Is this man the most powerful Jew in the world? - Haaretz Com - Haaretz.com https://www.haaretz.com/.premium-the-most-powerful-jew-in-the-world-1.5315512 乌克兰第三富有的人(犹太人,governor of Dnipropetrovsk province)支持新纳粹 This April, a few weeks after his emergency appointment as governor of Dnipropetrovsk province, Kolomoisky was photographed proudly wearing a particularly scandalous T-shirt. It combined the Jewish emblem of the menorah along with the Ukrainian ultranationalist symbol of a trident, and all in red and black. Beneath it said “Zhidobandera” – an amalgamation of a Russian-Ukrainian word for Jews, normally regarded as derogatory, and the name of Stepan Bandera, the most controversial figure in Ukraine’s history. Bandera was the leader of the Ukrainian national movement, resisting Soviet rule, before and during World War II. At least some of his followers carried out pogroms and mass murders of Jews. He himself was murdered by the KGB in 1959 and has always been seen by the Soviets – and, to this day, Russia – as a fascist they claim collaborated with Nazi Germany. “Banderovtzi” is a slur still used by the Kremlin’s propaganda machine against Ukrainians who resist Russian influence, and, for obvious reasons, his memory is a highly uncomfortable one for most Jews.
乌克兰第三富有的人(犹太人,governor of Dnipropetrovsk province)支持新纳粹
This April, a few weeks after his emergency appointment as governor of Dnipropetrovsk province, Kolomoisky was photographed proudly wearing a particularly scandalous T-shirt. It combined the Jewish emblem of the menorah along with the Ukrainian ultranationalist symbol of a trident, and all in red and black. Beneath it said “Zhidobandera” – an amalgamation of a Russian-Ukrainian word for Jews, normally regarded as derogatory, and the name of Stepan Bandera, the most controversial figure in Ukraine’s history. Bandera was the leader of the Ukrainian national movement, resisting Soviet rule, before and during World War II. At least some of his followers carried out pogroms and mass murders of Jews. He himself was murdered by the KGB in 1959 and has always been seen by the Soviets – and, to this day, Russia – as a fascist they claim collaborated with Nazi Germany. “Banderovtzi” is a slur still used by the Kremlin’s propaganda machine against Ukrainians who resist Russian influence, and, for obvious reasons, his memory is a highly uncomfortable one for most Jews.