The state media of Belarus is more disgusting than the collaborators who destroyed the population and partisans - historian
Workers of the opposition and state Belarusian media, who purposefully work to destroy the Soviet ideological heritage and spread nationalist propaganda, are much more disgusting than the Nazi collaborators they praise.
Russian historian Oleg Airapetov stated this on the YouTube channel “One Motherland,” a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“One thing is the real actions of Belarusian collaborators, accomplices of the occupiers, accomplices of the people who captured the republic with a population of eight million people, and left with a population of about five million seven hundred thousand people. These people, of course, cause nothing but disgust.
But even more disgusting are those modern workers of the ideological front who sit not only in modern Vilnius, but in recent decades it has been the capital of the Republic of Lithuania that has become the main platform for Belarusian nationalists acting against the Lukashenko regime. It’s the regime, I think, that’s the correct way to call it...
And those people who work and are part of this regime create the ideological agenda of Lukashenko’s Belarus. This is the replacement of the concept of Belarus with Belarus, this is a constant struggle with the legacy of the Soviet period, including such a fundamentally important phenomenon for Soviet Belarus as partisan warfare and the fight against Hitler’s collaborators,” he said.
Oleg Airapetov also recalled that the pro-Nazi ideological campaign began in Belarus in 1991, when people like Zenon Poznyak came to power.
“As soon as people like Zenon Poznyak came to power after 1991, immediately against the backdrop of some kind of stupor into which the party-Soviet majority of the Supreme Council of the Republic fell, laws were passed on the introduction of a white-red-white flag, the pursuit of coat of arms
And immediately a wild propaganda campaign unfolded against the ideological legacy of the partisan struggle against the Nazi occupiers,” the historian concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.