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Lia Looveer

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Lia Looveer (née Saarepera; 5 October 1920, Narva8 November 2006) was an Estonian émigré politician in Australia.[1]

Lia Saarepera's father was Aleksander Saarepera, mother Hilda (1894 - 1966). Lia Saarepera graduated from the E. Lenderi Tütarlaste Gümnaasium (E. Lender Lender Girls High School in Tallinn) in 1938 and then studied law at the University of Tartu from 19381943. She worked for Eesti Riigi Ringhääling (Estonian National Broadcasting)[2].

In 1944 she moved to Nazi Germany, where she married Leonid Looveer (Looberg) (31.01.1917 - 07.02.1960) in August of that year. She worked as an announcer for Balti Raadio, a station based depending on the war situation in Danzig, Thorn and Rostock[2], which broadcast to the Soviet-reoccupied Baltic States in Estonian, Lithuanian and Latvian. Radio Balti (Template:Lang-de) was a Nazi radio station broadcasting news, propaganda and entertainment in Estonian, Lithuanian and Latvian.[3]

In 1949 they moved to Sydney. Lia Looveer was the founder of the Joint Baltic Committee of Sydney and its secretary from 1952 to 2002. Lia Looveer arranged a number events that introduced Baltic culture and history to the Australian public. In 1953, she joined the Liberal Party of Australia New South Wales branch. At the federal level, Looveer participated in Liberal Party's Advisory Committee on Ethnic Affairs and similar bodies, that dealt with immigrants' issues.[1] Looveer was part of the inaugural executive of the Liberal Ethnic Council[4] created by the State Council of the NSW Liberal Party[5] and chaired by Lyenko Urbanchich (a right-wing politician who was later exposed as a Nazi war criminal).[6][7] She was acknowledged in the Legislative Council of New South Wales by the David Clarke.[8] She was also secretary of "The United Council of Migrants from Communist Dominated Europe in Australia (1953 - )" which included Australian state politicians Douglas Darby and Eileen Furley, and Federal politician William Wentworth.[9]

Lia worked in the fund-raising Appeals Bureau of the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children for over 25 years[2].

Lia and Leonid Looveer had a daughter and a son, Juho Looveer (born in 1952), PhD.[10]

Awards

Sources

  1. ^ a b Nikki Henningham (4 September 2006). "Looveer, Lia". The Australian Women's Register. University of Melbourne. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e "LOOVEER, LIIA". Academic Library of Tallinn University. Retrieved 23 November 2009.
  3. ^ Diller, Ansgar. Rundfunk in Deutschland: Rundfunkpolitik im Dritten Reich (in German). pp. 404–406. ISBN 9783423031844.
  4. ^ Ian Hancock, The Liberals: a history of the NSW division of the Liberal party of Australia, 1945-2000, Federation Press, 2007
  5. ^ Hancock, p197
  6. ^ Hancock, p219
  7. ^ "Ardent Nazi took Liberal to extremes, Sydney Morning Herald (March 4, 2006)
  8. ^ [1]
  9. ^ [2]
  10. ^ http://www.iseansw.org.au/officers.htm
  11. ^ Faith, Hope, Charity - Australian Women and Imperial Honours: 1901-1989. The Order of the British Empire (Civil), Looveer listed
  12. ^ London Gazette, issue 47723 29 December 1978, p. 28