From the Stories Get Distorted desk: A stand of fir trees in Kyrgyzstan, planted near the base of the Himalayas some 50 to 60 years ago, has grown in the shape of a 600-foot-wide swastika. How did it happen? According to the NY Times, among the explanations in circulation are the following:
- German POWs planted the seedlings in a swastika shape after World War II, "a time-delayed act of defiance by vanquished soldiers marooned in a corner of Stalin's Soviet Union."
- In the 1940s, local laborers planted the seedlings under the supervision of a Soviet citizen who was an ethnic German and secret Nazi sympathizer.
- In 1953, a woman who was a German nationalist supervised the tree-planting.
- The trees were planted by Soviet authorites after the Molotov-Ribbentrop non-aggression pact as a symbol of Soviet-German friendship.
The Times says that "History has become malleable, a yarn by turns sinister, wry, clever and Soviet. It is also warped by errors, a cover-up, competing theories and lies."

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