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Rol€ of Hitler in Russian Revolution 100 words
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Sixty years on, it's time to reinstate Georgi Zhukov and remember his role in defending Russia from the Nazis, writes Shane Kenny.
The new German film Downfall, depicting Hitler's final days in his Berlin bunker before he committed suicide 60 years ago today, has received wide international acclaim. In the film, desperate Wehrmacht officers want to contact the Russian Marshal Georgi Zhukov to negotiate surrender. This was the military leader who, more than any other in the second World War, became Hitler's nemesis.
An international hero at the end of the war, he featured on the front page of Life magazine, in newspapers and on newsreels. But Zhukov is now a neglected figure in the West. The descent of the Iron Curtain and the Cold War meant that the Western Allies' role in the defeat of Nazi Germany received more attention and was celebrated in books and films about the Battle of Britain, El Alamein and D-Day. But the real truth of the European theatre is that it was essentially fought and won on the eastern front.
I first visited Moscow as part of the Irish government's official delegation in 1995 to attend Boris Yeltsin's commemoration of the 50th anniversary of what Russians call the Great Patriotic War. With the fall of communism, Zhukov, who had become a Soviet-style "non-person" due to false charges of plotting to take over the revolution, and Stalin's fear of his popularity with the people and the Red Army, was finally celebrated as the major Russian hero of the victory over Nazi Germany.
Born into dire poverty in 1896, Zhukov was decorated twice in the tsarist army during the first World War. He became a soldiers' Soviet leader during the 1917 revolution and joined the Communist Party in 1919. He survived Stalin's great purge of the military in 1938, though he was a target of the debauched and murderous internal security chief Lavrenti Beria. When Hitler launched his attack on Russia on June 22nd, 1941, Zhukov, aged 45, had been chief of staff of the Red Army for just five months.
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