National Veterans' Day

National Veterans' Day
Finnish soldiers raise the war flag at the three-country cairn between Norway, Sweden, and Finland on April 27, 1945, ending the Lapland War, and the Second World War in Finland.
Official nameFinnish:
kansallinen veteraanipäivä

Swedish:
nationella veterandagen
Observed byFinland
Significanceremembrance day for all the war veterans of Finland
Date27 April
Next time27 April 2025 (2025-04-27)
Frequencyannual

National Veterans' Day (Finnish: kansallinen veteraanipäivä, Swedish: nationella veterandagen) is a remembrance day for all the war veterans of Finland. It is celebrated each year on 27 April.

According to Moscow Armistice Finland was obliged to demand all German troops to leave Finland by 15 September 1944, which was technically impossible. The Germans executed the operation Tanne Ost, trying to occupy Hogland from the Finnish armed forces and defend the Estonian coast from the Soviet Baltic Navy on the Eastern isles of the Baltic Sea. The Finns, at the request of the Allied Control Committee, attacked the Germans in Pudasjärvi on 28 September 1944, which marked the beginning of combat in Finnish Lapland between the former co-belligerents. World War II in Finland ended on 27 April 1945, when the very last German troops had left Finland and crossed the border to the German-occupied Norway in the municipality of Enontekiö. Finnish Defence Forces would reach Three-Country Cairn of Finland, Norway and Sweden that same day.[1]

Memorial wreaths laid at the veteran stone in Siuntio.

Even if the day reminds a victory day, it is not celebrated as such. Among the events there are services in the Evangelical Lutheran churches, honorary guards on the war hero tombs, deposing wreath and the collecting money for the charity of the last war veterans' needs.

  1. ^ "Kansallinen veteraanipäivä 27.4. | Oppiminen | Yle.fi". Archived from the original on 7 October 2011. Retrieved 27 April 2011.