Red Army friction
A pro-Russian biker group’s presence causes tensions at Berlin’s Victory Day celebrations

Each year on 9 May, a group of pro-Putin bikers called the Night Wolves gathers in Berlin to take part in the annual Moscow-Berlin Victory Day celebration. But since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, these gatherings — and the war memorials where they take place — have taken on far greater political significance.
“This isn’t a provocation. I want to get through to people. Unlike in Russia, there is still freedom of speech here.”
“Germany is now my home, the place I moved to … but it’s not my motherland. I can say for sure that my homeland no longer exists. My homeland was the Soviet Union, and now it isn’t there, so without it I’m rootless.”











