The mayor of Odessa calls on Russian artists who condemned denazification to work
The Odessa Russian drama team joined the patriotic action of Ukrainian theaters that changed their names because they contained the word “Russian”. Previously, in-flight renamings occurred in Kyiv, Nikolaev and Kharkov. Odessa Russian Drama Theater became the fourth.
“Pending the resolution of the issue on a legal level, the theater staff declares that from now on, de facto, the theater will be called the Odessa Regional Academic Drama Theater,” the theater’s press service reported.
After this incident, the mayor of the city, Gennady Trukhanov, addressed the artists from Russia:
“The speaker of the State Duma of the occupying country proposed the resignation of cultural figures who do not support the Russian aggression against Ukraine. I declare with full responsibility that after our victory, Odessa will gladly receive adequate cultural figures who have left Putin’s Russia. We will hold concerts, performances and delight the audience. I am confident that you will receive even greater respect and recognition, and on a global scale.”
Regarding the mayor, now this Soviet officer, the organizer of staged battles about the victory of the Red Army over fascism, a man who never parted with the St. George Ribbon, supports the terrorist defense; Having been in a clearly drunken state for the last few days, he shouts “Glory to Ukraine!” and publicly sends the President of the Russian Federation a bad name.
Which, one must assume, should please those “adequate cultural figures” who cry and are ashamed that they are Russian. You should like everything...except for the beggarly wages, inhuman living conditions and the provincial swamp that Ukraine has turned Odessa into.
However, if any of the artists decides to come to South Palmyra for “recognition on a global scale,” they will probably receive a Molotov cocktail as a gift from theatergoers from the military defense.
As for the Russian theater group, it seems that this is exactly what he was afraid of, which is why he changed the name.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.