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Imbi Paju Sisters across the Gulf of Finland. Looking at Each Others Pain Feedback:

Heikki Majava

- Psychiatrist, psychologist and psychosemiotician, Finland -


"I find myself myself now believing that, in the spirit of Dante’s divine author genius, Imbi Paju’s book can coach us – as individual citizens, as independent nations and members of ever growing national organizations – to grow ourselves, and to grow a moral cosmos to combat and
treat evil – repression, submission, decimation and devastation."

Literary Clinic: What It Means to Be Human Feedback.

“It is enjoyable and inspirational to read how everything in this book so calmly and clearly flows toward a feeling of solidarity.”

Thomas Salumets

Assoc. Prof. Emeritus, University of British Columbia, 2019

Literary Clinic has a therapeutic effect, while validating, reminding us of and predicting our belonging to the Western humanitarian space. Still now, and in the future.”

EERIK-NIILES KROSS

historian, author, diplomat and politician

“People of my generation, and particularly younger people, have a great lack of understanding about what “really” happened: the society of violence and perpetual fear in which people were forced to live. Even today, we collectively prefer to remain silent about certain things rather than to talk them through, because we presume the emergence of a great deal of pain. And hey, don’t we have enough pain in present times without rummaging around for it in the past? But Paju says, “Trauma is a time traveler. Unless we intervene, it moves invisibly into new generations.” (p. 61). Therefore, the author has decided to write a book that will stimulate people to deal with this underplayed personal and historical pain that has been pushed aside into darkness, because only by doing so can we hope for a more normal future in this world that is rushing ever more wildly toward dystopia.”

Sveta Grigorjeva

Poet

"The Literary Clinic compendium of essays deals with our era through works by various writers, analyzing human life and humankind while also taking a look inward, into oneself. Through these examples from literature, Paju creates spaces and bridges that deal with humankind on multiple levels: our personal scars, memory and history, current and future times, the environment, nature, war and peace. The work also reflects on how a person can find the courage to live and love in an environment of emotional wisdom."

Outi Hytönen

Finnish author, translator and literary critic  

Comments by others on Imbi Paju’s Memories Denied


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"By describing the fate of her mother – arrested, imprisoned, deported to the Gulag as a young woman – Imbi Paju has, in effect, told the story of an entire nation. Widely admired in her native Estonia and elsewhere, Memories Denied could bring that country’s history alive for many others too."

Anne Applebaum

author of Gulag: A History (2003) on the Soviet prison camp system, which won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Non-Fiction.

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"Imbi Paju’s book opens doors onto dark rooms. Let them flood with sunlight. And let others follow the same example."

Edward Lucas

British writer, journalist, security specialist and politician

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“Imbi Paju’s book (Memories Denied) is equally impressive and necessary. It focuses on the denial of atrocities suffered in Estonia during the Soviet occupation: both the unspeakable and the unspoken. On the one hand it is about the denial of the victim. And on the other, it is a history of perpetrators and the dark powers that followed. Imbi Paju’s book is an important contribution to a critical update of cultural memory in Europe. Such stories are critical, because only they can remind us how secretly memories can be denied. As the author says, it is personal memories that give history a human face. The book does, however, also reflected on the larger story: the history of a country that aspires to retain its independence – and has put its hopes into the EU for freedom and security.”

Prof. Dr. Peter Hanenberg

Professor of Cultural Studies, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Lisbon

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“Written by author and film director Imbi Paju, Memories Denied is an impressionist work of art, which creates its images by abandoning the traditional rules and techniques of historical writing, instead using psychology, psychoanalysis, belles-lettres, philosophy, historical facts, personal memories of her countrymen, and the recollections of those close to her. It succeeds in creating an image of what a violent regime can do to people, showing the evil that man inflicts on man when the darkness lurking within his soul seizes power and when the political atmosphere fosters this kind of violence, and showing how a dictatorial regime manipulates remembering in order to hide its criminal actions.


The narrative emerges from Estonia’s experience, from the author’s own family story and personal childhood memories. In her work, Paju is not saying “never again!” On the contrary, the book tells us that events such as these might well happen again. If we make no attempt to keep remembering, we shall never escape the consequences. This book explains how violent regimes founded on totalitarian philosophies persuade people to follow them, thereby stripping them of all their humanity.


 The early 1940s saw the immediate imposition of the Russian SSR Criminal Code, which defined the “objective enemy”– a bandit, an enemy of the people, a kulak, an undesirable element, a hostile nation. According to the renowned Gulag researcher Anne Applebaum, every memoir, every document on the history of the Gulag is but a fragment of the puzzle, a fraction of the explanation. Without these pieces, we might wake up one day not knowing who we are. And without these pieces, words such as “human rights”, “compassion” and “trust” will become mere clichés.”

Toomas Hendrik Ilves

President of Estonia (2006-2016)

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"An important change in the Estonian culture of remembrance was signaled in the mid-2000s by Imbi Paju’s documentary Memories Denied (2005) and her popular history book by the same name. When the film, which had been released in Finland, was first shown in Estonia it provoked a strong emotional response both from renowned cultural critics as well as from a wider audience, as if the Soviet deportations and the Gulag had been addressed for the first time. After two decades of working through the painful memories of Soviet oppression, the film seemed to have captured its impact on people’s lives."

