http://english.pravda.ru/world/americas/113730-1/

09.06.2010

Stalin Rolls Over in His Grave After WWII Scandal in USA's Virginia 



Residents of a small town of Bedford, Virginia, have found themselves in the 
center of a scandal related to the name of one of the most disputable 
politicians in history - Josef Stalin. 

A memorial complex commemorated to the 66th anniversary since the landing of 
allied troops in Normandy (June 6, 1944) was unveiled in Bedford. The opening 
of the sculptural ensemble would have been regarded just as a local event if 
the busts of Roosevelt, Truman and Churchill had not been supplemented with the 
bust of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. 

Even Winston Churchill, one of the masterminds of the Cold War, could not deny 
the fact that Stalin was one of the key figures in the anti-Hitler coalition. 
Dozens of pages of Churchill's epoch-making book "The Second World War" are 
devoted to the Soviet leader. 

Russia Today: Russia protests Strasbourg court decision against Soviet WWII 
veteran

William McIntosh, the head of the foundation which organized the erection of 
the monument in Bedford, is certain that it was America that won WWII. 
Nevertheless, he believes that Stalin's bust is a necessary addition since the 
Soviet Union was a member of the anti-fascist coalition. McIntosh said that the 
bust had been unveiled in recognition of Stalin's role in the defeat of Nazi 
Germany, which contributed greatly to the operation in Normandy. 

Annie Pollard, a Bedford County Supervisor who has volunteered at the memorial, 
said Wednesday it has been a source of controversy in Bedford and she feels its 
presence is "a slap in the face to all these other people we honor and 
remember." 

"I just don't think it belongs on the hill with them," Pollard. "To me, he 
(Stalin) is just a murderer. I just can't see how he fits in with the memorial. 
They are people we want to remember. He's someone I'd rather forget," she 
added. 

James Morrison, a resident of Bedford shares the same opinion. It was a 
shameful event, an expression of disrespect to war veterans, the man said. 

The Bedford veterans preferred not to express their views regarding the opening 
of the monument. 

The funds for the monument were collected with the help of donations. It was 
impossible to either spend the funds on other goals or change the project, 
William McIntosh said. The sponsors were aware of the fact that they were 
funding the creation of the busts of Roosevelt, Truman, Churchill and Stalin. 
All of the sponsors knew that each bust would cost $50,000, but they were happy 
about everything. 

The scandal with the sculpture of the Soviet leader in an American town is 
obviously a continuation of the discussion about Stalin's role in world 
history. This discussion remains open for more than 50 years. 



A similar scandal occurred in Ukraine on May 5, where Ukrainian communists 
unveiled Stalin's monument despite nationalists' protests. 

Vladimir Litvin, the chairman of the Ukrainian Parliament, was strongly against 
the practice to immortalize those historical figures who provoke too much 
rejection among the population. 

"A state and a nation can not exist without symbols and myths. However, they 
must be accepted by the majority of people. They must unite rather than split 
the society. Instead, we have a war of monuments against their political 
rivals. It will not lead to anything positive," the official said. 

It is worthy of note that Stalin did not pat himself on the back as far as 
future estimations of his persona were concerned. Here is what he said: "Many 
deeds of our party and the nation will be perverted and spit over, especially 
abroad and in our country too. My name will be slandered too, they will ascribe 
many atrocities to me." 

First monuments to Josef Vissarionovich Stalin appeared in the USSR in the 
beginning of the 1930s. Most of them were erected during the post-war years, 
when his persona was glorified as the father of all nations in the world. Many 
of those monuments were subsequently demolished after the 20th Congress of the 
Communist Party, which deflated Stalin's personality cult in the Soviet Union 
and Eastern Europe. 

The monument in Budapest was the first of Stalin's monuments that was 
demolished in 1956. The monument to Stalin in Prague - the largest 
architectural composition in Europe - was exploded in 1962. 

It goes without saying that even the total destruction of monuments to Stalin 
has not erased the memory about him. The appearance of Stalin's bust in the US 
State of Virginia is a good example of it. 

Ivan Tulyakov
Pravda.Ru 


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