Off the wire
Spotlight: Austrian Chancellor resigns following his party's debacle in presidential election  • 1st LD Writethru: Brazil's Senate to move forward with Rousseff impeachment vote  • World Economic Forum in Kigali to prepare Africa for digital era  • U.S. Justice Dept sues North Carolina over violation of transgender rights  • Poyet confirmed as next Betis coach  • Sweden to reshuffle government after resignation of deputy PM  • Refugees stranded in Greece visit Acropolis on Europe Day  • U.S. stocks end mixed after soft jobs data  • First EFSI deal signed to provide loans for Greek SMEs  • Drug lord "El Chapo" Guzman's extradition to U.S. appropriate, says Mexican judge  
You are here:   Home

Commemoration held in Berlin to mark Soviet victory over Nazi Germany

Xinhua, May 10, 2016 Adjust font size:

Peace organizations held on Monday a variety of commemorative activities at a war memorial in Berlin to mark the 71st anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War II (WWII).

The Soviet Memorial in Treptower Park, located in the southeast of the German capital, is a cemetery for more than 7,000 Soviet soldiers killed in the fight to take Berlin in 1946. It was the largest Soviet military memorial outside the former Soviet Union as dedicated on May 8, 1949.

Wreaths were laid on Monday by the German government as well as embassies of Russia, Belarus and many other countries at the monument to remember the Soviet soldiers buried there.

As a highlight of the commemoration, more than 20 Russian-speaking children and adolescents, dressed in Soviet military uniform, laid flowers to pay tribute to the martyrs of the war.

Peace organizations and leftist parties also held a variety of activities, including open-air exhibitions and art performances, sending a message of peace promotion as well as opposition against xenophobia and extremism.

"For Germans, Victory Day is both a day to remember the victims of fascism and a time to celebrate the liberation from fascism," said Sara Schwanke from Berlin, who for the second time came with her family to the victory commemoration in Treptower Park.

She hoped that people today could learn from the history and cherish the hard-won peaceful life by taking part in commemorative events marking the end of WWII.

The Allied forces formally accepted the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany on May 8, 1945, after years of war started by Adolf Hitler with an attack on Poland in September 1939. The day is celebrated in Europe as Victory Day, or Victory Europe Day.

After WWII ended, the former Soviet Union announced May 9 a public holiday to mark the end of the Great Patriotic War. Since 1996, Russia has staged military parades every year on May 9 at Red Square in Moscow. Enditem