In Europe, it takes place in the 8th, because the 9th is about the victory of communists and their "liberation" of easstern Europe. I don't think this is the place to make the apologia of war crimes and crimes against humanity (Tatars deportation, mass Baltics inhabitants deportations, Katyn butchery...). If one dictature replaced another one, there is no victory to be celebrated, only the defait of freedom in the eastern Europe. It is no more celebrated the 9th in European ex-USSR countries (Estonia, Latvia and Lituania) because of the things I told you above.
Thanks. Jean-Marc Gailis Jānis-Marks Gailis Ubuntu GNOME Translations Coordinator Latvian Ubuntu Translator Think Global, Make Locales.
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