May Day

Walking towards what was then the "Daugavpils Desert," where the Chemistry is today, flags fluttering in the chill breeze, it felt good to participate in a process those representatives included in the constitution they drafted and adopted. I've since heard a reliable rumor that the required number of signatures, 149 064, was recently reached -- in the nick of time, as tomorrow's the last day to sign (though I understand that in my city, only a few hundred people did so). The governing coalition hastily withdrew the legislation to avoid a referendum, since a referendum will be seen as a vote of confidence, or lack thereof, in this Cabinet -- they've therefore tried to paint the process as a costly "referendum about nothing." The film director Laila Pakalniņa, writing in Diena, observed how she felt when the French visitors attending an event in Rīga excused themselves to fly home and vote, seeing it as their duty -- when most Latvians cannot be bothered to go and sign for a referendum that is crucial to whether our democracy functions or not.
Fēlikss Cielēns, in exile after the 1905 Revolution, marveled at French democracy. He once found a page from a young child's notebook -- notes on the Declaration of the Rights of Man. He kept it all his life and held it, nearly blind, when he dictated his memoirs, including such high points as striding into that May Day assembly eighty-seven years ago. We still have a long way to go before democracy is so ingrained in us -- but reaching the required number of signatures will at least demonstrate that not everybody is apathetic.
The photograph of May Day 1920 is from Wikipedia.
Labels: constituent assembly, daugavpils, history, latvia, may day, referendum