European Union.
The organization had an official magazine Karjala Lehti, which stopped being published in September 2022, but there are plans to restart printing in 2023.[3]
In 2023, Karjalan Liitto was contacted by a Karelian nationalist organisation, which wanted to cooperate with the movement in order to return Karelia back to Finland. The movement refused the offer, seeing it as a Russian information attack.[4]
Some members of Karjalan Liito supported a peaceful return of Karelia, but as of 2023, the movement is against border changes with Russia.[5]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.