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  • Day 8

    The Last Day....

    October 22, 2023 in Lithuania ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    Today is going to be a hard day as this little penguin is still feeling sorry for himself and we have to check out of our room by 11:00 am. Unfortunately, our flight home isn’t for another 12 hours!!
    After what has become the habitual lazy breakfast, we finished packing our bags, paid our bill and checked out. With our bags locked away we decided to go out for a walk towards the other side of town. As we headed in the direction of Kaunas Train Station we came across a park and decided to check it out. The park is called Ramybė Parkas (Peace or Tranquility Park), a public park established in 1959 in the territory of the Kaunas City Old Cemetery that was also known as the Carmelite Cemetery. During World War I and subsequent Lithuanian Wars of Independence, Russian, German, and Lithuanian soldiers were buried in the cemetery. During the interwar period when Kaunas was the temporary capital of Lithuania, many famous people were buried there and several buildings (churches, schools) were constructed on the cemetery's territory. In 1930, a monument to fallen Lithuanian soldiers with a tomb of an unknown soldier was unveiled. Around the same time, a tradition to honour fallen soldiers on the All Saints' Day began. On All Saints' Day in 1956, a spontaneous anti-Soviet demonstration started in the cemetery in support of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. After smaller incidents in 1957 and 1958, Soviet authorities decided to demolish the cemetery and turn it into a recreational park. Families were given a few months to rebury their relatives elsewhere (many were moved to the Petrašiūnai Cemetery). Tombstones, monuments, crypts and a Catholic chapel were demolished. The Soviets installed a monument with ashes of four communists executed after the December 1926 coup. After Lithuania regained independence in 1990, the Soviet monument was moved to Grūtas Park. The monument to Lithuanian soldiers was reconstructed, and new monuments dedicated to the participants of the June Uprising and Lithuanian partisans were erected.
    Heading back to the hotel we stopped off at the Akropolis Shopping Centre, staying there for an early evening meal at a lovely Chinese restaurant; called Devyni Drakonai, where the food was equally as lovely and cheap in price, only £34.
    After heading back to the hotel, we collected Pat from her room and after a short wait the taxi arrived to take us all to the airport for our flight home.
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