Daily Stormer
July 16, 2015
If there’s one good thing that has come out of the Nazi revolution in the Ukraine, it’s that Jews who got turned into lampshades by Hitler are finally getting the recognition they deserve.
RNS:
Ludvika Sarah Leah Schein, who survived the Holocaust, hadn’t been to her hometown in 70 years. But she still vividly remembers the day Germans came to Rava-Ruska.
“We ran immediately into the forest,” Schein said, explaining how she and her two sisters narrowly escaped the Germans before a gentile family took them in. “Bullets were flying at us from all directions. It was a miracle we were not killed.”
Late last month, Schein, whose parents and brothers were killed by the Nazis and who now lives in San Francisco, attended a ceremony unveiling monuments to murdered Ukrainian Jews and giving family members a place to visit and pay their respects seven decades later.
The first five monuments were opened in late June in the western part of the country, giving official recognition to mass graves containing the remains of Ukrainian Jews murdered by German troops between 1941 and 1944.
These also mark the lifting of a Soviet-era taboo about discussing Jewish victims of the Holocaust in the official history, in what is a significant about-face for Ukraine. When it was part of the Soviet Union, Ukraine tended to follow a Soviet-era narrative grouping together all Eastern Europeans killed by the Nazis as “victims of fascism.”
It was a miracle, she says.
There were so many miracles during that dark time.
But miracles still happen: it’s a miracle what this Nazi revolution funded by the US government did for these Jews.