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GREAT PATRIOTIC WA (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   179758


Changed Paradigm of World War II Commemoration in Ukraine After Crimea’s Annexation / Klymenko, Lina   Journal Article
Klymenko, Lina Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article outlines how the Ukrainian political leadership has promoted the commemoration of WWII anew following Russia’s annexation of Crimea. It argues that the new commemorative practices reflect changes in Ukraine’s foreign policy, aiming to come closer to the (Eastern European) EU member states and to move away from Russia. The efforts of the Ukrainian authorities remain contradictory, however, as to some extent they disregard the EU’s remembrance of WWII and are reminiscent of the Russian commemoration of the Great Patriotic War.
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2
ID:   140572


Great patriotic war: the cossacks' final attack / Bondarenko, I   Article
Bondarenko, I Article
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Summary/Abstract During that war, there existed the so-called Goebbels propaganda, which was named after one of the top figures in Nazism and one of Hitler's fellow genocide mongers, Reich Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda Joseph Goebbels, who met a sticky end in 1945. Goebbels shamelessly used his boss' principle, "The bigger the lie, the more it will be believed." Today, this principle is followed by those who feel that recognizing the victory of the Soviet Union runs against their interests. And it is not only, and not even mainly, ideology or the former confrontation between the two systems that is behind this. The bottom line is a campaign against Russia as a state.
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