The Ukrainian President is actually the grandson of a Holocaust-survivor, so why do Putin insist on Ukraine being run by neo-nazis?
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The Ukrainian President is actually the grandson of a Holocaust-survivor, so why do Putin insist on Ukraine being run by neo-nazis?
“Denazification”

Vladimir Putin has, on several occations, justfied his war on Ukraine by calling it a peacekeeping mission to “denazifi” the old Soviet Republic.
Victory Day

Russia even has a national holiday to mark the victory over Nazi-Germany called “Victory day” on May 9th each year.
Grandson of a Holocaust-survivor

The thing is, that the Ukrainian President, Volodomyr Zelenskyy, is actually Jewish. He is even the grandson of a Holocaust-survivor.
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Has Putin lost his mind?

Many will probably answer that question with a “yes”, Nazi-claims or not, but to understand Putins continued focus on fighting against Nazism, we need to understand Russian history.
The Pogroms

In 1881, Russian Tsar Alexander II was assassinated. Following the assassination, sporadic episodes of violence against Jews occured in what is now considered the South of Russia. These episodes are called Pogroms.
100,000 Jews killed

According to PBS, after the Russian Revolution in 1917, an estimated 100,000 Jews was killed in attacks perpetrated by soldiers fighting to restore a united Russia. Jews were also killed by armies of the newly formed Ukranian and Polish states.
Ukranian collaboration with Nazis in WW2

During WW2, German soldiers killed an estimated 1,5 million Jews in the areas that are now Ukraine. These killings often happened in collaboration with Ukrainian militas and local auxiliary police.
A national trauma

According to New York Times, the lingering trauma of WW2 that still exists in Russia is part of the reason, Putin is using denazification as justification for his war.
“Factually wrong”

Shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, an open letter written by scholars of genozide and Nazism from all over the World made it clear that Putins rhetoric is both “factually wrong, morally repugnant and deepy offensive”.
Us vs. Them

It’s a well-known tactic to use an “Us vs. Them” rhetoric. It creates a sense of unity within the population as well as giving the population a common enemy to blame for whatever is wrong.
Half-mirror of reality

That being said, Ukraine has actually been criticized by some Jewish groups efter the pro-Western revolution of 2014. The main point of critizism was that Ukraine now allowed independence fighters, who at one point sided with Nazi Germany, to be honored as national heroes.