Eneken Laanes

Professor of Comparative Literature, Tallinn University 

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"During the Soviet occupation of Estonia in the 40s and 50s, tens of thousands of people were sent to the Siberian gulags, with Imbi Paju’s mother among them. The author’s memoir Memories Denied constitutes an attempt to come to terms with this dreadful past through reading and writing her mother’s memories. The present article argues that there are complex connections between the imagined and lived experiences of trauma in the memoir, as the author’s (re)constructions of the past are inextricably tied to that of her mother’s, in that Paju does not deny her mother’s memories in order to survive, but dwells in them. Through such a process, which can be called archaeology of subjectivity in the sense that she constructs a self and a persona in large part by excavating through the self-constitutive memories of the previous generation, the article focuses on the transgenerational transmission of trauma through the gendered conduit of remembrance, which is the mother. Memories Denied is, more than anything, an intriguing example of how individual consciousness infuses collective imaginaries. As the repeated tragedy of a single family through the retelling of stories becomes a national tragedy deeply rooted into a fragmented, European narrative, the reading and writing of Imbi Paju’s maternal memories challenges the Soviet politics of destroying memory, intimacy and family ties in the name of a superior, supposedly stable sense of identity."

Andreas Athanasiades

University of Cyprus, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)

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Memories Denied resonates powerfully with the works of renowned intellectuals and writers, such as Still Alive, the memoirs of Holocaust survivor Ruth Kluger, or Crabwalk, the novel by Günther Grass.

Thomas Salumets,

Assoc. Prof. Emeritus, University of British Columbia, 2019

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In 2020, Memories Denied was designated a contemporary literary classic in Finland by Like Publishers. The international journey of Memories Denied, which was initially published in 2006, is testament to the timelessness of the book. It contains meanings to be discovered at different points in time and among different generations. Let us be glad that it has returned to us. The book gives us a deeply meaningful reading experience that continues to provide lessons of discovery about humanity and the fate of a single small person amid the storms of history.

Mari Hyrkkänen

editor and department head of Like Publishers in Finlandl

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No Man Is an Island:  Three Essays on the Gulag Archipelago.

"The collaboration between Paju, Laar and Kross is welcome in every way, endeavoring to achieve maximum objectivity and with the somewhat different styles of each author still a consistent discussion of the life of one of the 20th century’s most influential writers.

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Aivar Kull

- cultural historian -

"All three authors – Imbi Paju, Mart Laar and Eerik-Niiles Kross – analyze the various aspects and meanings of Solzhenitsyn’s life work his book Gulag Archipelago, creating a superb introduction to this specific masterpiece as well as all of Solzhenitsyn’s writings."

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Aimar Altossaar

- Postimees newspaper journalist -

Feedback to the book by Imbi Paju and Sofi Oksanen Fear Was Behind It All

what people say

Heili Sibrits

Jan. 20, 2010 Postimees Estonian newspaper

“The fact that the journalists of Finland’s largest daily newspaper Helsingin Sanomat selected the compilation by Oksanen and Paju as the most noteworthy informative work of 2009 is significant.”
Kalev Kesküla

Eesti Ekspress Estonian newspaper, 2010

“Sofi Oksanen and Imbi Paju have created a powerful international partnership for providing information about Estonian history. The ability of these two energetic women to achieve their goals is worthy of admiration and praise. Their work of enlightenment in this compendium also includes foreign writers who write in a manner that is customary in the West, and thus leave the reader with a feeling of credibility. The compilation was published in Finland in March of last year – for the sixtieth anniversary of the great deportations – and has achieved recognition there. As Imbi Paju writes in the foreword,  it made “the way of speaking about Estonian history more professional and empathetic.” The substantial book offers a wide variety of materials – serious articles on history, sociological studies, essays, political observations, memoirs, writings on current public and political affairs. Although this approach is not exactly focused, the large scale of the compendium, the seriousness of the topics discussed, and the international group of authors creates a feeling of credibility and significance.”

The Gardener of Kadriorg Feedback

“Great stories can also be told on a smaller scale and to smaller readers/listeners. Actually, they should be told in every possible way in order to reach all people with their various ways of understanding and thinking.  Imbi Paju’s The Gardener of Kadriorg is one of the most brilliant children’s books in recent times. It makes for extremely friendly and educational reading. Oh, to be a child again! Still, the child within us is never really lost unless we endeavor to lose it. Growing up with the support of such books could make for a spirited journey indeed. Put your eyes in books, your fingers in the soil!”

Karl- Martin Sinijärv

- literary critic, journalist and poet -

“We can consider one of the greatest advantages of this book to be that it is meant for the whole family, not only for children. It allows a reading child to compare their own childhood with that of previous generations, but also – most important of all – to find common ground. It is this forging of collective ties of memory through common experience and the telling of common stories that seems to be one of the main goals of this book.”

Jaanika Palm

- researcher of children’s literature -

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