Crucified boy

"Crucified Boy" (Russian: Распятый мальчик, romanizedRaspyaty malchik) is a reference to an anti-Ukrainian fake news story spread by Russian state-owned Channel One on July 12, 2014.

The story was first published by Eurasianist philosopher Aleksandr Dugin on 9 July 2014.[1][2][3] It was then republished in news reports, officially titled "A refugee from Sloviansk recalls how a young son and a wife of a militiaman were executed in front of her". It contained allegations of a public crucifixion of a three-year-old boy performed by Ukrainian soldiers at "Lenin Square" in Sloviansk, as told by an alleged resident of Sloviansk, Halyna Pyshnyak (Ukrainian: Галина Пишняк, Russian: Галина Пышняк), a native of Zakarpattya. The story has become a staple example of Russian fake news.

The spread of the story served to distract from the Donetsk People's Republic's withdrawal from Sloviansk, and the cross-border shelling of Ukraine by Russian armed forces.

  1. ^ Дмитрий Быков (15 July 2014). Зачем ТВ, Александр Дугин и Галина Пышняк распяли мальчика (in Russian). Sobesednik.ru.
  2. ^ Мария Епифанова (16 July 2014). И это—не предел?. Novaya Gazeta (in Russian). No. 77.
  3. ^ Snyder, Timothy (12 April 2022). "The sadness of Sloviansk". Thinking about... Retrieved 12 April 2022.

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