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WWII is slipping away into realm of mythology

The use of the Third Reich to score political points or make glib analogies betrays our past

May 11, 2023 13:01
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The U.S. and the Holocaust,09-01-2023,Nazi Party meeting or rally. Sign in back reads "Kauft nicht bei Juden" - Don't buy from Jews.,National Archives and Record Administration NARA,Unknown
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The 78th anniversary of German surrender in 1945 was a holiday this year, but not by design. VE Day happened to fall on the Monday of the long Coronation weekend.

The significance of the date, May 8, went largely unremarked, as it does most years. Only the big-number anniversaries get special treatment. There were big plans for 2002, 75 years since Hitler’s defeat, but coronavirus intervened and the festivities moved online. That made them more poignant. Lockdown restrictions gave new resonance to Vera Lynn singing We’ll Meet Again.

History never stays in the past. Old triumphs are banked as an emotional resource to be tapped at times of insecurity. The fact of winning the Second World War invested enough glory to support national pride through decades of decline.It serves a similar purpose, deployed to sinister ends, in Russia. Victory Day has been a public holiday there since the Soviet era (on 9 May because the German surrender happened late enough on 8th that it was past midnight in Moscow).

Under Putin, it has become a carnival of nostalgia for superpower status that was lost when the USSR ended. The war in Ukraine is part of a long campaign to reverse that humiliation. His Victory Day speech this year drew explicit comparison between the present conflict and the one Russians call the Great Patriotic War. The analogy involves grotesque inversions, casting aggressors as liberators and Ukraine’s Jewish president, Volodymyr Zelensky, as the criminal boss of a neo-Nazi junta.

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