The Joint Baltic American National Committee, Inc. came together 55 years ago on April 27, 1961, documented by the decision and signatures of the heads of the leading national Baltic organizations. In doing so, it would combine the efforts of the three main national organizations of Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians based in the United States. JBANC, as it came to be known, helped coalesce activities in Washington, DC for the three national groups in order to better engage with policy makers and to keep closer to the pulse of American politics.
In organizing the Baltic-American communities into an effective advocacy force in the United States, JBANC’s forefathers had the foresight to strengthen its standing and efficacy by pledging to coordinate efforts together. It was force multiplication in triplicate.
How did this come about when it came about?
JBANC was born largely of the Baltic refugees who came to America following the Second World War. It is true that the existing Lithuanian community in the U.S. had been around much longer and was already much larger. However, the displacement of wartime European populations and the corresponding Displaced Persons Act in the U.S. in 1948 presented an opening for a great new influx of Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians to emigrate westward across the Atlantic to American shores. As the new wave of Baltic communities established themselves in the U.S., they also began to organize themselves, first societally and soon politically. By that time, the Cold War was in full swing, and Soviet threats to the West were growing. To help counter the challenges, the North Atlantic Treaty, which created NATO, was signed on April 4, 1949.
As the Baltic-American communities took root in America, a greater awareness in the United States of Soviet and Nazi crimes in Europe arose following WWII. Communist crimes in the Baltics were highlighted, for instance, during the Kersten Committee hearings in the U.S. Congress during 1953-54. Many newly arrived Balts were witnesses at these hearings on Soviet atrocities.
For JBANC’s first thirty years (from 1961-1991), the main focus was to retain recognition of the exile Baltic governments, and keep hopes alive for one day achieving the goal of seeing the Baltic countries independent again. Thankfully, during these years, the Welles Declaration remained a cornerstone of U.S policy regarding the Baltic countries. It was issued by the U.S. government in 1940 and condemned the Soviet occupation of the Baltic countries, and stated the U.S.’s refusal to recognize the Soviet annexation of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. JBANC, as the voice of the unified Baltic-American communities, helped inform U.S. policy makers on developments in the Soviet-occupied Baltics, and for the importance of standing up for this very important principle of non-recognition.
Through the 1970s and 1980s, JBANC helped raise awareness of Baltic political prisoners, and the Soviet Union’s continual transgressions against the Helsinki Act’s Declaration of Principles, particularly those having to do with human rights and the self-determination of peoples. The budding nationalist movements within the Baltic nations during the Gorbachev era gave rise to renewed hopes of freedom, and Baltic-Americans rose to the occasion during a multitude of actions and political rallies in support of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
Other key areas of focus for JBANC during the past ten years have centered on human rights, democracy building, energy security, defending against Russian propaganda and disinformation, and helping support regional issues in the Central and Eastern European neighborhood, such as helping Ukraine push back against Moscow’s continuing military invasion. We need to be up to today’s challenges in light of Russia’s increasing threats and aggression. From 1995-2015, JBANC has organized eleven Baltic conferences in Washington, DC to discuss important issues like these. The twelfth JBANC conference is slated for the spring of 2017. These have helped bring together Baltic-American activists with the policy community and with leading political figures from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. In addition, annual commemorations of the 1941 and 1949 deportations and Black Ribbon Day on August 23 remain important activities.
For Americans of Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian descent, JBANC has remained a central place for information and policies affecting the Baltic countries, and for conveying the concerns of the Baltic-American community to Congress, the White House, and other U.S. government agencies. For 55 years, JBANC has remained a unified voice and a force in advocating for Baltic issues. These efforts will continue.