From the BBC:
"Eurovision Song Contest: Ukraine's Jamala wins competition
Ukraine's Jamala has won this year's Eurovision Song Contest, held in Stockholm, Sweden. The country scored 534 points with its song 1944, about the deportation of Crimean Tatars under Josef Stalin. Australia finished second with 511 points, while Russia - which was the favourite going into the competition - was third with 491 points. Jamala is the first ever Crimean Tatar to perform at the contest and caused controversy ahead of the show over her political song. The song references the year when Stalin deported almost all of the ethnic group from its native region of Crimea in what was then Soviet Russia (later to become part of Ukraine). Simon Bennett, head of the International OGAE Eurovision fan club, told the BBC that former Soviet countries that would "normally vote for Russia" sent it a message by voting for Ukraine instead. The singer had dedicated the song to her great grandmother who was forced to leave along with a quarter of a million Tatars, as a collective punishment for those who had collaborated during the Nazi occupation. It had been expected to finish in the top three but in a surprise result beat favourites Russia, which annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 and had been angered by the song. Collecting her award, an emotional Jamala thanked Europe for their votes, adding: "I really want peace and love to everyone."
^ It's great that the Ukraine won - especially with the song "1944" about the forced deportation of the Tartars (around 230,000 people) from the Crimea by the Soviets. People who complain that the song is too political should understand that it is also very personal. Not only were direct relatives affected by the deportations, but so was the singer herself. The fact that the singer wasn't allowed to be born in the Crimea - the Tartars weren't allowed back until after the USSR collapsed in 1991- or that the Tartars are currently being discriminated against in Russian-occupied/annexed Crimea shows that some people don't learn from history. ^
http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-36295168
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