Speaking at a forum called Great Heritage — Shared Future, Putin solemnly declared: “Today, the President of Belarus and I paid tribute to the defenders of the city, who covered themselves with eternal glory in the battles for Stalingrad. They fought to their deaths, just like the heroes of the Brest Fortress, the defence of Minsk, Leningrad and Sevastopol.”
In this all-too-familiar list of patriotic battles, one city was notably missing, Odesa, and another was unexpectedly included: Minsk. The “heroes of the defence of Minsk” — words not usually uttered in historical accounts — are a generous gift indeed from Putin to Lukashenko.
Historical reality
For any native of Minsk, World War II is etched into family memories: stories of how the Communist Party leadership fled the city in June 1941, stuffing their cars with household plants, not essential supplies, became the lasting symbol of their ignominious escape. On 28 June 1941, German troops entered Minsk without a fight. The Brest Fortress, further west, continued to resist, but contrary to Soviet schoolbook tales, it did not halt the German advance.