Eesti Elu / Estonian Life No. 15 | April 14, 2022

Page 19

Nr. 15

EESTI ELU neljapäeval, 14. aprillil 2022 — Thursday, April 14, 2022

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Witnessing the expansion of Toronto’s Estonian village at the KESKUS groundbreaking ceremony Vincent Teetsov On Friday April 8th, just over 150 people, many wearing branded hardhats, waited eagerly at what would soon be the foundations of KESKUS International Estonian Centre. And at the foundations of this building, due to be finished in 2023, the words of all those invested in the project became a cornerstone. Before finding a place in the crowd to watch the afternoon’s six speakers, attendees scrawled their wishes and dreams for the centre on slips of paper. What they are most thankful for. What ideas they love. What they will bring when the doors finally open. Everyone has a different conception of how exactly this building will be a ­ part of their lives. And it wasn’t just Estonians there. Among the crowd were Ukrainians, Latvians, and Lithuanians, showing support for their Estonian friends. There were also “Annexonians”, the neighbourhood residents with whom the centre has fostered a supportive relationship. As Ellen Valter, Project Lead, has emphasized, this will be a ­welcoming space for all. Of course, this sentiment would be incomplete without acknowledging the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples that live and have sustained the land that Canadians call home. In Toronto, she acknowledged the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haude­ no­ saunee, and the Wendat peoples. Linguistically, there were also opportunities to welcome attendees through teaching the Estonian language: “tere”, “tere tulemast”, “aitäh”, and the combination of words that makes up the KESKUS name,

“kes” (“who”) and “kus” (“where”). The location is clear: 9 and 11 Madison Avenue. But the “who?” Well, the list is long, and the pages of Eesti Elu alone have held many stories of those team members, donors, and advisors who have given their ­ best to bring the project to ­fruition. Valter credited all those involved on the four-organiza­ tion steering committee that consists of the Estonian Foundation of Canada, Northern Birch Credit Union, Tartu College, and Toronto Eesti Maja. The latter organization is especially key, in how it rep­ ­ resents the roots placed in Toronto by Estonian refugees, so that the community could flourish, so that Estonian heri­ tage could continue to evolve today. Valter also thanked architect Alar Kongats, who envisioned “the map of Estonia being put onto the map of North America’s 4th largest city, Toronto.” Kongats’ creations have not only caught the atten­ tion of Estonians, but Canada’s leaders; namely, The Right Honourable Adrienne Clarkson, former Governor-General of Canada. Madame Clarkson, an architecture buff herself, said the design “fits perfectly with our neighbourhood.” Moreover, she fondly recalled how, in 2002, she gave Kongats his first Governor-General’s Medal in Architecture. What stood out most from her speech, however, was the way she related her own ex­ perience fleeing to Canada when the Japanese occupied Hong Kong ; how she was

Alar Kongats, Jaan Meri, Urve Tamberg, Ellen Valter, Eva Varangu, Raivo Remmel, David Kalm. Photo: Eesti Elu

“­ exchanged one for one” by the Red Cross and arrived in Canada on the MS Gripsholm, a ship that many EstonianCanadians will be familiar with. Linda Turu, who was attending the groundbreaking, remarked how her own family arrived at Pier 21 in Halifax on the very same ship, saying “It’s a small world. Everyone is connected.” Indeed, as Madame Clarkson affirmed with attendees, “We’re all Annexonians. We’re all Canadians.” In reciting Jaan Kaplinski’s poem “Our Shadows”, a poem that reminds us of the cycles of life and the tireless work of the Estonian people, Madame Clarkson left attendees wonder­ ing about how this project could be a type of rebirth. This rebirth could be from a cultural angle, as Liisa Käärid, chair of the Estonian Arts Centre board, illuminated. She noted how KESKUS will be a flagship, a place “where the rest of the world can come to col­ laborate with Estonian culture and create something new.” It could be a rebirth for openness, as Estonia’s Am­ bas­ sador to Canada Toomas Lukk indicated; where Estonians build “a bridge across Estonian communities in Canada” and Canada’s multicultural society. It could be a rebirth for families. Blake Royer, Toronto ­

Photo: Kristina Laukkanen Photo and Films

Berkley Colford, David Kalm and Ellen Valter. Photo: Kristina Laukkanen

Estonian House and Inter­ national Estonian Centre board member, proclaimed his desire to ensure that Estonian heritage is a core part of the upbringing of his and his wife’s children. By 2023, all 36,000 square feet of the space will be a testing ground for these possibilities. Certainly, a wave of exciting activity like this has been moving down Bloor Street re­ ­ cently. For instance, Ward 11 City Councillor Mike Layton spoke of the Blackhurst Cultural Centre being created by Toronto’s Black community at Bathurst Street. He voiced his support and encouraged the continued investment in facili­ ties like these. And as was ­relayed in a message from The Honourable Chrystia Freeland, Deputy Prime Minister, “Canada would not be the country it is without the strength of diaspora communi­ ties like the Estonians.” She be­ lieves it is now more important than ever to celebrate their con­ tributions.

Across the afternoon’s speak­ ers, support for Ukraine’s freedom, and horror over the ­ atrocities taking place there, were expressed. Concluding the afternoon, Kaili Colford, the Estonian Arts Centre co-vice chair, related the relationship between Ukraine and Estonia poignantly with regard to her daughter, Berkeley, who is of both Estonian and Ukrainian descent. Berkeley is also of the youngest generation, for whom the centre will be a part of their memories from early on. Fittingly, it was over her hands that sand from the shores of Estonia was poured, so that the youngest, too, have touched this building from its foundations. The rain came down heavily. Fortuitous gusts of wind blew. But then, the sun came out, poetically shining on this ­ rectangular plot at Bloor and ­ Madison. And so the next chap­ ter of the Estonian community proceeds, with the expansion of Toronto’s very own Estonian village.


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