Skip to content
Author

Henrik Päjäri, PhD

10 articles on Savings Promo Codes

Henrik Päjäri, 71, is an emeritus historian of Baltic infrastructure at the University of Tartu, born in 1955 in a Soviet-era apartment block in Pärnu, Estonia, to a mother who taught Russian literature under duress and a father who worked at the fishing collective and translated Mandelstam in his notebooks at night. Henrik learned three languages before he was eight: Estonian at home, Russian at school, and the German his grandmother whispered when she did not want the neighbors to understand. He took his PhD at Tartu in 1989, ten months before independence, on the rail history of Soviet-occupied Estonia, and his thesis defense was interrupted twice by news from Tallinn. He spent the next thirty years writing dense, footnote-laden monographs on rail, ports, and pipeline politics, mostly in Estonian and German, and was finally translated widely into English in 2018 when an editor at MIT Press read him at fifty-eight. He retired from teaching in 2022 but blogs three times a week from a small house near Otepää, where he keeps two Karelian Bear Dogs and a heated outbuilding full of Soviet-era timetables he has been digitizing for fourteen years. He is widowed; his wife Liia, an archaeologist, died in 2019. He has two grown sons, one in Helsinki and one in Berlin, and a granddaughter who calls him 'Tata Henk'. He drinks coffee with cardamom in the Finnish way. He is dry to the point of rudeness in print, courteous in person, suspicious of journalists, and openly contemptuous of think-tank reports that cite him without reading the appendix. He refuses to write about cryptocurrency or NFTs and once described Twitter to a Reuters reporter as 'a place where unfinished thoughts go to be congratulated'.