Take another example. Stepan Bandera (Степан Бандера), leading and famous nationalist in the Ukraine, not to say part-time collaborator to Third Reich Germany, fled to Munich and died there in 1959 by assassination. Having hidden under a different name in the city, even though he was buried by his real name on a graveyard in Munich. Another high Ukrainian nationalist named Jaroslaw Stezko (Ярослав Стецько) and several other collaborators to Germany in WWII also gathered in Munich, parts of them even landed in the camps for the Displaced People. Stezko becomes important in this matter because Ukrainian president Yushchenko (Ющенко) (from 2005 - 2010) made them put a memorial plaque with a sentence on the wall of the house in Zeppelinstraße 67 in Munich where Stezko and his wife practiced their ideological work after the end of the war. He died in 1986 by natural means and lead his work until his death. (His wife lived until 2003 and continued their work, fully involved into their ideology.)
Re: From a NYT book review
Having hidden under a different name in the city, even though he was buried by his real name on a graveyard in Munich.
Another high Ukrainian nationalist named Jaroslaw Stezko (Ярослав Стецько) and several other collaborators to Germany in WWII also gathered in Munich, parts of them even landed in the camps for the Displaced People.
Stezko becomes important in this matter because Ukrainian president Yushchenko (Ющенко) (from 2005 - 2010) made them put a memorial plaque with a sentence on the wall of the house in Zeppelinstraße 67 in Munich where Stezko and his wife practiced their ideological work after the end of the war. He died in 1986 by natural means and lead his work until his death. (His wife lived until 2003 and continued their work, fully involved into their ideology.)