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Moscow commemorates 1941 parade on Red Square

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War veterans, soldiers and children gathered on Moscow's Red Square on Tuesday for a march to commemorate one of the most famous parades in the country's history, when troops left the square straight for the front line in 1941.
MOSCOW, November 7 (RIA Novosti) - War veterans, soldiers and children gathered on Moscow's Red Square on Tuesday for a march to commemorate one of the most famous parades in the country's history, when troops left the square straight for the front line in 1941.

About 2,500 children from youth public organizations and 2,000 soldiers from the Moscow garrison joined the march dedicated to the 65th anniversary of the November 7, 1941 military parade, when Moscow was attacked by Nazi forces.

Addressing the gathering, Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov said "Our generation remembers the sacrifice by our veterans of their lives and health, and will always continue that which our veterans defended."

In Soviet times, November 7 was the main public holiday commemorating the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Celebrations under communism involved huge military parades and demonstrations observed by Soviet leaders on Lenin's mausoleum on Red Square.

After the collapse of communism, November 7 was renamed National Reconciliation Day, but was only celebrated by hard-line left-wingers, who continued to mark it by marching on the streets under red banners.

In 2004, the Russian parliament replaced National Reconciliation Day with National Unity Day on November 4, a pre-revolutionary public holiday commemorating the liberation of Moscow from Polish troops in 1612, which ended decades of civil war and foreign intervention in Russia.

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