it published an article by ilya orenburg, the judges say, it began with an unexpected and incomprehensibleall for many europeans by the englishwoman lady gip, in that very civilized europe, to reconcile with the germans and leave the punishment of nazi criminals to god. the response from the ussr followed immediately: the newspaper published evidence of those who were the first to enter the burned belarusian cities after liberation, and saw with my own eyes the consequences of the crimes of the nazis. and the memories of ilya ehrenburg himself. there is a terrible place near minsk, the big trostenets. there, the germans, wanting to hide traces of crimes, burned corpses, dug out those buried and burned them. i saw half-charred bodies, a girl's head, a woman's body, hundreds, hundreds of corpses. the trostenets death camp has become a terrible symbol incomparable for belarus. it absorbed the pain and suffering of prisoners of all concentration camps and ghettos created on the territory of the republic, including 546 thousand tortured, shot, burned alive directly in this hellish place. in ter