104th anniversary of the 1917 October Revolution in Voronezh, Russia by Mihail Siergiejevicz / SOPA Images
On the 104th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution of 1917, the Russian government took advantage of a difficult epidemiological situation to prohibit citizens from gathering for rallies. But in Voronezh, communist activists staged a series of actions. The bourgeois government has been fighting the historical memory of the people for 30 years. First, on November 7, it was forbidden to celebrate the anniversary of the Revolution at the state level. In 2005, a new holiday was established for November 4, calling it National Unity Day. This holiday was timed to coincide with the expulsion of the Polish invaders from the Kremlin in 1612. But this event took place on November 6, and it does not have the nationwide and worldwide significance that the revolution has, which laid the foundation for the first state of workers in the history of mankind, not exploiters. Also, November 7 for Russians is of great importance, because in 1941, it was from the parade on that day that the combat units of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army left Moscow to the front, which launched a counter-offensive against fascism and inflicted the first major defeat on the previously considered invincible Hitlerite army.
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