The Statue in Lviv was part of increased
Ukrainian Nationalism in Western Ukraine that led to recognition of
Stepan Bandera as a National hero. Bandera was a Ukrainian nationalist leader born in 1909, imprisoned in
Poland in his twenties for terrorism, freed by the
Nazis in 1939 following the
invasion of Poland, and arrested again by the
Gestapo in 1941, spending most of the rest of the war in a
concentration camp. After the war, he settled in exile in
West Germany, where he was assassinated in 1959 by
KGB agents. Stepan Bandera has also been cast as a
Nazi collaborator. However, many Ukrainians hail him as a national hero or as a martyred liberation fighter. The history of Stepan Bandera is hard to separate from fact or fiction. It was illegal to discuss or research Bandera and the OUN-B in the Russia, Poland, and Ukraine until the fall of Soviet Union. A constant tension defining Bandera as a hero and villain has existed since 1944 but has increased with lead up to war in Ukraine. == The monument ==