Author Topic: 70th Anniversary of the Liberation of Auschwitz by the Red Army  (Read 3789 times)

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70th Anniversary of the Liberation of Auschwitz by the Red Army

Russia Excluded from Commemoration Ceremonies

The Marxist-Leninist Weekly Information Project, January 24, 2015
http://www.cpcml.ca/Tmlw2015/W45004.HTM#4

The attempts to rewrite history are mind-boggling.This week, the great lengths to which Germany went to make sure representatives from Russia would not attend the celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz were revealed.

A recent report by germanforeignpolicy.com informs that "EU countries are preventing the Russian president from participating at the commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz." The highest representative of the country whose army halted the mass murder in the German extermination camp January 27, 1945, is thereby excluded from the commemoration ceremonies, germanforeignpolicy.com wrote. However, Germany's President Joachim Gauck participated. This is the same Joachim Gauck who used his speech on the 75th anniversary of Germany's invasion of Poland to stir up sentiment against Moscow and to transform the commemoration of Nazi crimes into an appeal for closing ranks against Russia. In his memoirs, Gauck described Red Army soldiers, who had liberated Germany, as beings "with Asian facial features," "reeking of Vodka," who "requisitioned and stole." This is typical CIA propaganda about the conduct of the Red Army when it liberated Europe. Of course, for the Red Army to achieve the feats it accomplished, discipline was decisive and it conducted itself very differently to what the slanders claim. The motivation of such slanders is understood from the statements made by Gauck a few years ago when he complained, "The occurrence of the German Judeocide has been inflated to a uniqueness," because "certain milieux of post-religious societies" were seeking to induce "a certain shudder in face of the unspeakable." In 2010, he was quoted saying, he "wonders how much longer we Germans want to nurture our culture of chagrin."

The denial of the role of the Soviet Union in the anti-fascist war is for purposes of equating communism with fascism and thereby depriving the world's people of communist leadership today. It is also to isolate Russia today, in the frenzied attempt by the U.S. to impose its control over Europe and dominate Asia, and of the European Union to do the same. Blaming the Soviets for all the crimes the Hitlerites committed also serves to cover up the crimes committed during the war by British Zionism's projects and Zionist forces, the aim of which is to condone the terrible crimes the Zionist state of Israel is committing against the Palestinians, in the name of creating a safe haven for Jews, despite the fact they themselves only wanted a chosen few. All of it serves to deprive the younger generations of an understanding of the past so as to help them cope with the present in a manner that opens a path for the future.

But what it tells us is that today the reactionary forces suffer from a most morbid preoccupation with defeat. In their desperation they are reaching out to the Hitlerites of yesterday and today to save them. They are despicable indeed.

In a January 16 article, germanforeignpolicy.com writes:

"Just Like Nazi Troops"

The commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the German Auschwitz extermination camp had been the focus of political intrigues already last year. At the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of its liberation, Russian President Vladimir Putin's participation was still taken for granted. After having suffered severe losses, the Soviet Army reached Auschwitz January 27, 1945, putting an end to the ghastly murders Germans were committing. First attempts to exclude Putin from the commemoration of the 70th Anniversary were made in Poland in the summer 2014. A parliamentarian was quoted saying that the Red Army "had been an aggressor" in WW II, "just like Nazi troops," which is why the Russian President should only be allowed to make a "penitential pilgrimage" to Poland.[1] At the time, [Polish President] Bronislaw Komorowski could see nothing wrong with Putin's participation at the Auschwitz commemoration. However, anti-Russian forces have prevailed and the Russian President's invitation was cancelled through diplomatic channels. According to reports, Poland's Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz has also campaigned to prevent Putin from participating at a parallel commemoration ceremony in Prague. This would exclude the president of the country, whose army had lost more than a million soldiers just to liberate the German Reich and the Polish territories under German occupation.

Turned Against Russia

The anti-Russian use of the memory of German crimes against humanity is making headway with Putin's virtual disinvitation. Already on September 1, 2014, German President Joachim Gauck used his memorial address in Gdansk -- commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the German invasion of Poland -- to stir up anti-Russian sentiments. Referring to the Ukraine conflict, Gauck accused Russia of giving a higher priority to "a quest for power," rather than to "maintaining stability and peace." Completely blotting out western support for the Ukrainian putsch and the civil war, while ignoring all the wars waged by the West from Yugoslavia to Iraq on up to Libya, Gauck alleged that Russia had "violated international law" and "annexed foreign territory."[2] Alluding to Great Britain and France's approbation of Germany's occupation of parts of Czechoslovakia in October 1938, targeting Russia, Gauck declared, "history teaches us that territorial concessions often whet the appetite of the aggressors." The commemoration of Nazi crimes was thereby transformed into an appeal to close ranks against Russia, which Germany had invaded.

