The Soviet historiography either omitted the subject of the Holocaust or universalized it by replacing Jewish victims with abstract Soviet citizens (Asher, 2003: 888-889). The Lviv pogrom, however, did not fit the official Soviet narrative of heroism and martyrdom of Soviet people for two major reasons. Firstly, the subject of ethnic violence was largely ignored by the Soviet historiography of the Second World War, especially, when it involved “brotherly” Soviet nations, like Ukrainians, which unanimously — except a small group of collaborators – fought against fascism. Secondly, even while evidences of NKVD crimes produced by German were quickly labeled by the Soviet Union as the war-time propaganda, the complex investigation of the Lviv pogrom could bring unpleasant revelations of Soviet crimes, which would barely suit the Great Patriotic War…