Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
SOME FACTS ABOUT MOSCOW Genghisid BRUTALITY toward Europeans , GOOGLE T: After the 2nd World War, 10-million Belarus was missing about 3 million of its inhabitants, but about 2 million were killed even before the war by the communist NKVD. In Belarus, 70 percent of all Belarusian writers were physically destroyed, scientists and artists were killed. (The troupe of the Third Belarusian State Theater of Vladislav Golubok was arrested in its entirety. Almost everyone was shot.) They were killed on a national basis. For the sake of this, the label "Natsdem" was coined (it means national democrat, although such a party did not exist). This label was attached to all Belarusians whom the Stalinists planned to exterminate. In the bowels of the NKVD, a non-existent anti-communist organization SVB ("Union for the Liberation of Belarus") was invented. Under the invented phantom, the NKVD carried out arrests, conducted an imaginary investigation, interrogated, tortured, tried, then exiled to Russia and shot innocent people. After the Riga agreement in 1921, Belarus was divided between Poland and Russia. The dividing line was drawn near Mensk. There was a secret order from the NKVD to exterminate the entire Belarusian population along the border. Russian invaders wanted to make a deserted zone here. The destruction was carried out by border troops. Trusted persons were given a rifle and a shovel. When such a border guard met in a deserted place (on a road, in a field, in a forest) a lonely Belarusian or Belarusian, or a child, he shot a person, immediately dug a hole with a shovel and covered up the corpse. That was the instruction. People in the villages were not so afraid of the "man with a gun" as they were of a soldier with a shovel. (These facts were published in the Belarusian press in the early 1990s.) In the 1930s, 95-99 percent (almost completely) were destroyed (exiled and shot) by the Belarusian communist-party and Soviet administration. They even destroyed the directorate and economic leaders. Russians from Russia were sent to the positions of murdered administrators and communist bosses-Belarusians. Russians (the so-called "nominees") came to Belarus, occupied vacant positions, received benefits, property, apartments, and the first thing they did was to close Belarusian schools, translate them into Russian, so that their children could study without burdening themselves with studying , as they said, "unnecessary" Belarusian language. Thus, the occupiers created a "Russian-speaking population" in Belarus. Ethnocide, linguacid, mnemacid and genocide were carried out by the Bolsheviks at the same time. The destruction of Belarusians by the Russian NKVD continued during the German occupation. In June 1941, during the first days of the war, the communists shot thousands of prisoners in prisons and on stages. Only in the Brest Fortress, where there was a terrible prison of the NKVD, they did not have time to liquidate all those arrested, some of them fled. Meanwhile, a large group of overseers and functionaries of the NKVD was blocked in the fortress by the Germans. They sat there for about a month until they died out. About 20 years after the war, the communists came up with a legend about the "heroic defense" of the Brest Fortress. It is noteworthy that a broad Soviet partisan movement was organized only in Belarus and partly in the ethnic Belarusian lands that were part of Russia (Smolensk, Bryansk). There was no partisan movement in occupied Russia. Why? Yes, because the plan for the destruction of the Belarusian nation continued to operate. Moscow, using the organs of the NKVD, dragged the masses of the Belarusian civilian population into the war against the Germans, and thus exposed the Belarusians to the German attack. The necessary work of struggle proceeded from an insidious plan and was carried out by vile methods. (Stalin wanted to get a double benefit.) The NKVD specifically killed a German near a Belarusian village or did some other provocation in order to provoke a punitive operation by the Nazis (who usually burned the entire village, most often along with the people). Thus, by the way, as a result of a special provocation by Soviet partisans, the famous Khatyn was also burned, which the communists then advertised to the whole world in the 70s as a typical victim of fascist atrocities. As a result of such a communist-fascist joint "work", more than 9 thousand villages were burned in Belarus. Therefore, by the end of the war, as a result of a special operation of the NKVD, many Belarusian commanders were sent to death, removed from command, killed and repressed. Their places were taken by Russians sent from Moscow and loyal NKVDs. In the summer of 1944, when the "Red Army" occupied Belarus, the Russians mobilized into the army on Belarusian territory. Tens of thousands of young Belarusian men, almost without training, were thrown to the front line. Russian commanders raised them in unnecessary attacks under the fire of German machine guns, without even giving weapons to their hands, or with rifles, but without cartridges. They died by the thousands, like grass under a scythe. And those who fled back fell under the bullets of the NKVD "blockade detachments". However, detachments fired in the back. This is how the destruction of Belarusians in the war continued, by the hands of the Germans and Russians at the same time. As the communists said, "in the struggle for the Soviet motherland." In the 40s, the Russians took them to Siberia and tortured all the foresters and the so-called "kulaks" from Western Belarus there. They were taken out by wagons, in different rows.Azov
