It is situated to the west of the city ofSmolensk (about 18 km from its center) and circa 60 km from the Russian borders withBelarus. It has a station on theBerlin-Warsaw-Minsk-Moscow international railway line.
BeforeWorld War I,Gnyozdovo with the Katyn Forest belonged to the Koźliński family. In the 19th century, Piotr Koźliński married Leokadia Lefftreu, the daughter of the director of the English railway construction company in Russia. Under the marriage articles Gniezdovo and Katyn became co-owned by the British.[4]
Mass grave of the victims of theKatyn massacre after discovery in 1943
The Katyn Forest, in the vicinity of the village, was the site of theKatyn massacre duringWorld War II, in which thousands of capturedPolish officers and other citizens were killed. On 5 March 1940, Stalin approved, together with Voroshilov, Mikoyan and Molotov, a proposal from Beria that led to the assassination of 21,857 Poles.[5]
Despite claims by the Poles, the Soviet Union blamedNazi Germany for the mass murders and attempted to hide its involvement, going as far as to ban all mention of the Katyn massacre in the USSR. In 1990, Soviet leaderMikhail Gorbachev admitted that theNKVD had executed the Poles and confirmed two other burial sites similar to the site at Katyn: Mednoye andPiatykhatky. A number of earlier mass graves of victims of the Soviet system have also been found there, because Katyn Forest had long been used as an execution site for Soviet citizens.[citation needed]
The NKVD resolved to execute prisoners of war and "members of various counter-revolutionary organisations, former landowners, factory owners, former Polish officers, officials and escapees".[6] In 2004, Polish prosecutors described this as a plan to eliminate in part the "intellectual elite of the Polish Nation", so as "to prevent the rebirth of Polish statehood".[6]
The 2007 Polish filmKatyń, directed byAndrzej Wajda, is an interpretation of the events that led up to the mass execution.
^"Об исчислении времени".Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации (in Russian). 3 June 2011. Retrieved19 January 2019.
^Почта России. Информационно-вычислительный центр ОАСУ РПО. (Russian Post).Поиск объектов почтовой связи (Postal Objects Search)(in Russian)
^Tadeusz A. Kisielewski, Zabójcy. Widma wychodzą z cienia, Poznań 2006, p. 40.
^Rees,Laurence, A puerta cerrada, Barcelona, Crítica, 2009, pp. 70-77; Sanford, George, Katyn and the Soviet massacre of 1940, Londres, BASE-ES/Routledge, 2005, p. 27