This is the Lonsky Prison in Lviv, a site where the Soviet regime executed thousands of Ukrainians during the occupation. People were imprisoned and killed simply for speaking the Ukrainian language, owning Ukrainian books, or for the 'crime' of loving their country. They were branded as 'nationalists'—a label used then, as it is now, to justify systemic terror. When the Soviet forces retreated in 1941, the scale of the atrocity was revealed: the bodies of the murdered, many showing horrific signs of torture, were laid out in the courtyard and on the streets so that families could attempt to identify their loved ones. It remains one of the darkest pages of our history. Today, Russia has struck this very building again. The symbolism is chilling : a century later, the same aggressor is attempting to destroy the same memory and the same people. History is repeating itself in the most tragic way, but our memory remains bulletproof

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