From the DW:
“Poland demolishes 4 Red Army
monuments”
(Karol Nawrocki, president of the
Institute of National RemembranceKarol Nawrocki, president of the Institute of
National Remembrance)
Poland on Thursday dismantled
four communist-era monuments to Red Army soldiers who died during World War II.
The step comes amid historically strained relations between Warsaw and Moscow
that have deteriorated following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. "This is a
monument to disgrace, a monument of contempt of the winners over the
victims," the head of the Institute of National Remembrance, Karol
Nawrocki, said in Glubczyce, in the south of Poland, while workers were busy
dismantling the obelisk. "In 1945, the Soviets did not bring liberation,
they brought another captivity. They were capturing Poland and treating it as
booty," Nawrocki said, adding that the spirit of that system is still
present in the Russian Federation, which is killing civilians in Ukraine. Nawrocki
also stressed that Russian law prosecutes and sentences anyone removing Soviet
army monuments to up to three years in prison, even in foreign countries.Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov condemned the demolition of the monuments in Poland.
Symbols of domination Russia
argues that it liberated Poland when its forces drove out German Nazis at the
end of the war. Most Poles believe that the Soviet Union replaced Nazi occupation
with another form of repression. Since shedding communist rule in 1989,
Poland has been taking steps to remove symbols of Moscow's past domination from
the public spaces, and authorities have taken down several monuments and
plaques. Some have been moved to special storage. The drive does not include
cemeteries or current burial sites. Russia's invasion of Ukraine earlier
this year has made the effort even more urgent. Poland supports Ukraine's fight
against Russia politically, militarily and economically. Since the
Russian invasion of Ukraine began, Soviet-era monuments have also been
dismantled or removed in Estonia and Latvia.
^ The Soviet Union and its Red
Army didn’t liberate Eastern Europe. They simply replaced one Dictatorship
(Nazi Germany) with another Dictatorship (the Soviet Union.) While the Nazis
occupied Eastern Europe for 6 years the Soviets occupied Eastern Europe for 46
years.
I agree that these monuments and
memorials should be removed, but they should not be destroyed or defaced. They
should be kept as historical evidence of the Soviet crimes – in museums
(including open-air museums) – where future generations can come and see what
evil was forced upon their country in the past. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/poland-demolishes-4-red-army-monuments/a-63576097
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