Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 28 – Jews around the
world have a special memorial day for victims of the Holocaust “not in January
when in 1942 the Wannsee conference too place or in 1945 when a Soviet unit
broke into the Auschwitz complex but in April in memory of the uprising in the Warsaw
ghetto, Yevgeny Ikhlov says.
Russia should follow the same
principle and have as a memorial day for victims of Soviet power and resistance
to it “not on October 30, the day of protests of hunger strikers in Brezhnev
camps … not on December 1 when forced (and genocidal) collectivization began
and on the start of the Great Terror in 1934” (.kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5B0B99F956B14).
Instead, the Moscow
commentator says, Russia should mark it on May 26, the anniversary of the largest
rising in the history of the GULAG in Norilsk in 1953. That would honor those
who resisted and died fighting the monstrous regime. Even more, “it would unite
all the peoples of the former USSR” who also died at the hands of the
chekists.
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