Birch bark letters from Siberia were written by people exiled to Soviet Gulaglabor camps. Often they had only birch bark for writing letters, especially during the World War II when paper was scarce everywhere.[1] In 2023 Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine, submitted a joint application to include birch bark letters from Siberia (1945–1965) in the UNESCO "Memory of the World" Register. The application presents 148 items, including letters and other documents on birch bark.[2][3]
The preparations for this submission were started in 2015 by representatives of the three Baltic States.[4]
In 2009 the collection "Letters written in Siberia on birch bark" („Sibīrijā rakstītas vēstules uz bērza tāss”) was included in the Latvian national register of the UNESCO program "Memory of the World". It consists of 45 letters written in prisons and camps between 1941 and 1965.[5]
Agrita Ozola, head of the Tukums Museum [lv][9] published the book Sibīrijā vēstules (Siberian Letters).[10][11]
Lithuania
On May 21, 2015, together with other objects, birch bark letters kept in the Museum of Occupations and Freedom Fights were entered into the Lithuania's national register of the “Memory of the World”[12][4][13] Other places in Lithuania that preserve buirch bark letters are the National Library of Lithuania Martynas Mažvydas , the Directorate of the State Kernavės Cultural Reserve, the Biržai Region Museum [lt] "Sėla", a branch of the Gargžda Region Museum, the Special Archive of Lithuania, the Panevėžys Local Lore Museum [lt] , S. Nėris Memorial Museum, branch of the Maironis Museum of Lithuanian Literature, Šiauliai "Aušros" Museum, Vrublevskii Library of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences and Kaunas IX Fort Museum.[14][15][16]