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60 Minutes' Cheap Shots

Ukrainian Anti-Semitism

Jewish Ukrainophobia

Mailbag

A Sense of Responsibility

What 60 Minutes Should Do

PostScript

PostScript

A discussion relevant to the above critique concerns third-party attempts to incite

Ukrainian-Jewish animosity and can be found within the Ukrainian Archive at Ukrainian

Anti-Semitism: Genuine and Spontaneous or Only Apparent and Engineered? The relevance lies in

the fact that The Ugly Face of 60 Minutes which you have just read above has been the target of

a crude attempt at anti-Semitization, and at the discreditation of the author, myself, as is

documented particularly at Lubomyr Prytulak: Enemies of Ukraine anti-Semitize The Ugly Face of

60 Minutes.

HOME DISINFORMATION 60 MINUTES

HOME DISINFORMATION PETLIURA 1441 hits since 23Mar99

Symon Petliura An Introduction

Long after Symon Petlura had gone into exile and was living in Paris, armed

resistance broke out again and again in his name in Ukraine. Indeed, even today his

name is still regarded by the Ukrainian masses as the symbol of the fight for freedom.

Symon Petliura: An Introduction

Is Symon Petliura the man who "slaughtered 60,000 Jews"? Symon Petliura is

relevant to the Ukrainian Archive primarily because he led the fight for Ukrainian

independence at the beginning of the twentieth century, and secondarily because

Morley Safer in his infamous 60 Minutes broadcast of 23Oct94, The Ugly Face of

Freedom, summed him up this way:

Street names have been changed. There is now a Petliura Street.

To Ukrainians, Symon Petliura was a great General, but to Jews,

he's the man who slaughtered 60,000 Jews in 1919.

Or is Symon Petliura a fighter for Ukrainian independence? But as the documents

in this PETLIURA section will begin to suggest, Safer's contemptuous dismissal is not

quite accurate and does not quite tell the whole story. We can begin with a few

short excerpts to provide background on Petliura from his entry in the Encyclopedia

of Ukraine:

Petliura, Symon [...] b 10 May 1879 in Poltava, d 25 May 1926 in

Paris. Statesman and publicist; supreme commander of the UNR Army

and president of the Directory of the Ukrainian National Republic.

(T. Hunczak in Danylo Husar Struk (ed.), Encyclopedia of Ukraine,

1993, Volume III, p. 856)

After the signing of the UNR-Polish Treaty of Warsaw in April 1920,

the UNR Army under Petliura's command and its Polish military ally

mounted an offensive against the Bolshevik occupation in Ukraine.

The joint forces took Kiev on 7 May 1920 but were forced to retreat

in June. Thereafter Petliura continued the war against the

Bolsheviks without Polish involvement. Poland and Soviet Russia

concluded an armistice in October 1920, and in November the major UNR

Army formations were forced to retreat across the Zbruch into

Polish-held territory and to submit to internment.

(T. Hunczak in Danylo Husar Struk (ed.), Encyclopedia of Ukraine,