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・ Popular Front for Armed Resistance
・ Popular Front for Change and Liberation
・ Popular Front for Democracy
・ Popular Front for Recovery
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Bahrain
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Chad
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – External Operations
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – Special Command
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf
・ Popular Front Incident
・ Popular Front of Estonia
・ Popular Front of India
Popular Front of Latvia
・ Popular Front of Moldova
・ Popular Front of Potosí
・ Popular Front of the Canary Islands
・ Popular Front Party
・ Popular Future
・ Popular Guard
・ Popular Health Movement
・ Popular history
・ Popular Holdings
・ Popular Hot Rodding
・ Popular Independent Movement
・ Popular Indigenous Council of Oaxaca "Ricardo Flores Magón"
・ Popular initiative (Switzerland)
・ Popular Italy


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Popular Front of Latvia : ウィキペディア英語版
Popular Front of Latvia

The Popular Front of Latvia ((ラトビア語:Latvijas Tautas fronte)) was a political organization in Latvia in late 1980s and early 1990s which led Latvia to its independence from the Soviet Union. It was similar to the Popular Front of Estonia and the Sąjūdis movement in Lithuania.
Its newspaper was ''Atmoda'' ("Awakening", cf. Latvian National Awakening), printed in the Latvian and Russian languages during 1989-1992.
==Historic background==
Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania were occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940. To avoid bloodshed there was relatively little resistance to the occupation, but many Latvians remained deeply unhappy with it and waited for a chance to regain independence. Such a chance came in 1980s when Sovier premier Mikhail Gorbachev attempted to reform the Soviet Union. In particular, Gorbachev's ''glasnost'' policy allowed more freedom of speech in the Soviet Union than ever before.
Beginning in 1986, Latvians began to organize around specific causes; one of the first successes in challenging Moscow was the stoppage of the building of hydroelectric dam on the Daugava, the main river in Latvia. This protest inspired the formation of the Environmental Protection Club, which saw the environmentally driven protests as a channel through which to challenge the Soviet regime more broadly.〔Schwartz, K. (2006). Nature and national identity after communism: Globalizing the Ethnoscape. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.〕
Latvia's independence movement started with small demonstrations for independence and human rights in 1986. The first demonstrations, organized by Helsinki-86, were, however, suppressed by the government of Latvian SSR. The breaking point came in summer 1988. Many prominent Latvians publicly announced their support for increased autonomy for Latvia. Latvian newspapers started writing about aspects of Latvian history which had been banned during the Soviet period (for example, how Latvia had been occupied in 1940). The flag of Latvia which had been banned during the Soviet period was brought back. To summarize, a strong resurgence of Latvian national identity had started.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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