The Politics of Lithuanian Basketball
By Valerie Shuman, first-time O.A.T. traveler from Tacoma, WA
Sometimes, when I’m traveling, I’m afforded a glimpse of clarity that I seldom get. I had one of those moments today—an understanding of good and bad, gauging resilience and determination, and the confusing framework of our world falls temporarily into place.
How did I gain such insight? Basketball and the Grateful Dead.
Because, here I am, an American with only a limited historical foundation, riding a tour bus through Lithuania at a time of great peril for Lithuania, Ukraine, Latvia and more—countries facing the creeping resurgent shadow of the Soviet empire.
Our guide, Aida, is playing a video—The Other Dream Team—for us—which tells the story of the Lithuanian basketball team at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, the first Olympiad after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Lithuania has long had a strong basketball tradition—it is played in backyards, community squares, high schools. But when the Soviets took over in 1945, the Lithuanians had to play for the Soviet Union. For 36 years, Lithuanians propelled Soviet basketball teams to medal-winning basketball domination. At times, four of the five starting players were Lithuanian—in fact, they were all from Kaunas—Aida’s hometown.
But the times were changing—look at these pictures from August 23, 1989. This is the Baltic Chain of Freedom—a line of two million people, stretching 430 miles across Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania to publicize their quest for freedom from the Soviets. On March 11, 1990, Lithuania was the first Soviet republic to declare its independence.
Where does the Grateful Dead come into this? Well, once Lithuania was free, those basketball stars wanted to play basketball at the 1992 Olympics—for Lithuania, not the Soviets. And while they had plenty of talent, they had no money.
To the rescue? The Grateful Dead. Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir and company decided to bankroll the team—under the guise of celebrating the general concept of freedom. Team fashion? Tie-dye, of course.
Maybe you all know that story already, with the Lithuanians winning the bronze medal. I had forgotten the little bit I knew—I recall just a commemorative tie-dye t-shirt rotating through my marital laundry back in law school.
But why does it resonate so much with me today? Well, because of this O.A.T. bus I’m riding. Stories like that help me understand what’s at risk right now. Every Lithuanian we talk to—from the PhD tour guides, to the Lithuanian family Ron and I had an O.A.T.-sponsored home-hosted dinner with last night—they’re worried. They’re worried that if Ukraine falls, next comes Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and more. They’re worried that the beautiful cities they’ve built—the non-Soviet architecture, the freedom they’ve grown accustomed to, the family businesses, the nice cars, the top-tier medical care systems—it’s all at risk.
A day like today makes me immensely grateful for the perspective I am offered as I travel—an important chance to step out of the American egocentric muck—and focus on something else.
Where’s my travel update? As I mentioned above, we had dinner with university PhD-candidate history student Thomas and his parents. O.A.T. sets up dinners with local families and pays for a cab to drive us out there and in we walk—dinner with total strangers. It sounds like exactly the kind of thing I would avoid but we went—and were served a fully vegetarian meal—vegetable soup and paella—and heard about their life under the Soviets and the strides they have made in living standards, educational options, and freedoms. It was a fantastic night.
We also made a stop at an ethnographic museum and met local resident, Jonas Markauskas, whose family was banished to Siberia by the Soviets for 12 years. Here he is with Aida, showing us the map of his family’s journey and then, below, one of the train cars the Soviets used—50 people in there for a 4000-mile ride.
And to end on a light note, here is my amazing lunch today—vegetarian crepes with sautéed vegetables. Our O.A.T. bus stopped at the Magda Cafe that they use for all their tours. I love the history of O.A.T.’s relationship with cafe owner, Edmunda. Years ago, an O.A.T. tour bus broke down near the cafe, and Edmunda was so unexpectedly helpful—arranging for bus repair, feeding the O.A.T. tourists—and so O.A.T. has been stopping there ever since.
Discover the complex history of Lithuania and her neighbors when you join O.A.T. for The Baltic Capitals.
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