‘Our city is not worthy of his name’
The Stalingrad Battle victory celebrations were spread over two days, 1 and 2 February. Public employees were given days off for the duration of the festivities at the initiative of the Volgograd Veteran Council.
Sculptures of two Soviet marshals, Georgy Zhukov and Alexander Vasilevsky, were revealed to the public along with the Stalin bust on the first day near the Stalingrad Battle Museum. Local lawmakers, Russia’s Young Army Cadets National Movement members, veterans, and hundreds of city residents attended the celebrations.
A marble monument to Zhukov used to occupy the place where the three busts have now been erected. The old monument was placed indoors, and one war general was replaced with three.
Sergey Shcherbakov, the sculptor of the busts, told local media that the Stalin bust had to be made in a hurry: “Everything was quick, I needed to fulfil the order in a very tight timeframe. It was a very serious job, no room for hesitation. Everything was very precise and direct.”
According to Volgograd’s media outlet V1.ru, the sculptures cost three million rubles (€38,800) to make. This sum was provided by a local foundation that sponsors the Ukraine war. According to V1 sources familiar with the internal operations of the foundation, the organisation was established to avoid disclosing certain expenditures through the public procurement system. Shcherbakov confirmed this information to the media outlet but refused to specify the price.
Alexander Bloshkin, head of the regional veteran council and speaker of the local parliament, was the first to speak at the event.