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<card title="Former political prisoner critical of the motion to open a Soviet Occupation Museum">
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Former political prisoner Semyon Gluzman believes that a Soviet Occupation Museum would not have exhibits. He told the Ukrainian Service of Deutsche Welle that he fears the President&amp;#146s initiative could not be carried through.<br />
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The main question, Gluzman believes, is what to put in such a museum. There are still a fair number of documents which have yet to be made public and which are in special archives of the SBU [Security Service]. Even if these were declassified, a lot of documents would need to be censored. Whether all of society is ready for this, and in particular, the victims of repression, is not clear. 'If it&amp;#146s a museum where they&amp;#146ll have Vasyl Stus&amp;#146 gloves from childhood or something like that, it&amp;#146s not serious. I understand a museum to be an archive. Otherwise it&amp;#146s just a game'. Gluzman believes that President Yushchenko is making a mistake in politicizing this issue. He says that in fact one needs to begin from an academic platform and sober science.  <br />
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Semyon Gluzman himself was arrested in 1972 and sentenced to 7 years harsh regime labour camp for 'anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda'.  <br />
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There are already such museums of Soviet Occupation in Tbilisi, Riga, Tallinn, Warsaw and Prague.  <br />
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President Yushchenko recently stated that 'for the sake of our grandparents, grandchildren and great grandchildren' a similar museum is needed in Ukraine. He said that certain forces would 'go crazy' over this.<br /><br /><a href='http://khpg.org/wap/'>home</a> | <a href='index.php?r=2.3.1.1.34'>Victims of political repression</a>
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