We are all going home is born out of the desire to reflect on the image of Eastern Europe that many of us have, as an indistinct whole from Tallinn to Tirana, excluding Helsinki and Thessaloniki. Geographical bewilderment, a legacy of the Iron Curtain, is reflected in the people who come from the closest former Soviet countries: not refugees, not immediately identifiable as foreigners, but rather people who have chosen another European country, forever poised between the opportunity and the longing to see a home once again, but to find out that, perhaps, it is no longer home. We are all going home describes the dream of feeling at home.”