A "Culture of Chagrin"

On various occasions before becoming president, Gauck, who, unlike Russia's President Putin, will be present at Auschwitz January 27, had made public statements showing how he views Germany's 1945 liberation and the Shoah [Holocaust]. In his memoirs, he wrote on the subject of Germany's liberation, that it arrived as "horrible news." He depicted the Red Army soldiers as beings "with Asian facial features," reeking "of vodka," who "requisitioned and stole" and systematically raped women.[3] In 2006, Gauck remorsefully claimed that there is "a tendency toward sanctifying the Holocaust," wherein "the occurrence of German Judeocide is inflated to a uniqueness that ultimately escapes comprehension and analysis." "Certain milieux of post-religious societies" were persistently searching "for the dimension of the absolute, a certain shudder in face of the unspeakable." This could also be achieved by "the absolute evil" and is "paradoxically of psychological advantage."[4] Gauck has stated several times that "the Germans" would be well advised to change their approach to history. In the fall of 2010, he mused, "I ask myself, how much longer do we Germans want to nurture our culture of chagrin."[5] This was after he had positively responded to the question whether "the majority of the Germans" are mature enough for a "reorientation toward their own victims, the reorientation toward the patriotic." "That's how I see it."[6]

Broad Brush

Until he was inaugurated president, Gauck's historical views were criticized in German public opinion. For example, he has a knack for using the "broad brush," in reference to his remarks on the "Black Book of Communism."[7] Gauck had written that "the communists had also made themselves unpopular, when they ... approved Poland's westward acquisition of territory and thereby Germany's loss of its eastern territories." "To both the natives and the expellees, this loss of the homeland was considered a great injustice, which the communists sealed in 1950, by recognizing the Oder-Neisse as the new German-Polish border,"[8] alleges Gauck. In the conflict over the "Centre against Expulsions," he took the side of the president at the time, Erika Steinbach, who was sharply criticized for her historical revisionist statements, particularly in Poland. Gauck is quoted on the German League of Expellees' (BdV) website saying, Berlin is most certainly the best location for a "Centre against Expulsions." It blends in, because Berlin is where "there are various 'topographies of terror,' the location of the Wannsee Conference and the Stasi Headquarters, the former seat of government of brown and red despots."[9]

Yatsenyuk's "Soviet Invasion"

Gauck's Auschwitz speech and Putin's disinvitation coincide with Berlin's open cooperation with the fascist successors of Nazi collaborators to stage a pro-western coup in Kiev, (german-foreign-policy.com reported.[10]) The Kiev government has adopted their anti-Russian standpoints, which are also increasingly having an influence on the German debate where they dovetail with old anti-Russian sentiments. Arseniy Yatsenyuk recently caused a stir with his interview on German television. He literally alleged, "We all remember well the Soviet invasion of Ukraine and Germany."[11] This statement has remained unchallenged.

Notes

1. Streit in Polen über Einladung Putins zu Auschwitz-Gedenken 2015. www.tt.com 09.05.2014.

2. Gedenkfeier zum deutschen Überfall auf Polen 1939. www.bundespraesident.de 01.09.2014.

3. Joachim Gauck: Winter im Sommer, Frühling im Herbst. München 2009. See Hans-Rüdiger Minow: Der Zug der Erinnerung, die Deutsche Bahn und der Kampf gegen das Vergessen.

4. Joachim Gauck: Welche Erinnerungen braucht Europa? www.robert-bosch-stiftung.de. See The Consensus President.

5. "Mutige Politiker ziehe ich vor." www.sueddeutsche.de 30.09.2010.

6. Gauck: Erinnerung an Vertreibung leugnet nicht den Nazi-Terror. www.dradio.de 31.08.2006.

7. Daniela Dahn: Gespalten statt versöhnt. www.sueddeutsche.de 10.06.2010.

8. Stéphane Courtois et al.: Das Schwarzbuch des Kommunismus. Unterdrückung, Verbrechen und Terror. München 1998.

9. www.z-g-v.de.

10. See Vom Stigma befreit

11. www.facebook.com/tagesschau/posts/10152968920374407
 
 
29 Jan 2015 - 09:52 by WDNF International | comments (0)