From Reuters/Yahoo:
“Russia not invited to Auschwitz liberation ceremony”
(The former Nazi German concentration and extermination camp
Auschwitz II-Birkenau in Brzezinka, Poland.)
Friday will mark the 78th anniversary of the haunting winter
afternoon when Red Army troops liberated the Nazi concentration camp of
Auschwitz-Birkenau, where more than a million people (the vast majority of them
Jews, but also political prisoners and Roma people) had been murdered.
But the annual commemoration in Oświęcim, Poland, will not
include Russian officials, the Auschwitz-Birkenau museum announced on Thursday.
That decision has less to do with the past — never far away in this sorrowful
corner of Europe — than with the present. “Because of the attack on free and
independent Ukraine, representatives of the Russian Federation have not been
invited to participate in this year's commemoration event of the anniversary of
the liberation of Auschwitz,” Pawel Sawicki, a press officer for the museum,
told Yahoo News in an email. Polish President Andrzej Duda will preside over
the ceremony, which takes place as fighting continues to rage in eastern
Ukraine. Poland has emerged as one of the strongest supporters of its neighbor
Ukraine, accepting hundreds of thousands of refugees and facilitating military
transfers from the West.
The ruined gas chambers, sparse wooden barracks and other
facilities that are toured by some 2.3 million visitors each year are “an
eloquent warning to mankind, how eloquent today in light of Russia's war crimes
in Ukraine,” the museum’s director, Piotr Cywinski, said when the 78th
anniversary ceremony was first announced. Russia responded sharply. "No
matter how our European 'non-partners' contrived in their attempts to rewrite
history in a new way, the memory of the Soviet heroes-liberators and horrors of
Nazism cannot be erased,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in
a social media post. Soviet prisoners of war in Auschwitz were among the first
to be subjected to the Nazi practice of using poison gas to commit mass murder
in 1941, before the first of the death camps in Poland opened the following
year. Hundreds of thousands of Jews would be murdered there and in a camp that,
by 1944, had expanded into a vast labor colony and killing factory known as
Auschwitz-Birkenau.
No other camp would survive intact, as Nazis sought to hide
evidence of their grotesque crimes against humanity. It was the Red Army’s
relentless advance that expelled Hitler’s forces from its conquered lands in
Eastern Europe, including Poland, leading to the eventual liberation of
Auschwitz-Birkenau by the 322nd Rifle Division of Russia's 60th Army. It was
the Red Army, too, that marched two months later into Berlin. The costs of the
triumph were great, with the Soviet Union losing an inconceivable 26 million
civilians and soldiers throughout the war. In her post, Zakharova recalled that
it was Soviet soldiers who “saved the world from the fascist plague.”
Both American and British authorities had known what had been
taking place at Auschwitz, but they had refused to bomb the rail lines that
brought thousands of Jews daily from across Europe to their deaths.
Although the Red Army was exceptionally diverse, drawing from
every segment of Soviet society, it was most closely identified with its
Russian history and core. And though Russia has a long history of antisemitism,
its defeat of Hitler relegated that — until the late 20th century — to a
background detail. Victory over Nazism remains central to Russian identity; the
conflict is known in Russia as the "Great Patriotic War."
Russian President Vladimir Putin has attempted to capture the
spirit of that time by claiming that he ordered the invasion of Ukraine to
“de-Nazify” its ruling regime. Putin’s narrative largely overlooks the fact
that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is Jewish. To address that fact,
some Russian officials have contorted World War II history to fit their
narrative, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov citing supposed Jewish
complicity in the Holocaust. His comments were denounced as false and
antisemitic, precipitating an apology from Putin to Israel’s then-prime
minister. The absence of Russian officials from Friday’s ceremony will prevent
a potentially awkward encounter: Slated to attend the event is U.S. second
gentleman Douglas Emhoff, the first Jewish spouse of a successful presidential
ticket (his wife is Vice President Kamala Harris) Emhoff, whose family is from
Eastern Europe, is currently touring Holocaust-related sites.
^ Putin and the Russians of today are committing Mass Murder
in places like Bucha, Ukraine and other War Crimes on Innocent Ukrainian Men,
Women and Children the same way that Hitler and the Germans did during World
War 2 so of course they shouldn’t be invited to this or any other Ceremony.
Hitler and the Germans tried to erase Jewish Culture and Life
during World War 2 and Putin and the Russians are trying to erase Ukrainian
Culture and Life today. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russia-not-invited-to-auschwitz-liberation-ceremony-004815651.html
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