Putin: 'Those who rewrite history attempt to hide own disgrace'

2015/01/27
Russian President Vladimir Putin (RIA Novosti / Alexey Nikolsky)

It is hard to imagine that real ‘death factories,’ mass executions and deportations have become a terrible reality of the 20th century, that they were cold-bloodedly and thriftily organized in Europe that seemed to be civilized back then,” Vladimir Putin said as he spoke in the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow at the event dedicated to the 70th anniversary of Auschwitz’s liberation.


Direct attempts to silence history, to distort and rewrite history are inadmissible and immoral. Behind these attempts often lies the desire to hide one’s own disgrace, the disgrace of cowardice, hypocrisy and treachery, the intent to justify the direct or indirect collaboration with Nazism,” the Russian leader stated.


In places where they imprint the ideas of ethnic and moral supremacy into people’s heads, where they destroy or scoff at human values, civilization is being quickly and inevitably replaced by barbarity,” Putin noted, adding that the process is often accompanied with war and aggression.


Putin urged the audience to always remember the terrors of the Holocaust, reminding everyone that, according to the Nuremberg Tribunal’s verdict, the Nazi policies killed 6 million Jews. The president said that such crimes have no statute of limitation.


We bow our heads before the heroism of the Red Army soldiers and officers who defeated the Nazi Germany and stopped the fearful extermination machine,” the Russian leader stated.


Putin emphasized that the Russian people bore the greatest weight in the war against Nazism as 70 percent of the Red Army troops were ethnic Russians. However, the president also acknowledged the effort and heroism of other peoples.


We all know the danger and the destructive potential contained in the policy of double standards, indifference and lack of concern about other people’s fate. A typical example is the current situation in the south-east of Ukraine where civilian residents of Donetsk, Lugansk and other cities and towns are being killed for many months by cold-blooded attackers,” Putin noted.


Putin’s speech in the Jewish Museum was made as the world celebrated the 70th anniversary of liberation of Auschwitz by the Red Army in 1945. The Soviet soldiers saved about 7,500 of the camp’s last surviving inmates and disclosed to the world the blood-chilling details of the Nazi extermination machine. Auschwitz is one of the most infamous Nazi death camps, where over 1 million people were murdered during WWII. Most victims were Jews, but there were also Poles, Soviet Army soldiers and other people considered dangerous by the Nazi regime.


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