A stolen celebration
The Russian state’s use of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany as a propaganda tool amounts to outright theft

It’s not unusual to hear the view that the regime has ruined Russia’s most important holiday, Victory Day, but it has, in fact, done more than ruined it — it has stolen it.
Initially, people laughed at the stories of Brezhnev personally winning the war, but as time went by, and tales of the leadership grew steadily taller, there was soon no space left in which to commemorate the war’s genuine heroes.
Almost all Soviet war films feature scenes, often from documentary footage, showing swastika-emblazoned planes bombing cities as unarmed civilians attempt to flee the deadly attacks amid crumbling buildings.









