Lennart Meri (born March 29, 1929, Tallinn, Estonia—died March 14, 2006, Tallinn) was an Estonian scholar and political leader, who was president of Estonia from 1992 to 2001.
His father, Georg Meri, was a man of letters who served newly independent Estonia as a diplomat between World Wars I and II, and consequently Lennart was educated in Berlin, London, and Paris. After the Soviet Union annexed Estonia in 1940, Georg Meri was sent to a labour camp in Moscow and the rest of the family to Siberia. In 1946 the family was reunited in Estonia, which had become a Soviet republic. Lennart Meri received a degree in history and languages from Tartu University in 1953, and he spent much of his professional life documenting the history of the Finno-Ugric peoples in writings and in documentary films. One such film, Linnutee tuuled (1977; “The Winds of the Milky Way”), was banned in the Soviet Union but received excellent reviews for its documentation of rural folkways.
In 1988 Meri founded the Estonian Institute, which promoted Estonian culture through contacts with Western countries. After Estonia’s first free elections in 1990, Meri entered politics when he was named foreign minister. Estonia became independent in 1991, and Meri was appointed ambassador to Finland in 1992. He then ran for president as the head of Isamaa (Fatherland), a nationalist coalition party dedicated to preserving Estonian culture. No candidate received a majority of the votes, and Meri placed second. The parliament, however, was dominated by parties aligned with Isamaa, and it elected him president on October 5, 1992. Although the post was to a large degree ceremonial, he took an active part in Estonian politics and foreign relations. In 1993 he refused to ratify a law requiring Russians who wished to continue living in Estonia to apply for residence permits and to pass an Estonian language test, and in 1994 he forged an agreement with President Boris Yeltsin on the withdrawal of the remaining Russian troops from Estonia. On September 20, 1996, an electoral college of parliament members and local government officials elected him to a second five-year term. Constitutionally barred from seeking a third term, Meri left office in 2001.