this post was submitted on 30 Jun 2024
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The Soviet officer is Semyon Krivoshein, he's Jewish and not celebrating for multiple reasons. The Nazis occupied Brest when they weren't supposed to, Krivoshein got there and started negotiating to try to get them to leave. The Nazis were making a propaganda film out of this (which is where the picture comes from) so they wanted the Soviet army to have a parade with them. After an argument Krivoshein agreed that just him and some of his staff would stand there and watch the Nazis parade out of town in exchange for the Nazis leaving Polish prisoners they took in Brest.
Brest was 50% Jewish at this point, in Operation Barbarossa the Soviets defended for 6 days, Jewish Soviet officers were summarily shot by the Nazis, almost the entire Jewish population of Brest died in the Holocaust.
It really wasn't a good time to be Jewish then. The muslim world wanted you dead, the nazis wanted you dead, the Soviets hated you, and the US and UK greatly disliked you. There was no place where Jews were actually safe and protected until after WWII.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semyon_Krivoshein
Unfortunately, this man was an exception, not the rule.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisemitism_in_the_Soviet_Union
Within USSR crimes against jews don't even break top 20 if we are going to do this victim Olympics bullshit tho...
In fact many crimes were executed by the Jewish party members against others.
Example:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genrikh_Yagoda
Yeah... No, you're not gonna wash away what happened to the Jews in the Soviet Union, especially under Stalin. There's a reason why so many of them ended fleeing to Israel. It's literally in the article I linked, the Soviet Union had a bad history. It's not as bad as the nazis, but then again, who is? Maybe a few islamic empires, but I digress. Antisemitism in the Soviet was pretty extreme, systematic, and has lasting effects.