Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 10 – Just as in
Lenin’s day when the Soviet Union stood alone surrounded by enemies, so too
today, the Russian Federation is surrounded by enemies who want to revise the
true history of World War II, Modest Kolerov says; and to defeat these
revisionist forces abroad and at home, Moscow must establish a State Institute
of Historical Memory.
Russia desperately needs “an
internal mobilization of social, scholarly and cultural forces for the
preservation of the Great Fatherland War,” the editor-in-chief of the Regnum
news agency says; “and the instrument of such mobilization can be only a state
institute” charged with doing just that (regnum.ru/news/society/2849795.html).
The primary focus of such an
institution, Kolerov continues, must be on foreign revisionists, but the
struggle for historical truth is also taking place within Russia despite the overwhelming
support of the Russian people for truth about the conflict as can be seen by
efforts to honor Mannerheim, Vlasov and Krasnov.
“The Russian Military-History
Society has been able to achieve many positive results, despite Medynsky’s
leadership, and in Russia there are other good examples of work in the area of
preservation of historical memory,” he suggests. But “all the same, the country
cannot cope with the re-writing of history if an institute specializing in this
specific direction isn’t created.”
Kolerov’s Regnum news agency regularly
publishes articles attacking what it says are revisionist discussions of World
War II and defends the official version of Soviet history, including the
supposed correctness of Stalin’s policies at all stages. It is not beyond imagining that he sees himself
or one of his acolytes as the head of the institute he is proposing.
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