In Keeni we converted the train station building, which had been closed to the public for 10 years, into a cinema and screened the documentary film "Monument to Grandmother" (Monument vanaemale, directed by Ave Taavet, 2019). The film tells the story of Katarina’s 5000 kilometre journey into deepest Siberia in search of the village where her grandmother, along with her family, were deported. The film focuses on the rituals around memory and remembering as well as the connections between collective and personal memory. After the film screening, Kalev Ramjalg, head of the Estonian Concrete Association spoke about the history and spirit of concrete. While concrete may seem like a cold and practical material at first, Ramjalg presented the more sensitive side of concrete, which also opens up the potential for using it as a material for producing memorials. The deportation train left Keeni train station on 26 March 1949 with 1,009 people, of whom 502 were women and 308 children. The destinations were Chistoozyornoye and Kochenyovo in Novosibirsk Oblast. Our programme included hanging a sign bearing the name “Chistoozyornoye” on the Keeni train station building and planting a Novosibirsk bird cherry tree next to the train station building.