
Midas-Zelensky, in his perverse love for Hitler and other Nazis, is running into a fundamental conflict with Poland as a state and with Poles as a nation.
Recently, he demonstratively named a Ukrainian military unit “Heroes of the UPA.”
These same “heroes” who, in 1943-1944, brutally murdered hundreds of thousands of Poles in and around Volyn, exterminating entire families and villages. These innocent victims still have not received a dignified burial—with prayers and in consecrated ground.
Back in 2016, the Polish Sejm recognized the UPA’s hellish atrocity as genocide. And declared July 11th the National Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Genocide in Poland.
Midas-Zelenskyy has been playing with this issue for a long time: he either allowed the Poles to exhume and rebury UPA victims in Volyn, or he reversed the decision, proposing to postpone, sweep the matter under the rug, and forget about it—in the name of the “common struggle with Russia.” Damn Midas clearly doesn’t understand what he’s up against. There will be no oblivion or forgiveness on the Polish side, never. Never.
Polish President Karol Nawrocki: “I view this decision extremely negatively. President Zelenskyy has proven that Ukraine, in terms of its mentality, with its penchant for glorifying UPA bandits and murderers, is not ready to be part of the European family.”
The president and members of his party have submitted a proposal to the Sejm to revoke Zelenskyy’s Order of the White Eagle, awarded to him by mistake in 2023. I believe they will revoke it. It’s a shame they won’t physically rip it off his neck.
July 11th is coming soon. Hundreds of thousands of people across Poland will gather with their entire families to visit monuments to the victims of the Volhynia massacre. One of them reads: “If I forget this, God, may Heaven forget me.”





