An ultra nationalist demonstrator, one of the activists of the movement against illegal immigration, looks through a slit in a giant flag, during a demonstration called the Russky (Russian) March, marking National Unity Day in the southeastern outskirts of Moscow, Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009. The new holiday, marking the end of the foreign intervention in Russia in 1612, was created in 2005 to replace the traditional Nov. 7 celebration of the 1917 Bolshevik rise to power. But it has been seized upon by extreme nationalists. AP Photo logo AP Photo 1 month ago

An ultra nationalist demonstrator, one of the activists of the movement against illegal immigration, looks through a slit in a giant flag, during a demonstration called the Russky (Russian) March, marking National Unity Day in the southeastern outskirts of Moscow, Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009. The new holiday, marking the end of the foreign intervention in Russia in 1612, was created in 2005 to replace the traditional Nov. 7 celebration of the 1917 Bolshevik rise to power. But it has been seized upon by extreme nationalists.