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his year, Volgograd was prematurely renamed. Two days earlier than usual, the city administration installed the "Stalingrad" entrance signs.
Large posters of Stalin are now hanging everywhere.
Since 2013, propaganda has usually only been made "in memory of the heroic past" for 24 hours each with the old, symbolic name of the city.
But on the 2nd February is the 80th anniversary of victory of the Red Army over Hitler's troops in the Stalingrad cauldron.
In addition, Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to attend the commemorative event, so the local leaders probably did not want to hesitate with the traditional renaming of temporary in their city.
Other holidays on which Volgograd remembers its history include the 9th May ("Day of Victory"), the 23rd August (bombing of the city) and the 9th December ("Day of Heroes").
Patriotic tourists usually photograph the historic town sign, this year they will find more motifs for the round anniversary: The famous colossal monument of the "Mother Heimat" on Mamayev Hill is illuminated blood red as part of a large "light show".
New busts were set up in front of the local battle panorama, including one by Stalin.
However, Putin will by no means permanently return its old name to the city during his announced appearance in Volgograd, as could be read on social networks, says Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.
interfax.ru/russia/883975:
"I cannot confirm that." There is also "no discussion" about this in the government, according to Peskow a few days ago.
In addition to the anniversary of the battle, the latest reason for speculation was a statement by former short-term Prime Minister Sergei Stepazhin (70).
He had pointed out interfax.ru/russia/883537 in a panel discussion that there is a subway station called "Stalingrad" in Paris and described the dictator Josef Stalin as a "multi-layered person." It is wrong not to have a "staling wheel" in Russia.
By the way, today's Volgograd with around one million inhabitants only bore this name from 1925 to 1961, before that the place was called Tsaritsyn.
"Volgograd is a neutral name"The Communists in particular are very interested in permanently renaming Volgograd and honoring Stalin again.
"No, there is no need to rename the city," 93-year-old Mikhail Zasypkin is quoted by the Kremlin-related news agency RIA Novosti ria.ru/20230201/rodina-1848925415.html: "Volgograd is a neutral name that is close to our hearts.
He is apolitical, connected to the Volga. There are many cities on the Volga, but only one city with its name, which is a great honor for the inhabitants of Volgograd."
The Kremlin is not particularly interested in reviving Soviet traditions. Putin prefers to refer to Tsar Peter the Great.
That is why, for example, the subway station was renamed Moscow, which was named Pyotr Volikov, who headed the shooting command that executed the last Tsar's family. Bolshevik Volivov had later become the victim of an assassin himself.
The Kremlin-controlled media say that the "opinion of society" is decisive for renaming. Propagandists pointed out that there are Russians who could not forgive "Stalin the repression actually happened."
radiosputnik.ria.ru/20230126/stalingrad-1847723771.html
Particularly bizarre is the speech of a nationalist blogger that the West can understand a renaming to Stalingrad as an "invitation" to advance again to the Volga: "Isn't this price too high to cheer us up?"
Incidentally, a mere name change remains a "badly disguised imitation" as long as the "Russian victory ideology" including the "militarization of society" would not be introduced again.
How delicate the return to Soviet names is for the Kremlin is currently also evident in Melitopol, which is occupied by the Russians. There, the military city administration decided to return their "historical name" around eighty streets after Ukraine renamed them in 2016.
Thus, Domplatz became the "Platz der Revolution" again, the "Jaroslaw der Weise" street bears the name of the German communist Rosa Luxemburg as in the past.
Other streets are once again reminiscent of the October Revolution or the Soviet People's Commissioner for Culture Anatoly Lunacharsky.
By no means did all Russians find this comprehensible, certainly not the far-right "ultra-patriots" who struggle with the Soviet tradition, if only because they see themselves as "believing".
The authorities had been guided by the "names of executioners and sadists," scolded thepolitical scientist and Jaroslav Belousov persecuted among the communists t.me/s/yaroslav_belousov: "The feelings of the Orthodox are ridiculed, the historical memory desecrated.
Even people who are far from religion are shocked by such a turn. Even the worst enemy could not invent such a provocation."
Russia does not need "revolutions" but "reconciliation." Historians sensed an "undounished mockery of the memory of the great peoples of Russia." A political scientist was excited about "cretinism and ignorance."
An "Ultra-Patrist" wrote: "There should be no places with the names of fanatics, murderers, terrorists, torturers and Orthodox Christians." It is always better to resort to pre-communist names from the Tsarist period.
"Gift to Ukrainian propaganda"
The portal "Rybar" with 1.1 million followers wrote ironically: "You can't imagine a better gift for Ukrainian propaganda.
All the horror stories with which the Ukrainian media fed the population that Russia is trying to build a 'bloody USSR 2.0' come true before our eyes." Soviet names are a "blow against the young generation", after all, history does not begin with the October Revolution of 1917.
The fact that Rosa of all people will be honored in Luxembourg again is "quite strange."
"Just live in a different street"
The popular military blogger Boris Rozhin ("Supreme Kassad"), on the other hand, spoke of "hysteria" and tried to reassure his angry fans by pointing out that firstly, the local authorities of Melitopol did not act independently,
but adhered to the Kremlin's instructions and secondly, the suspicion that the communists After the end of the war, the population could "democratically" decide on the names.
He reprimanded "screaming necks" scolding Rosa Luxemburg. No one is forced to live in the street named after her: "If you don't want to, just live in another street."