Baltic Windows

I feel that it is healthier to look out at the world through a window than through a mirror. Otherwise, all you see is yourself and whatever is behind you.” Bill Withers

The windows of local residential flats as seen from a hallway near one of my classrooms (Daugavpils, Latvia)
Side windows of a Stalin-era building along. November Street, one of our major thoroughfares here in Daugavpils, Latvia
Looking north and west toward the Daugava River from my office in “The New Building,” at Daugavpils University. I hold lunchtime conversation classes here. (Daugavpils, Latvia)
Looking out from a synagogue window. At the Green Synagogue (1845), one of the oldest wooden structures in the city of Rezekne, population 27,000. (Latvia)
From the window of Tallinn’s oldest coffee shop, Cafe Maiasmokk (circa 1864). That’s the Russian Embassy across the street–note the protest paraphernalia. (Tallinn, Estonia)

Christmas window of shop in the Old Town. (Tallinn, Estonia)

Windows overlooking nuns. Location of the Vilnius Theater. (Vilnius, Lithuania)
Artist Mark Rothko, born in Daugavpils, Latvia, stands near a window, shortly before his death. There is a marvelous art museum in his name here in Daugavpils.
View from the window of a recently renovated flat in Daugavpils, Latvia
Windows reflecting a brilliant Tallinn sunset. (Tallinn, Estonia)
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One thought on “Baltic Windows

  1. Mārīte Kravale-Pauliņa's avatar Mārīte Kravale-Pauliņa says:

    ….Thanks for noticing the little things. Everything started small… I think the Greek thinker Plato was right – everything is based on an idea!!! The size of the idea doesn’t matter, what matters is whether the idea came to fruition…
    Our life consists of many small moments that will later become our big memories. Thank you for spotting things, ideas, and people that are so wonderful when they are discovered!

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