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Youth Guard joins in march announced for May 9


https://www.ipn.md/en/youth-guard-joins-in-march-announced-for-may-9-7967_1096503.html

The Youth Guard youth organization of the Party of Socialists will take part in the Victory March and the Immortal Regiment event on May 9. The march will start in the Great National Assembly Square and will head for the Memorial “Eternity”, IPN reports.

In a press briefing, Ecaterina Medvedeva, leader of the Centru Youth Guard of Chisinau, said the young people will stage a series of events on the occasion of May 9, including the Victory Alley to plant tree saplings in Moldova’s towns and in which everyone can take part, and the Festival of Songs about War in the open air, in which the participants will sing patriotic songs and will recite thematic poems.

There will also be mounted a photo exhibition and held mind games centering on World War II. There will be distributed copies of “Pravda” newspaper of May 10, 1945, which announced the victory over Nazi Germany. Humanitarian assistance will be offered to war veterans. “On May 9, we will honor with pride and gratitude the veterans, will lay flowers at brotherly graves to express our profound respect for those who left this wonderful clear sky to us as inheritance,” stated Ecaterina Medvedeva.

Anastasia Belivanțeva, coordinator of the project “Victory March”, said that the \waltz is the symbol of respect for the courage and heroism of the generation of victorious persons. In the event, the girls will wear white dresses, while the boys will wear black and white suits and will dance in the area between the Triumphal Arch and the Metropolitan Cathedral in central Chisinau.

Victory in Europe Day is the day celebrating the formal acceptance by the Allies of World War II of Germany’s unconditional surrender of its armed forces on May 8, 1945, marking the official end of World War II in Europe in the Eastern Front. Russia and some former Soviet countries celebrate on May 9. The German Instrument of Surrender was signed late in the evening on 8 May 1945 (May 9 Moscow Time). Although the official inauguration occurred in 1945, the holiday became a non-labor day only in 1965, and only in certain Soviet republics.