Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Historic Estonian flag to return home from Australia

An Estonian flag that was rescued in September 1944, where it had flown in front of Kadriorg Palace in Tallinn during the interim government of acting prime minister Otto Tief, is on its way back home to Estonia from Australia.

The flag was rescued by Eugen Vilder, an Estonian soldier who retrieved it from the flagpole, preventing it from being destroyed by the occupying Soviet forces. Joined by his mother and sister, Vilder fled the capital with the flag wrapped around his body under his clothes. The flag was then transported to Germany and eventually made its way to Australia in 1949 where Vilder kept it safe until his death in 2021. His descendants only discovered the flag recently, and decided to return it home to Estonia. An official handover ceremony took place today at the Sydney Estonian House and the flag will be transported to the Estonian National Museum in Tartu.

Australia is home to the seventh-largest Estonian community abroad which numbers approximately 11,500 people.