How many innocent people have your buddies the neo-Nazi Azov murdered? Thank goodness Putin has them starving in the gulag.SOME FACTS ABOUT MOSCOW Genghisid BRUTALITY toward Europeans , GOOGLE T: After the 2nd World War, 10-million Belarus was missing about 3 million of its inhabitants, but about 2 million were killed even before the war by the communist NKVD. In Belarus, 70 percent of all Belarusian writers were physically destroyed, scientists and artists were killed. (The troupe of the Third Belarusian State Theater of Vladislav Golubok was arrested in its entirety. Almost everyone was shot.) They were killed on a national basis. For the sake of this, the label "Natsdem" was coined (it means national democrat, although such a party did not exist). This label was attached to all Belarusians whom the Stalinists planned to exterminate. In the bowels of the NKVD, a non-existent anti-communist organization SVB ("Union for the Liberation of Belarus") was invented. Under the invented phantom, the NKVD carried out arrests, conducted an imaginary investigation, interrogated, tortured, tried, then exiled to Russia and shot innocent people. After the Riga agreement in 1921, Belarus was divided between Poland and Russia. The dividing line was drawn near Mensk. There was a secret order from the NKVD to exterminate the entire Belarusian population along the border. Russian invaders wanted to make a deserted zone here. The destruction was carried out by border troops. Trusted persons were given a rifle and a shovel. When such a border guard met in a deserted place (on a road, in a field, in a forest) a lonely Belarusian or Belarusian, or a child, he shot a person, immediately dug a hole with a shovel and covered up the corpse. That was the instruction. People in the villages were not so afraid of the "man with a gun" as they were of a soldier with a shovel. (These facts were published in the Belarusian press in the early 1990s.) In the 1930s, 95-99 percent (almost completely) were destroyed (exiled and shot) by the Belarusian communist-party and Soviet administration. They even destroyed the directorate and economic leaders. Russians from Russia were sent to the positions of murdered administrators and communist bosses-Belarusians. Russians (the so-called "nominees") came to Belarus, occupied vacant positions, received benefits, property, apartments, and the first thing they did was to close Belarusian schools, translate them into Russian, so that their children could study without burdening themselves with studying , as they said, "unnecessary" Belarusian language. Thus, the occupiers created a "Russian-speaking population" in Belarus. Ethnocide, linguacid, mnemacid and genocide were carried out by the Bolsheviks at the same time. The destruction of Belarusians by the Russian NKVD continued during the German occupation. In June 1941, during the first days of the war, the communists shot thousands of prisoners in prisons and on stages. Only in the Brest Fortress, where there was a terrible prison of the NKVD, they did not have time to liquidate all those arrested, some of them fled. Meanwhile, a large group of overseers and functionaries of the NKVD was blocked in the fortress by the Germans. They sat there for about a month until they died out. About 20 years after the war, the communists came up with a legend about the "heroic defense" of the Brest Fortress. It is noteworthy that a broad Soviet partisan movement was organized only in Belarus and partly in the ethnic Belarusian lands that were part of Russia (Smolensk, Bryansk). There was no partisan movement in occupied Russia. Why? Yes, because the plan for the destruction of the Belarusian nation continued to operate. Moscow, using the organs of the NKVD, dragged the masses of the Belarusian civilian population into the war against the Germans, and thus exposed the Belarusians to the German attack. The necessary work of struggle proceeded from an insidious plan and was carried out by vile methods. (Stalin wanted to get a double benefit.) The NKVD specifically killed a German near a Belarusian village or did some other provocation in order to provoke a punitive operation by the Nazis (who usually burned the entire village, most often along with the people). Thus, by the way, as a result of a special provocation by Soviet partisans, the famous Khatyn was also burned, which the communists then advertised to the whole world in the 70s as a typical victim of fascist atrocities. As a result of such a communist-fascist joint "work", more than 9 thousand villages were burned in Belarus. Therefore, by the end of the war, as a result of a special operation of the NKVD, many Belarusian commanders were sent to death, removed from command, killed and repressed. Their places were taken by Russians sent from Moscow and loyal NKVDs. In the summer of 1944, when the "Red Army" occupied Belarus, the Russians mobilized into the army on Belarusian territory. Tens of thousands of young Belarusian men, almost without training, were thrown to the front line. Russian commanders raised them in unnecessary attacks under the fire of German machine guns, without even giving weapons to their hands, or with rifles, but without cartridges. They died by the thousands, like grass under a scythe. And those who fled back fell under the bullets of the NKVD "blockade detachments". However, detachments fired in the back. This is how the destruction of Belarusians in the war continued, by the hands of the Germans and Russians at the same time. As the communists said, "in the struggle for the Soviet motherland." In the 40s, the Russians took them to Siberia and tortured all the foresters and the so-called "kulaks" from Western Belarus there. They were taken out by wagons, in different rows.
