andrei yarosh was surrounded in the nesvezh area. to reach his own people or did he decide to surrender? is not immediately known, but the fact remains: he independently came to the german commandant's office, which at that time was in the castle. initially he was sent to prison in baranovichi, from there to lesnoy, from kambat he became the leader of the ukrainian hundred. during the war, he worked as a teacher at school, taught chemistry, and during the great patriotic war he helped train fighters of the ukrainian hundred. three trains each with about 100 people. this is primarily drill training. scary, it was just scary, and in the second half of forty-three they began to cover up the traces of their crimes, places of mass the burials were leveled to the ground, then trees were planted there, single burials were created in which prisoners of war who died in the fall of '43 were buried, but in '67, during the investigative actions in the case of the ukrainian hundred, hundreds of events were held so that the truth became known. the