Romas Kalanta
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Romas Kalanta (22 February 1953 – 14 May 1972) was a 19-year-old Lithuanian high school student who killed himself by self-immolation in an act of protest against the Soviet regime in Lithuania. His death provoked the largest post-war riots in Lithuania<ref name=misiun/> and inspired similar self-immolations. In 1972, 13 more people committed suicide by self-immolation in Lithuania.<ref name=anusa/>
Kalanta became a symbol of the Lithuanian resistance throughout the 1970s and 1980s.<ref name=colem/> In 2000, he was posthumously awarded the Order of the Cross of Vytis.
Life and deathEdit
Kalanta was religious; in a school essay he indicated that he would like to become a Catholic priest, which caused him some troubles with the authorities.<ref name=kamin/> He attended an evening school while working at a factory.<ref name=kamin/> Kalanta played the guitar and made a few drawings; he had long hair and sympathised with the hippies.<ref name=vardys/> These sympathies were later exploited by the Soviets to discredit Kalanta among the older population.
At noon on 14 May 1972, Kalanta poured three litres of petroleum on himself and set himself on fire in the square adjoining the Laisvės Alėja in front of the Kaunas State Musical Theatre where, in 1940, the puppet legislature People's Seimas had declared the establishment of the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic and petitioned the Soviet Union to admit Lithuania as one of the soviet socialist republics.<ref name=peter/> He died about 14 hours later in hospital. Before the suicide, Kalanta left his notebook with a brief note on a bench. Its content became known only after the declaration of independence in 1990 and opening up of secret KGB archives. The note read "blame only the regime for my death" (Lithuanian: Dėl mano mirties kaltinkite tik santvarką).<ref name=kamin/> No other notes were found to explain in more detail what had provoked the suicide.<ref name=kamin/>
After his death, rumours spread that a few of his classmates had formed a patriot group, and that they had held a lottery to determine which of them would have to carry out the mission.<ref name=peter/> Official Soviet propaganda claimed that Kalanta was mentally ill.
Riots and aftermathEdit
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The Soviet government tried to cover up the event, but its witnesses spread the news by word of mouth. On 18 May, the Soviet authorities hastened Kalanta's burial by several hours to prevent publicity.<ref name=anusa/> His funeral procession touched off two full days of rebellion in which thousands of people took to the streets shouting: "Freedom for Lithuania!" They attacked a police station and the party offices. The people gathered, mostly high school students and young workers, broke into a politically charged riot, which was forcibly dispersed by the KGB, militsiya, and Internal Troops. The next day, about 3,000 people marched along the Laisvės Alėja of whom 402 were arrested. The New York Times reported numerous injuries and one death among Soviet troops.<ref name=nyt/>
The public agitation was felt throughout 1972 and 1973 as the KGB registered various anti-Soviet incidents to even greater degrees.<ref name=anusa/> Lithuania recorded 13 other suicides by fire in 1972, including 24-year-old V. Stonys in Varėna on 29 May, 60-year-old A. Andriuškevičius in Kaunas on 3 June, 62-year-old Zališauskas on 10 June, and 40-year-old Juozapas Baracevičius in Šiauliai on 22 June.<ref name=anusa/><ref name=vidz/>
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