Friday, 8 January 2010
TVR Belorussian / News Talk Radio from Minsk Belarus
TVR Belorussian News Talk Radio from Minsk Belarus. Minsk
Belarus, pronounced /ˈbɛləruːs bel-ə-ROOS (Belarusian: Беларусь, Russian: Беларусь or Белоруссия), is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe, bordered clockwise by Russia to the northeast, Ukraine to the south, Poland to the west, and Lithuania and Latvia to the northwest. Its capital is Minsk; other major cities include Brest, Grodno (Hrodna), Gomel (Homiel), Mogilev (Mahilyow) and Vitebsk (Viciebsk). Forty percent of its 207600 km2 is forested, and its strongest economic sectors are agriculture and manufacturing.
Until the 20th century, the Belarusians lacked the opportunity to create a distinctive national identity because for centuries the lands of modern-day Belarus belonged to several ethnically different countries, including the Principality of Polotsk, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the Russian Empire, and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. After the short-lived Belarusian People’s Republic (1918–19), Belarus became a constituent republic of the Soviet Union, the Byelorussian SSR.
The final unification of Belarusian lands within its modern borders took place in 1939, when the ethnically Belarusian-Russian lands held by the Second Polish Republic (interwar Poland) were annexed into the Soviet Union under the terms of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, and attached to Soviet Belarus. The territory and its nation were devastated in World War II, during which Belarus lost about a third of its population and more than half of its economic resources; the republic was redeveloped in the post-war years.
The parliament of the republic declared the sovereignty of Belarus on 27 July 1990, and following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Belarus declared independence on 25 August 1991. Alexander Lukashenko has been the country's president since 1994. Under his lead and despite objections from Western governments, Soviet-era policies, such as state ownership of the economy, have been implemented. Since 2000, Belarus and Russia signed a treaty for greater cooperation, with some hints of forming a Union State.
Most of Belarus's population of 9.85 million reside in the urban areas surrounding Minsk and other oblast (regional) capitals. More than 80% of the population are native Belarusians, with sizable minorities of Russians, Poles and Ukrainians. Since a referendum in 1995, the country has had two official languages: Belarusian and Russian. The Constitution of Belarus does not declare an official religion, although the primary religion in the country is Russian Orthodox Christianity. The second most popular, Roman Catholicism, has a much smaller following by comparison, but both Orthodox and Catholic Christmas and Easter are officially respected as national holidays.
Liberation of Belarus, 1943-44
Belarus suffered from fascist enslavement for 3 years. Among the chief methods that the fascists used to implement their “new order” in Belarus were genocide and mass and bloody terror. Hitler’s soldiers committed unheard atrocities here, regardless of whom they were killing: women, men, old people or children. Concentration camps, prisons and ghettos functioned practically in every region of Belarus. All in all there were 260 death camps and 70 ghettos in the Republic. Only in Trostenz concentration camp about 206.5 thousand people were killed.
Irrespective of the barbaric repressive measures of the fascists against the Belorussians they couldn’t crush the National will for Liberation. On the territory of Belarus there appeared a mass Resistance Movement against the invaders.
From the first days of aggressive invasion into the country many underground partisan organizations sprang up encompassing all districts, areas and regions. Among the most well-known were the “Partisan group of Pinsk” led by Korzh, the “Red October” group headed by Bumazhkov and Pavlovskii of October district in Polesskii region, and the “Troop of Shmirev” which started to operate in 1941 in Suruzhskii district of Vitebsk region.
An outstanding underground work was performed by the partisans of Minsk region with their first leader Kovalev. The group estimated at about 9 thousand members including people of 25 nationalities of the former USSR, antifascists from 9 foreign countries, about 3000 workers, 2235 soldiers and 1860 former military men, 1700 students. They prepared and disseminated hand-written leaflets with the information from the Soviet Information Bureau, gathered and transmitted weapons to guerrilla groups as well as medical supplies and committed diversions in fascist establishments.
The Liberation of Belarus from the German aggressors began in autumn 1943. On the 26th of November the Troops of the Belorussian front headed by General Rokossovkii liberated Gomel (the major city of Gomelsk region) and the Belorussian Government re-evacuated there at once. Numerous Belorussian cities were freed in summer 1944 during the prominent military operation called “Bagration”. In the course of the operation the troops of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd Belorussian and 1st Baltic fronts in cooperation with partisan groups and brigades defeated the armies of the German group “Center”. 17 German divisions and 3 brigades were annihilated completely and what is more 50 fascist divisions lost over 50% of their soldiers over there. It was a disaster for Germany and even its Army Chiefs had to acknowledge the fact. Over 1600 generals, officers and soldiers were awarded the Honorable title of the Hero of the USSR for courage and heroism revealed in the battles with the Germans on the Belorussian land. Besides more than 400 thousand military men and guerrillas were honored with special orders and medals; they were people of all nationalities of the former USSR: Belorussians, Russians, Tatars, Ukranians, Kazachs and others.
As a result of the offensive operation “Bagration” the whole territory of Belarus, the greatest part of Lithuania, a considerable part of Latvia, East Poland were liberated from the aggressors, the Red Army approached the border of Eastern Prussia. But even after its Liberation our country did everything to win a glorious Victory over the enemy. At the restored plants and factories workers completed military orders before terms, fallow citizens gave their money, obligations and even products (bread, potatoes) to special Funds to help soldiers on front.
After the Red Army had driven away the enemy from the Soviet territory in the second half of 1944 it rendered its help to the people of Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania to free their lands from the Nazi invaders. In January 1945 our troops passed to offensive on a vast territory from the Baltic Sea to the Carpathians.
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