Key dates related to the Katyn massacre (Herald Tribune, by The Associated Press. Published: Monday, September 10, 2012)
WARSAW, Poland – September 1939: World War II begins with the German invasion of Poland from the west, quickly followed by the Soviet invasion from the east. The carving up of Poland results from a secret pact between Adolf Hitler’s Germany and Josef Stalin’s Soviet Union. The Soviets soon capture thousands of Polish officers and transport them to POW camps in Russia. They also deport hundreds of thousands of Polish civilians to Siberia.
– April-May 1940: Soviet secret police kill 22,000 Polish officers and other prisoners of war and dump their bodies in mass graves. The murders, carried out with shots to the back of the heads, take place in the Katyn forest in western Russia and other locations. At that time, letters from the officers to their families come to a sudden stop, bringing despair to relatives and creating an early Polish belief that the Soviets killed them. Questioned by Polish leaders on the fate of the officers, the Soviets begin decades of denying their guilt.
– 1941: Germany attacks Soviet Union, and in its eastward advance overruns the territory surrounding Katyn. The Soviets join the Allies in the war against Hitler.
– April 1943: Nazi Germany’s propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels announces the German discovery of mass graves at Katyn. Goebbels hopes public knowledge of the Soviet crime would sow distrust between the Soviet Union and the Western Allies and weaken their alliance.
– May 1943: As part of the Nazi propaganda effort, the Germans bring a group of American and British POWs to Katyn, as well as other groups, to see the remains of the Poles in the mass graves, in an advanced state of decomposition.
– May 1945: World War II ends. Upon being freed Lt. Col John H. Van Vliet gives his first report to Army intelligence on what he witnessed at Katyn, one that disappeared and still has never been found.
– 1951: The U.S. Congress sets up a committee to investigate the Katyn crimes after questions about the whereabouts of the missing Van Vliet report from 1945. Even ahead of the formal establishment of the committee, Van Vliet in 1950 makes a second written report on his impressions from Katyn.
– 1952: The Congressional committee concludes there is no question that the Soviets bear blame for the massacre. It faults Roosevelt’s administration for suppressing public knowledge of the truth. The report also says it suspects pro-Soviet sympathizers within government agencies buried knowledge about Katyn. It expresses anger at the disappearance of the first Van Vliet report and says: “This committee believes that had the Van Vliet report been made immediately available to the Dept. of State and to the American public, the course of our governmental policy toward Soviet Russia might have been more realistic with more fortunate post-war results.”
– 1990: The reformist Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev publicly admits that the Soviets bear guilt for Katyn.
– Sept. 10, 2012: The U.S.National Archives releases about 1,000 pages of newly declassified records related to the Katyn massacre. Among them are the newly declassified U.S. army documents proving that two American POWs wrote encoded messages to Army intelligence, MIS-X, soon after their 1943 visit to Katyn, pointing to Soviet guilt.
Bari, 26 novembre 2024. Proiezione del film documentario “The Dmitriev Affair”.
Martedì 26 novembre alle 20:30, presso il Multisala Cinema Galleria di Bari, Andrea Gullotta, vicepresidente di Memorial Italia, presenta il film documentario The Dmitriev Affair, scritto e diretto dalla regista olandese Jessica Gorter e sottotitolato in italiano. Jurij Dmitriev è uno storico e attivista, direttore di Memorial Petrozavodsk. Negli anni Novanta scopre un’enorme fossa comune in cui sono sepolte migliaia di vittime del Grande Terrore. Nella radura boschiva di Sandormoch, in Carelia, inaugura un cimitero commemorativo e riesce a raccogliere persone di varie nazionalità intorno a un passato complesso e conflittuale. Da sempre schierato contro il governo della Federazione Russa, nel 2014 Dmitriev condanna apertamente l’invasione della Crimea. Da allora inizia per lui un calvario giudiziario che lo porta a essere condannato a tredici anni e mezzo di reclusione. Il documentario di Jessica Gorter, realizzato nel 2023, racconta con passione e precisione la sua tragica vicenda. Gabriele Nissim, ha letto per Memorial Italia l’ultima dichiarazione di Jurij Dmitriev, pronunciata l’8 luglio 2020, come parte del progetto 30 ottobre. Proteggi le mie parole. Irina Flige, storica collaboratrice di Memorial San Pietroburgo, ha raccontato la storia della radura di Sandormoch nel volume Il caso Sandormoch. La Russia e la persecuzione della memoria, pubblicato da Stilo Editrice e curato da Andrea Gullotta e Giulia De Florio. La proiezione è a ingresso libero ed è uno degli incontri previsti dall’undicesima edizione del festival letterario Pagine di Russia, organizzato dalla casa editrice barese Stilo in collaborazione con la cattedra di russo dell’Università degli Studi di Bari. Quest’anno il festival è inserito nella programmazione del progetto Prin 2022 PNRR (LOST) Literature of Socialist Trauma: Mapping and Researching the Lost Page of European Literature ed è dedicato al concetto di trauma nella cornice della letteratura russa del Novecento sorta dalle repressioni sovietiche.