Paragraphs are a neat invention. You should try them out.SOME FACTS ABOUT MOSCOW Genghisid BRUTALITY toward Europeans , GOOGLE T: After the 2nd World War, 10-million Belarus was missing about 3 million of its inhabitants, but about 2 million were killed even before the war by the communist NKVD. In Belarus, 70 percent of all Belarusian writers were physically destroyed, scientists and artists were killed. (The troupe of the Third Belarusian State Theater of Vladislav Golubok was arrested in its entirety. Almost everyone was shot.) They were killed on a national basis. For the sake of this, the label "Natsdem" was coined (it means national democrat, although such a party did not exist). This label was attached to all Belarusians whom the Stalinists planned to exterminate. In the bowels of the NKVD, a non-existent anti-communist organization SVB ("Union for the Liberation of Belarus") was invented. Under the invented phantom, the NKVD carried out arrests, conducted an imaginary investigation, interrogated, tortured, tried, then exiled to Russia and shot innocent people. After the Riga agreement in 1921, Belarus was divided between Poland and Russia. The dividing line was drawn near Mensk. There was a secret order from the NKVD to exterminate the entire Belarusian population along the border. Russian invaders wanted to make a deserted zone here. The destruction was carried out by border troops. Trusted persons were given a rifle and a shovel. When such a border guard met in a deserted place (on a road, in a field, in a forest) a lonely Belarusian or Belarusian, or a child, he shot a person, immediately dug a hole with a shovel and covered up the corpse. That was the instruction. People in the villages were not so afraid of the "man with a gun" as they were of a soldier with a shovel. (These facts were published in the Belarusian press in the early 1990s.) In the 1930s, 95-99 percent (almost completely) were destroyed (exiled and shot) by the Belarusian communist-party and Soviet administration. They even destroyed the directorate and economic leaders. Russians from Russia were sent to the positions of murdered administrators and communist bosses-Belarusians. Russians (the so-called "nominees") came to Belarus, occupied vacant positions, received benefits, property, apartments, and the first thing they did was to close Belarusian schools, translate them into Russian, so that their children could study without burdening themselves with studying , as they said, "unnecessary" Belarusian language. Thus, the occupiers created a "Russian-speaking population" in Belarus. Ethnocide, linguacid, mnemacid and genocide were carried out by the Bolsheviks at the same time. The destruction of Belarusians by the Russian NKVD continued during the German occupation. In June 1941, during the first days of the war, the communists shot thousands of prisoners in prisons and on stages. Only in the Brest Fortress, where there was a terrible prison of the NKVD, they did not have time to liquidate all those arrested, some of them fled. Meanwhile, a large group of overseers and functionaries of the NKVD was blocked in the fortress by the Germans. They sat there for about a month until they died out. About 20 years after the war, the communists came up with a legend about the "heroic defense" of the Brest Fortress. It is noteworthy that a broad Soviet partisan movement was organized only in Belarus and partly in the ethnic Belarusian lands that were part of Russia (Smolensk, Bryansk). There was no partisan movement in occupied Russia. Why? Yes, because the plan for the destruction of the Belarusian nation continued to operate. Moscow, using the organs of the NKVD, dragged the masses of the Belarusian civilian population into the war against the Germans, and thus exposed the Belarusians to the German attack. The necessary work of struggle proceeded from an insidious plan and was carried out by vile methods. (Stalin wanted to get a double benefit.) The NKVD specifically killed a German near a Belarusian village or did some other provocation in order to provoke a punitive operation by the Nazis (who usually burned the entire village, most often along with the people). Thus, by the way, as a result of a special provocation by Soviet partisans, the famous Khatyn was also burned, which the communists then advertised to the whole world in the 70s as a typical victim of fascist atrocities. As a result of such a communist-fascist joint "work", more than 9 thousand villages were burned in Belarus. Therefore, by the end of the war, as a result of a special operation of the NKVD, many Belarusian commanders were sent to death, removed from command, killed and repressed. Their places were taken by Russians sent from Moscow and loyal NKVDs. In the summer of 1944, when the "Red Army" occupied Belarus, the Russians mobilized into the army on Belarusian territory. Tens of thousands of young Belarusian men, almost without training, were thrown to the front line. Russian commanders raised them in unnecessary attacks under the fire of German machine guns, without even giving weapons to their hands, or with rifles, but without cartridges. They died by the thousands, like grass under a scythe. And those who fled back fell under the bullets of the NKVD "blockade detachments". However, detachments fired in the back. This is how the destruction of Belarusians in the war continued, by the hands of the Germans and Russians at the same time. As the communists said, "in the struggle for the Soviet motherland." In the 40s, the Russians took them to Siberia and tortured all the foresters and the so-called "kulaks" from Western Belarus there. They were taken out by wagons, in different rows.