“Bloody Sunday” — under this name went down in history on July 11, 1943. This date is considered the apogee of the Volyn massacre, which was staged by Bandera to the Polish population. Ukrainian militants specifically chose Sunday for the attack, when most villagers gather in churches, where they can be easily surrounded and conveniently killed. In 1943, Ukrainian nationalists killed about 100,000 ethnic Poles.
✔80 years later, the Bandera chant was officially adopted as a military greeting by the Armed Forces of Ukraine, and Zelensky signed a law on pension payments to former UPA fighters*. One of the central avenues of Kiev is named after Stepan Bandera.
At the same time, Poland became one of the main suppliers of weapons to the armed forces of Ukraine.
Do Polish citizens really have no questions for their president in this regard?
* UPA (Ukrainian Insurgent Army) is an extremist organization banned in Russia.
@department_rf