Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda and First Lady Diana Nausėdienė look over historically important book at the Marija Gimbutas Library and Archives.
Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda, left, and First Lady Diana Nausėdienė look over historically important book at the Marija Gimbutas Library and Archives. Credit: Courtesy photo

Pacifica Graduate Institute and OPUS Archives and Research Center recently welcomed the president of Lithuania, Gitanas Nausėda and Lithuanian First Lady Diana Nausėdienė for a visit to the Marija Gimbutas Library and Archives, curated by OPUS Archives at Pacifica’s Lambert Road Campus in Carpinteria.

Following his address at the United Nations General Assembly, Nausėda, accompanied by his delegation, came to Southern California. The delegation viewed the visit to the Gimbutas Library and Archives as a priority of their trip to the region.

Lithuanians hold Marija Gimbutas in high regard for her work on prehistoric European archaeology, her work preserving Lithuanian folklore and mythology, and for her publications about the goddess figurines of Old Europe, the early farming cultures of Europe before 2500 BCE.

Gimbutas was professor of European Archeology and Indo-European Studies at UCLA, whose personal library and archives were donated to Pacifica and Opus in 1994.

Her publications in English include “Ancient Symbolism in Lithuanian Folk Art” (1958), “Bronze Age Cultures in Central and Eastern Europe” (1965), “Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe” (1974, revised 1982), “The Language of the Goddess” (1989), and “The Civilization of the Goddess: The World of Old Europe” (1991). 

Guided by Richard Buchen, Pacifica’s special collections librarian, Diana Nausėdienė underscored the vital role and far-reaching impact of OPUS in advancing the research of scholars committed to preserving cultural traditions.

President Nausėda, a collector of old books, was interested in seeing Gimbutas’ book collection, particularly her copy of her 1946 doctoral dissertation, which was completed in Germany, and had signatures on the inner cover page that he recognized as important Lithuanian intellectuals. 

Nausėda expressed his vision for OPUS to digitize the Gimbutas collection to ensure worldwide accessibility.

“This bold and urgent call to action aligns with my presidential commitment and Pacifica’s vision of making depth psychological education, research, and services accessible to all,” said Leonie H. Mattison, Pacifica’s president/CEO.

“I  couldn’t be prouder of how Pacifica and Opus came together to support this historic visit to our campus and in continuing opportunities to fulfill our commitment to tending soul in and of the world,” Mattison said.

“We are honored by this visit from President Nausėda and First Lady Nausėdienė, as well as by the presence of Marija Gimbutas’ daughter, Zivile,” said Maren Hansen, OPUS Board member, who co-hosted the tour with Mattison. “Our study of the material of the Gimbutas archives brings the material alive, making it a living archive.” 

OPUS is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to preserve, develop, and extend to the world the archival collections and libraries of eminent scholars in the fields of Jungian and depth psychology, mythology and the humanities.

The OPUS archives at the campuses of Pacifica Graduate Institute are open by appointment only and may be contacted via email at info@opusarchives.org. 

Pacifica Graduate Institute is an accredited graduate school offering master’s and doctoral degree programs under the mission to foster creative learning and research in the fields of psychology, mythology, and the humanities, framed in the traditions of depth psychology. For more, visit www.pacifica.edu.