Historical Exposition “The Burning Conscience”
Museum
The historical exhibit ‘Fire of Conscience’ is located in Cēsis, near the Cēsis Castle Square. Established in a Soviet-era temporary detention facility, it tells about the occupation of Latvia and reveals surprising and heroic stories of resistance from individuals. The yard features a memorial wall with the names of 643 residents of the former Cēsis district who died in Soviet repressions, including national partisans deported in 1941 and 1949 and those shot and sentenced to death. The exhibit’s timeline encourages visitors to study the course of the occupation of Latvia from 1939 to 1957. Arranged by topics, quotes from local newspapers offer a comparison of the political propaganda of the two occupation regimes. The six cells for temporary detention have survived to the present day in their original form from 1940 to 1941 and the post-war years. Here, the residents of Cēsis district, detained for various anti-Soviet activities, including national partisans, their supporters, young people who distributed anti-Soviet leaflets and other ‘traitors of the motherland’, were held for several days during the initial investigation and interrogation before being sent to the main KGB Building in Riga. Everything here is real: cells with iron doors, built-in ‘kormushkas’ (small openings for providing food), plank beds, a latrine for detainees, a small kitchen with an oven, as well as typical Soviet-era oil paint on the walls. In 2019, the exhibit was ranked third in the national design competition, the Latvian Design of the Year Award.
Used sources and references:
https://sirdsapzinasugunskurs.lv
https://pelecalasitava.lv/cesu-stura-maja
Educational programs
Museum pedagogical lesson “How to protect democracy?”
The aim of the lesson is to strengthen the national identity, civic and national sense of belonging of young people, helping students acquire the necessary knowledge about the basic values of democracy and increase understanding of the possible threat, which is linked in the lesson to the events of Latvian history in the 1940s, the occupation and the loss of independence. The exhibition provides young people with the opportunity to discover in an interactive way why the restoration of democracy was impossible in occupied Latvia in 1940, to enter five authentic prison cells where the residents of the district arrested by the Cēsis district branch of the Latvian SSR Cheka were imprisoned during the occupation, and to get acquainted with the stories of resistance and fates of these people.





























