Demoting the Holocaust
Russia marks two solemn occasions on 27 January each year — the lifting of the siege of Leningrad in World War II and the International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Holocaust. Throughout the 2010s, the Russian authorities tried to link the largest war crime and the largest genocide in the history of World War II, emphasising unity in remembering distinct groups that fell victim of Nazi terror.
That is now all in the past. While in January last year Putin met with representatives of Russia’s Jewish community and spoke about the importance of remembering the Holocaust, at the unveiling of the memorial this year he referred only to the “genocide of the Soviet people” and promised those present that Russia would successfully eradicate Nazism from the modern world, pointing to both Ukraine and the Baltic states as hotbeds of the phenomenon.