Aleksander Weiler
In Alberta
His career in journalism began at the age of 20, when he became the editor of the periodical [i] (Work) [i]. This led to the Russian tsarist regime jailing him for his writings and for his role as a leftist workers’ representative. After his release, he was one of the founders of the daily [i]Teataja (News) [i] in Tallinn, the capital; the editor, Konstantin Päts, later became the first president of the Republic of Estonia. From 1914 to 1917, Aleksander Weiler worked as news editor and war correspondent for the [i]Pevaleht (Daily). [i]
Rein Weiler
He was active in the underground Estonian provisional government formed at the end of World War 1. In November of 1918, at the start of the War of Independence, he began recruiting volunteers for an infantry battalion that he led against Communist Russia. At the same time, as a member of the Constituent Assembly, he was instrumental in passing the land reform laws of 1919, which confiscated the estates of Baltic German landowners, breaking them up to create small, individual family farmsteads for War of Independence veterans and other landless.
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As one of the founders of the left-of-centre Labour Party - a leading political force in the early days of the Estonian Republic – in 1918 he helped to found the publishing company [i]Vaba Maa[i] (then spelled [i]Waba Maa[i]:Free Country) and the newspaper of the same name which served as the party’s voice. Later, he was a member of the State Assembly (or parliament) until 1929, when he withdrew from active party politics.In the 20s and 30s, as the publisher, he built up the [i]Vaba Maa[i] newspaper and its associated publications (10 in total, plus advertising and retail businesses) into the largest publishing enterprise in the country. Investing in the most up-to-date printing presses, he revitalized Estonia’s staid and traditional journalism, increasing the quality and quantity of news and adding more verve with photographs, caricatures and illustrations. Voldemar Päts, brother of the Estonian President, was chairman of the board. Energetic, an activist, Aleksander himself was on the boards of several publishing and trade associations.
In World War II, after the 1940 Communist takeover, the company was confiscated. During the year of Soviet rule, Aleksander Weiler was arrested and jailed but, being extremely ill, evaded transport to the Russian gulag in July of 1941. With the advance of the invading German army (as part of Operation Barbarossa), he and a handful of others managed to escape from the harbourside Patarei prison. During the German occupation - 1941 to 1944 - only papers approved by the Germans were allowed: [i]Vaba Maa[i] was excluded. However, the publishing company survived as a lower-profile, printing and bookbinding establishment, under the direction of his son, Rein Weiler, acting as trustee.
In September, 1944, when the Red Army re-conquered Estonia, he and some of his family fled across the Gulf of Finland in a tiny fishing boat. Soon after, as the Russians harassed Finland, they continued westward, aboard the Venus, a mid-sized rock carrier that went almost fatally adrift, ending up in the far north of Sweden, after a voyage of some 13 hours.
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Aleksander reestablished his journalism career on a small scale in Sweden, working for a newspaper in Katrineholm. But an atmosphere of uncertainty (officially-neutral Sweden handed over some Estonians to the Russians) set off another wave of westward migration. At the invitation of his daughter Lea (she had married Walter Silverton of Barons, Alberta and moved to the prairies before the war) Aleksander and his wife Stella came to Canada in 1948, followed by his son Rein, daughter Asta, and several other families.
His organizational skills and his belief that Estonians in Canada needed to speak with a single voice to further their aims led him to form the South-Alberta Estonian Society from several clubs and groups. After moving to Toronto, in 1949 he co-founded the Estonian Federation of Canada (Eesti Liit Kanadas - EKL). As its first president, he worked closely with the Canadian government to assist the emigration of many post-war refugees, including Estonian coal miners still labouring in Belgium.
Rein Weiler
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In memoriam: Aleksander Weiler (16 Mar. 1887 - 17 Oct.1950 Toronto)
Rein Weiler (20 Sep. 1910 - 7 Jan. 1952 Toronto)
- [i]by Roland Weiler and Merike Weiler [i]