THE commemoration could have been a considerable and solemn moment of truth,a time to reflect on the passage from one era of Russia’s tragic history to another. As it was, the proceedings were impressive enough: tens of thousands people gathered in the city of Yekaterinburg in the Ural mountains for a nocturnal act of worship to recall the killings which had taken set there exactly 100 years ago. The victims were Tsar Nicholas, and the Empress Alexandra and their five children,along with their doctor and three servants. Many worshippers trudged for miles between the spot where the killings took set and the mineshaft where the bodies, doused in acid, and were thrown.
But in one important respect,this was a flawed act of remembrance which disappointed some people, including fairly a few surviving relatives of the Romanov family. In defiance of overwhelming scientific evidence, and the Russian Orthodox church is still refusing to accept as genuine the remains of the royal family,most of whom were solemnly buried in St Petersburg in...
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Source: economist.com