It's actually a mass grave of 187 ROA soldiers. Bojarski is just one of them. Russian and Czeck are related Slavic languages, so I understood the grave marking. PS. Unfortunately for ROA, they were traitors not just to USSR, but most importantly to the Motherland. PS Story of Vlasov is very interesting by the way. He was captured near Leningrad when the army under his command was surrounded in the swamps and eventually destroyed after many months of hellish fighting.
@johnposey1455
24 күн бұрын
@@ivan200804 I was under the impression that the RNNA was absorbed partly into the ROA, so there may be more RNNA members. Still, I hope I didn’t give the impression that this was exclusively RNNA, I just think their history is interesting separate from Vlasov’s soldiers
@edpzz
26 күн бұрын
Were the Grave markers erected after the Commonest era??
@johnposey1455
26 күн бұрын
@@edpzz Yes, I think during the Cold War there may have been a small marker but the communists would never even think of showing their patch!
@royale7620
Ай бұрын
I hope cancel culture weirdos dont take down these historic monuments
@lewisdarne5852
28 күн бұрын
They will try.
@johnposey1455
28 күн бұрын
I’ve had to delete a few inflammatory comments. I welcome discussion because these are morally vague historic figures, but comments like “you’re denying the holocaust” are already popping up - mostly from newly created profiles
@royale7620
27 күн бұрын
@@johnposey1455 well those are certainly weirdos, dont mind them
@Mike-xw4gm
Ай бұрын
In ukraine, Bandera was also a resistance fighter against russian communism genocide. He wanted to join nazis and fight the communist and make ukraine independent from communists and nazis when hitler found out Bandera wanted independent ukraine he arrested him and put him into concentration camp.
@johnposey1455
Ай бұрын
@@Mike-xw4gm I visited his grave in Munich, and the grave of Yaroslav Stetsko. I’m hoping to put out a video soon but I think it’ll have to be a voice-over, I didn’t speak in front of his monuments. Complex historical figures, for sure
@johnposey1455
Ай бұрын
@@claudermiller Good thing the Red Army never did anything like that.
@Internetbutthurt
27 күн бұрын
'Russian' communism? Marx and Engels were German. Stalin was Georgian who was running the show at the time. The USSR didnt get a leader of Russian heritage until the 1980s. Go back to school. Bandera was a Nazi who had his own agenda.
@megawiemjem7098
27 күн бұрын
He was not a resistance fighter, he was a gneocidal trerorist, a fanatic who was in love in national socialism and its racial policies which he tried to replicate in his future country, that would've been a naiz-like dictatorship (something like Independent State of Croatia - a not so Independent country, which was ruled officialy by Ustaše regime, but was in full control by Germany). His plan (OUN-B's) was to make an independent, etnically "clean" Ukraine, by collaborating with Germany. German government knew from beginning what Bandera and Ukrainians wanted, which they used for their own purpose ( final solution to jeiwsh question and general plan-ost) He was not in conctraton camp, but in a prison for high value prisoners, who can be useful for Germany - might collaborate. That's why it looked more like 5-star hotel, than a conctrtion camp. Bandera for example had access to SS cafeteria, could roam free in prison and his prison cell was always open.
@sovietheart3883
24 күн бұрын
Everyone who fights communism is a traitor to the working class.
Пікірлер: 24