Suitcase: The Simsons family
To Ukraine and Germany
Albins Simsons’ father was a butcher in Bauska. At the beginning of the First World War in 1914, the Tsarist government issued an order to evacuate the inhabitants of Kurzeme. As a result, Albīns’ family, the same as three quarters of a million other Latvian inhabitants, left their homes and fled or were evacuated to territories to the east of Latvia.Read more >
First years in America
Like the majority of refugees, the Simsons family left Latvia convinced that their time away would be brief: “that we’d depart, the war would end and we’d return”. But with the occupation of Latvia dragging on, this hope began to fade away. They had to find a more permanent home somewhere else. Read more >
The Simsons family today
Inta Šrāders, the eldest daughter of Albīns and Zelma, lives with her family in a suburb of Washington. She has directed various projects and advisory committees (boards) in one of America’s oldest and most significant nonpartisan organizations, the “League of Women Voters”. Read more >