The Audiovisual Archive contains:
• Video testimonies
• Audio testimonies and audio recordings of various events
• Video recordings of commemorative events
• Film materials (16mm; 8mm)
• Video testimony auxiliary collection – scanned photos of people whose video testimonies we have recorded.
Our collection consists more than 2500 video testimonies (more than 4500 hours of recordings). The number of recorded video testimonies continues to grow, as the recording of people’s life stories is ongoing.
The Audiovisual Archive was founded by Andrejs Edvīns Feldmanis in 1994, shortly after the foundation of the Museum. During first two years of operation, specialists collected audio testimonies and audio reports, but since 1996 recordings have been made in video format.
Video testimony is the narrative or life story of a person whose life was dramatically influenced by the Soviet and/or Nazi occupation policies, recorded as a historical source.
Video testimonies cover such topics as the Soviet mass deportations of 1941 and 1949, the Holocaust, Latvian soldiers during the Second World War, the national resistance movements, survivors of the Gulag, Latvians in exile, eyewitnesses of various historical events, veterans of the war in Afghanistan, and other topics.
You can view video testimony segments and documentaries based on video testimonies on the YouTube channel of the Museum of the Occupation of Latvia: @occupationmuseum.
Video testimonies have been recorded not only of Latvians, but also of Russians, Germans, Jews, Lithuanians, Estonians, and people of other nationalities. Most video testimonies are recorded in Latvian, but some are in Russian, German, English, and a few other languages. Likewise, video testimonies have been recorded not only in Latvia, but archive specialists have also been on expeditions abroad, recording testimonies from Great Britain, Krasnoyarsk Oblast in Russia, Germany, the USA, and Canada.
Donating audiovisual materials to the Museum and arranging historical witnesses for interviews
If you own and wish to donate to the Museum audio, video, film, or visual materials depicting the occupation periods, or if you know someone who could provide a video testimony and tell about their experiences during the years of occupation, please contact the Audiovisual Archive of the Museum by calling +371 66 116757 or by e-mail to evita.feldentale@okupacijasmuzejs.lv.