Duelling on the Narva
Competing 9 May celebrations on the Estonian border underscore the deep divide between Russia and the EU

Loudspeakers in the Russian town of Ivangorod blasted victory songs across the Narva River into Estonia on 9 May for the third year in a row. On the opposing riverbank, residents of Narva, Estonia’s third largest city, populated overwhelmingly by ethnic Russians, packed together to celebrate Victory Day, watching, clapping, and waving back at their Russian neighbours.
Officials in Ivangorod first erected a stage and screens facing Narva in 2023 after the Estonian government took measures to address Russia’s lingering influence in the country.
The Narva Museum first suspended a banner reading Putin War Criminal with a blood-spattered portrait of the Russian leader in 2023, a little over a year after the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Narva is overwhelmingly ethnically Russian because the Soviets did not allow the pre-war residents to return after the Red Army destroyed upwards of 95% of the city in a devastating bombing campaign.
Estonia has given a higher percentage of aid in terms of GDP to Ukraine than any other country, and former Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas, who now heads EU foreign policy, has been one of Putin’s most ardent critics.
Though the crowds at the Europe Day concert were much smaller than those that watched the Russian Victory Day concert, it may have given a glimpse into the country’s future. Much of the crowd lined up to watch the Victory Day celebration skewed older.


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