Russian drones destroyed the museum of Roman Shukhevych

by meyzner_

34 comments
  1. It’s quite apt they are called orcs, they just want to destroy everything.

  2. What if the Ukrainians destroyed this old museum full of old fossils? It’s called the Kremlin.

  3. Putin doesn’t do war against warriors well, he’s like all the pussies in power and goes after the weak; powerless and defenceless. May 2024, find him alone in a room with a bigger meaner snake than he is!

  4. Doubt many Polish will lose sleep over this destroyed Museum

  5. Polish and others may not like him, but still: it does not matter who that museum was about, but rather fact that warfare against museums is something orcs enjoy

    Polish should not forget that we all have something we shouldn’t be proud of. Instead they act as if they were perfect clean and white during WW2

    Time to get over it

    P.S. thank you for downvoting this, snowflake hypocrites. The world is not black and white like you imagine it to be, but go on

  6. So the museum dedicated to a nazi, destroyed at expense of a russian missile? Sounds like a win-win situation.

    Let it be an omen it will be a good year for us all.

  7. Not surprised.

    Colonizers hate those who fought against colonizers and want to erase them from history.

  8. Newly elected Polish leader sends Putin a bottle of his finest champagne for new years. It totally had nothing to do with Russians blowing up a nazi museum

  9. >”The Bolsheviks’ advances are forcing us to step up the liquidation of Poles to their full extinction. Villages with solely Polish populations are to be burned down. In villages of mixed nationalities only Poles are to be wiped out. Jews and Gypsies are to face the same treatment: full annihilation without remorse.”

    >Roman Shukhevych, Hero of Ukraine

    In this case, I trust Poles, Ukrainians and Europeans will all agree that nothing of value was lost.

  10. That’s Iranian drones. And we should have enough with Iran in Europe already since a long time! Iran of mullahs, not the normal one!

  11. For the first time since Feb 22 2022 Russia has done something positive.

  12. Redditors will justify nazis if it means going along with NATO propaganda lmao. Truly a r/redditmoment.

  13. Why Ukrainian: “I’m sorry that in Ukraine-Poland conflict Ukrainians killed **up to** 100,000 Poles.”

    Many magnitude more important than Polish: “I’m sorry that during Pacification Galicia Poland placed in concentration camps up to 100,000 Ukrainians, 20,000 of which died, and then in Ukraine-Poland conflict killed some part of 120,000 Ukrainians civilian that were killed in region during WW2 (without 70,000 of killed at the front and 45,000 killed by soviet repressions).”

    ?

  14. I perceive this as a happy accident. Good riddance mass murderer memorial place. Read on the guy on wiki and then think how much b/s the Poles have to overlook to support UA.

  15. If the museum financiers should want to restore the exhibitions dedicated to the museum’s hero, here is a small fragment concerning the actions of his UPA troops which could be used as his heroic motto above the entrance. From recollections of genocide survivor Maria Paszek, in 2016’s “Wołyń bez komentarza”, automatically translated:

    *IT WAS 1943, we lived together with my parents and little sister Franciszka (b. 1940) in Volhynia. I was six years old. It was a time of mass murders by bandits. Most often they appeared at night – you could hear their singing and ominous shouts then. They set fire to buildings in selected villages. I could see the burning villages from afar.*

    *We were warned by a neighbor, a Ukrainian. He said to my father: “Liszka, today run away, because they will burn your house and you. You must hide.” The other neighbor, as it turned out later, was murdering together with the Bandera bands.*

    *They found out: tonight will be the Red Night. So he told us: “Run away.”*

    *But it was already late. I heard singing, screaming, screeching. It was too late to run away and the night was already approaching, so this neighbor of ours says: “Liszka, stay the night with us. I’ll bounce a board in the barn for you. But if the dog barks, run away into the field, because they will also murder us.” He feared for the fate of his family, after all, those Ukrainians who followed the Poles were also killed. Dad kept vigil. Already that night we had to save ourselves by escaping and hid in a ditch where peat was being dug.*

    *We did not run away from Musina right away. Father, moreover, did not believe that such things would happen. Other Poles fled earlier, we hid for a few more days. One night we were hidden in the ziemlanka (a cellar near the barn). Mother was somehow restless and says to father: “Come on, Wojciech, let’s go from here, let’s not sleep here.” We went to hide in a nearby tobacco field. And then the Ukrainians arrived on horseback. They had axes, pitchforks. They sang, shouted loudly – apparently they were drunk. They rushed into the house. No one was there, so they searched, running around. They approached the dugout from which we had just left. They threw in two grenades.*

    *Many times at night we escaped, changed hiding places. We hid in tobacco, in millet, in peat. Banderovtsy also attacked more and more often during the day. I saw them going with their weapons: axes, pitchforks, scythes, knives. I have such an image before my eyes: they reached some girl, she was already big, older than me. They toyed with her, and then cut her with a knife near her knee and began to rip off her skin. She screamed terribly. They tore the skin from her, and one still said: “Here’s your Polish sock, bitch!”. They beat her, kicked her, stabbed her. And then they took her, stuck a stake in her mouth and nailed her to the ground. Before she died, she still tore up the ground with her heels.*

    *Later, I remember: a little boy – maybe like me. He runs. Running away. His parents had just been killed. And this boy was running away, somewhere else, apparently he saw what was happening. And suddenly a Ukrainian woman ran out of the house and stabbed him in the chest. He screamed a lot. And she still grabbed him and slit his throat. Blood gushed out a lot.*

    *Where they killed, they buried. Whether in the yard or in a ditch. And if they didn’t make it, that’s how everything lay.*

    *They tore apart the tiny children. They held them with a shoe and tore them apart with their hands.*

    *I remember, we were very thirsty. We came out of hiding and crawled quietly to a well in some courtyard. Mom wanted to draw with a bucket – and there in the well: full of drowned torn bodies of children. We didn’t drink any more of that water.*

    *Do you know that when I went there, to Ukraine in 2002, I took everything, even water with me from Poland? I couldn’t bring myself to drink there. I don’t know why – was it what I saw….
    I still smelled human blood in the water. Only later could I drink water there.*

  16. So, this seems to be Putin’s answer to the question of what his denazification means.

  17. May be interesting idea to rename some places completely devoid of any strategical value far enough from population in this guy’s name.

  18. Russians actually did something usefull for once

  19. I’m originally from Ukraine, and in this case, I have nothing against it. But it would be better if Ukrainians themselves did that. Maybe someday.

  20. Uh, yes, well, that name does not bring up happy thoughts in Poland, especially in the oldest WW2 era generation.

  21. a lot of people here sound too entitled and self-justified for someone who just recently closed vistula operation investigation on the premise that perpetrators did nothing wrong lmao

  22. Russian drones destroyed the museum of Ukrainian Nazi soldier and genocide perpetrator, Roman Shukhevych

    Wonder why a Ukrainian news site would choose not to use those descriptions of their hero…

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