Monument to victims of communism unveiled in Lodz, Poland

Phlegmak

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In my effort to find news for this forum that has absolutely nothing to do with the US, I found this little piece.

http://www.thenews.pl/national/artykul121845_monument-to-communist-victims-unveiled.html

A Monument to the Victims of Communism in the years 1918-1989 was unveiled in Lodz, central Poland, Saturday.

President Kaczynski - who could not attend personally due to continued ill health - said in a special statement that the monument will be for future generations, "an important sign of national remembrance and also a warning against totalitarian ideologies and systems.”

The monument depicts an eagle rising above fractured rocks, holding broken bars in its grip and is in memory of inhabitants of the eastern borderlands who were the victims of the Soviet invasion of 1919-20. It also in memory of the 22,000 victims of the 1940 Katyn massacre, the victims of the pacification of the workers' protests on the Baltic coast in December 1970 and the activists of the Solidarity movement who were imprisoned and persecuted during martial law in 1981.

The unveiling ceremony was attended by representatives of government and veterans. Presidential Kaczynski was represented by deputy chief of his office, Jacek Sasin. The minister read out a from the letter the president, in which he pointed out that the ceremony took place on the eve of the 28 anniversary of the introduction of martial law in Poland.

"Today we remember not only the victims of martial law, but also all Poles who have suffered in the twentieth century from repression and persecution," wrote the president.

“The history of [communist] Poland is marked by recurrent protests, starting from the workers’ revolt in Poznan in 1956 to the Solidarity movement.” President Kaczyński stressed in his letter that Poles must not forget the courage of all those who risked their future, their health and in many cases their life in the defence of country’s independence.

The memorial stands outside building which served as Gestapo headquarters during World Two and later, during the first post-war decade, as the seat of the provincial Public Security Bureau which was responsible for the repressions and terror during the communist period.

The foundation stone for the memorial was laid on 17 September 2008, the 69th anniversary of the Soviet invasion of Poland. About one tenth of the cost of the memorial was covered from public donations.

Good for the Poles.
 
Oh, and one of my ancestors owned a huge factory in Moscow. The commies killed him and nationalized his factory. Thought this was worth mentioning.

If the commies never killed him, I could be rich.
 
Although I am disturbed to see the amount of Polish news as of late.

I deliberately looked for Polish news because I thought Poland is a good candidate for taking over the US's current reign of #1 news producer. In other words, I want to use Poland instead of the US for the frequent news threads, since I'm sick to death of all the US-centric threads.
 
There are dozens of memorials all across the former Eastern Bloc. The message one one I go around almost every day reads "To the memory of those killed in the two World Wars and the victims of fascist and communist totalitarianism."

Modern history of Europe compressed into one sentence.
 
The monument depicts an eagle rising above fractured rocks, holding broken bars in its grip and is in memory of inhabitants of the eastern borderlands who were the victims of the Soviet invasion of 1919-20

A war the Poles started. I hope there is a monument in Kiev and Belarus to all the Ukrainians and Belorussians who died thanks to Polish imperialistic delusions.

Or maybe in the Czech Republic, to those people who lost their state to the Poles when they collaborated with the Nazis?

Ah, double-standards.
 
A war the Poles started. I hope there is a monument in Kiev and Belarus to all the Ukrainians and Belorussians who died thanks to Polish imperialistic delusions.

What are you talking about? The war started after the Russian SSR invaded the Vistula River, invading Belarus, Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. It was their goal to spread the freaking revolution. The border was completely undefined, anyway, and I'd like to remind you of the number of Poles at the time within what is now Belarus and Ukraine.
 
Oh, and one of my ancestors owned a huge factory in Moscow. The commies killed him and nationalized his factory. Thought this was worth mentioning.

If the commies never killed him, I could be rich.

Tough break, man. You could be in the French Riviera getting STD's from 3 European super models. :p
 
Or better yet, one for the victims of western European imperialist butchery outside Europe?

Indeed. They far outnumber the dead from communist "oppression."

What are you talking about? The war started after the Russian SSR invaded the Vistula River. It was their goal to spread the freaking revolution. The border was completely undefined, anyway.

I'm talking about the Kiev Offensive. Target:Vistula dealt with puppet German governments in the Baltic states and Poland; no serious gains were made further than Lithuania and Latvia, which had their soviets beaten and overthrown because of British reinforcement. AFAIK it never even entered "Poland" beyond what eventually became parts of Lithuania and Belarus; remember, those states were all also fighting with each other in the chaos of German retreat, Sovnarkom was just another player in that, and a relatively weak one at that, since the Estonians managed to beat them. They also had concerns elsewhere, especially once the Ukraine fell to Anarchists and Cossacks.
 
So did it take almost 20 years to build this monument ? Or did they remember the victims only after 20 years ?

Typical
 
Speaking of the United States, do we have any monuments to the Native Americans?
 
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