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Monday, June 25, 2012
Text: PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA VLADIMIR PUTIN address at Netanya dedication

[IMRA: For some reason the fantastic address by President Peres has yet to
be distributed]

Unveiling a monument marking the Red Army’s victory over Nazi Germany
June 25, 2012, 14:00 Netanya
http://eng.kremlin.ru/transcripts/4071

In Israeli Netanya, Vladimir Putin and Israeli President Shimon Peres took
part in a ceremony of unveiling a monument to the Red Army’s victory over
Nazi Germany. Great Patriotic War veterans also attended the ceremony.

The initiative to build the monument came from Israeli Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu during his visit to Moscow in February 2010, and received
the Russian leadership’s support. The monument was designed by Russian
architects and sculptors and was built in Netanya’s central district,
alongside an existing monument to the fallen in the Israeli-Arab wars.

* * *

Speech at a ceremony of unveiling a monument marking the Red Army’s victory
over Nazi Germany

PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA VLADIMIR PUTIN: Everything I just seen and heard here
makes a strong emotional impact on me and strengthens my deep respect for
the Jewish people, for Israel’s people, and my sense of gratitude for
everything you are doing to immortalise the memory of those who died in
World War II.

We are here to unveil a monument that I think will become one of the most
symbolic in the country. I have seen various monuments in Israel, all of
them works of talent that make a truly deep impression. But this monument
commemorates the immortal heroism and strength of spirit of the entire
wartime generation, their countless sacrifices and irreplaceable losses, and
the victory in 1945 that has given the whole of humanity an undying legacy.

Russia holds sacred the memory of this terrible war. We greatly appreciate
that our sincere feelings are shared here in Israel, where millions of
people in their hearts, just like in Russia, keep a special place for dates
such as September 1, 1939, June 22, 1941, and May 9, 1945.

As we unveil this monument today, we grieve together for those who fell on
the battlefields, died from wounds and hunger, or suffered the death camps’
tortures. The Holocaust was one of the blackest, most shameful and tragic
pages in all of human history. Even today, our hearts still refuse to accept
this monstrous cruelty that the Nazis committed. It was the Soviet Army that
put an end to this madness and saved from destruction not just the Jewish
people but many other peoples too. And now, this wonderful monument has been
raised in its honour here in this holy land.

This monument appeals to our memory, but also reminds us of just how fragile
peace is. We must do everything we possibly can to ensure that the criminal
Nazi doctrines never rise again under any form or guise, and that the
Nuremberg Tribunal’s verdicts remain unquestioned.

It is our duty to defend and preserve the truth about the war and prevent
any attempts to justify the Nazis’ helpers. We cannot and will never allow
the executioners and their victims to be placed together, and will not
accept the truth to be distorted and replaced by all manner of
falsifications and fabrications. To rewrite history in this way would be a
crime before the memory of those millions of people who gave their lives for
victory, and a crime before the future generations, who must know the true
heroes of World War II and be able to distinguish the truth from insolent
and cynical lies. This is why the monument we are unveiling today is so
important.

Once more, I want to thank sincerely for this initiative Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu, and express my profound gratitude too, to President of
Israel Shimon Peres and all of our Israeli friends for their all-round
effort to preserve history’s memory. Of course, I also want to thank the
monument’s creators – the team of Russian sculptors and architects – Salavat
Shcherbakov, Vasily Perfilyev, and Mikhail Naroditsky.

The white dove soaring skywards, the dove’s wings, symbolise the victory of
goodness and peace. May these eternal values always remain the solid
foundation of the friendship between our countries and their peoples.

June 25, 2012, 14:00Netanya

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