No place for Stalin in today's Georgia
AUTHORITIES in Georgia yesterday tore down another monument to Soviet leader and native son Josef Stalin.
The monument in the town of Tkibuli in western Georgia was taken down two days after authorities tore down a bigger and more famous monument to Stalin in his hometown of Gori.
Both statues were brought down in the middle of the night to avoid protests.
Stalin was born to a modest family of cobblers in 1878. Both monuments in his honor were erected before his death in 1953.
The Georgian government says a younger generation who have embraced Western ideals of freedom favor the dismantling of Stalin's monuments.
"A memorial to Stalin has no place in the Georgia of the 21st century," President Mikhail Saakashvili said last Friday. Saakashvili's government said a memorial to the fallen in the Russian-Georgian war of 2008 will replace Stalin's statue in Gori.
Georgia's Culture Minister Nikolos Rurua said the government will also soon rename Georgian streets still carrying Stalin's name.
But Rurua said that the body of Stalin's mother that rests alongside the nation's most prominent figures shouldn't reburied as some in Georgia have suggested.
Rurua said on Imedi television yesterday that the mother of Stalin carries no responsibility for what her son did to people. "Reburying her body isn't a good idea."
Stalin's mother Keke Dzhugashvili, born in 1858 to a peasant family in Gori, died in 1937. She was buried at the Mtatsminda Pantheon, a cemetery in Tbilisi where Georgia's writers and other cultural and public figures were buried.
The Western-leaning Saakashvili began a crackdown on Soviet-era monuments last December.
The monument in the town of Tkibuli in western Georgia was taken down two days after authorities tore down a bigger and more famous monument to Stalin in his hometown of Gori.
Both statues were brought down in the middle of the night to avoid protests.
Stalin was born to a modest family of cobblers in 1878. Both monuments in his honor were erected before his death in 1953.
The Georgian government says a younger generation who have embraced Western ideals of freedom favor the dismantling of Stalin's monuments.
"A memorial to Stalin has no place in the Georgia of the 21st century," President Mikhail Saakashvili said last Friday. Saakashvili's government said a memorial to the fallen in the Russian-Georgian war of 2008 will replace Stalin's statue in Gori.
Georgia's Culture Minister Nikolos Rurua said the government will also soon rename Georgian streets still carrying Stalin's name.
But Rurua said that the body of Stalin's mother that rests alongside the nation's most prominent figures shouldn't reburied as some in Georgia have suggested.
Rurua said on Imedi television yesterday that the mother of Stalin carries no responsibility for what her son did to people. "Reburying her body isn't a good idea."
Stalin's mother Keke Dzhugashvili, born in 1858 to a peasant family in Gori, died in 1937. She was buried at the Mtatsminda Pantheon, a cemetery in Tbilisi where Georgia's writers and other cultural and public figures were buried.
The Western-leaning Saakashvili began a crackdown on Soviet-era monuments last December.
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