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Putin quotes Jesus
During a pro-war rally in Moscow on Friday night, Russian President Vladimir Putin invoked the words of Jesus Christ in order to justify his invasion of Ukraine.
Moscow police said more than 200,000 people attended the rally, Al Jazeera reported. Polling shows that a majority of Russians support the war in Ukraine, which has already left numerous Ukrainian civilians displaced, injured, and dead.
Speaking to the crowd in a turtleneck and down winter coat, Putin said he ordered the invasion "to get people out of their misery, out of this genocide, that is the main reason, the motive, and purpose of the military operation that we began in Donbas and Ukraine," according to The Washington Post. Russia has repeatedly accused the Ukrainian government of committing genocide in separatist-controlled areas of eastern Ukraine.
"And this is where the words from the Scriptures come to my mind: 'There is no greater love than if someone gives his soul for his friends,'" Putin continued, paraphrasing John 15:13.
Both the Post and ABC News translate the Russian word душу (dushu) as "soul," but most English translations of the passage using "life." The verse is part of a long discourse Jesus delivered to his disciples as they traveled to the Garden of Gethsemane, where he was arrested and taken to be crucified after ordering Simon Peter not to use force to defend him.
Putin identifies as a Russian Orthodox Christian but has expressed discomfort with speaking publicly about his faith.
Radio Free Europe: More than 2,500 Russian soldiers' corpses shipped back as morgues overrun
A witness at Mazyr's morgue said he has seen many "black sacks" being loaded from military ambulances onto Russian rail cars“In 2015, we had 300,000 to 400,000 people coming into Europe every month. We just had 300,000 people come into Warsaw in three weeks,” Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski said in an interview. “We want to take everyone who needs help, but how many kids can we take into schools? How can we do everything we can so the health system doesn’t break down in our city?”
Nearly all the initial Ukrainian arrivals planned on staying with family or friends, Trzaskowski said. That eased the pressure on the city to find places for everyone to sleep. But as refugees continue to arrive, fewer are staying in private homes. Instead, they sleep in one of what the mayor said are 30 refugee centers in the city. Some are nearing or at capacity.
The centers are often organized to house people for a few nights. Some people at Warsaw’s Torwar Hall, which had filled 418 of its 500 beds as of Friday, have had nowhere else to go for more than a week.
VLAD THE SAVAGE Hero survivor, 96, of FOUR Hitler concentration camps killed by a shell in Putin’s perverted war to ‘rid Ukraine of Nazis’
Stephen Moyes in Lviv
15:17 ET, Mar 21 2022
A SURVIVOR of four World War Two Nazi concentration camps was killed in the bombing on his home in the north-eastern city of Kharkiv.
Boris Romantschenko, 96, "actively campaigned for the memory of the crimes of Nazism", his family said.
Boris Romantschenko survived four Nazi concentration camps
Boris Romantschenko survived four Nazi concentration camps
He was deported by the Nazis to work in Germany but was sent to a camp after trying to escape
He was deported by the Nazis to work in Germany but was sent to a camp after trying so escape
He had withstood evil death camps at Buchenwald, Peenemünde, Dora and Bergen-Belsen.
It comes as Vladimir Putin was likened to Adolf Hitler yesterday after reports his invading troops were forcibly deporting Ukrainians to sinister Russian work camps.
Up to 5,000 residents have bundled away from the besieged city of Mariupol — with many taken to Taganrog in southwestern Russia to support Putin’s deranged claim he was “liberating” Ukraine.
In 2012, Mr. Romanchenko attended an event recalling the liberation of Buchenwald, where he read an oath devoted to "creating a new world where peace and freedom reign”.
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