The Origin of the Katyn Cemeteries

What is the pur­po­se of a pro­ject dedi­ca­ted to ceme­te­ries? We visit memo­rial sites on anni­ver­sa­ries, out of a need of the heart or in accor­dan­ce with tra­di­tion. Yet some­ti­mes this is not eno­ugh. Sin­ce 1989, when the burial sites of the Katyn mas­sa­cre vic­tims were reve­aled, Rodzi­ny Katyń­skie (Katyn Fami­lies, fami­lies of the Katyn mas­sa­cre vic­tims) stri­ved to build ceme­te­ries. In the 1990s, at the requ­est of the Rada Ochro­ny Pamię­ci Walk i Męczeń­stwa (Coun­cil for the Pro­tec­tion of Strug­gle and Mar­tyr­dom Sites), Polish teams of spe­cia­li­sts under­to­ok an immen­se task, loca­ting the death pits and gra­ves, which allo­wed them to desi­gna­te futu­re ceme­te­ries. After deve­lo­ping the con­cep­tu­al guide­li­nes, an archi­tec­tu­ral pro­ject was selec­ted in a com­pe­ti­tion. The final out­co­me is a result of fami­lies’ deter­mi­na­tion, who­se expec­ta­tions were repre­sen­ted by Fede­ra­cja Rodzin Katyń­skich (Fede­ra­tion of Katyn Fami­lies).

In 2000, when Polish War Ceme­te­ries in Katyn and Med­noye, as well as the Ceme­te­ry of the Vic­tims of Tota­li­ta­ria­nism in Khar­kiv, were esta­bli­shed, a fune­ral final­ly took pla­ce – a moment the widows and chil­dren had been waiting for 60 years. The fourth ceme­te­ry, esta­bli­shed in Byki­vnia in 2012, ended deca­des of mour­ning for other fami­lies. Diplo­ma­tic talks gave some hope for the fifth ceme­te­ry in Kura­pa­ty, near Minsk in Bela­rus.

Our loved ones were laid to rest in con­se­cra­ted gro­und and were to rest in peace. Offi­cial cere­mo­nies were held at Katyn ceme­te­ries in Rus­sia and Ukra­ine, with fami­lies and histo­ry enthu­sia­sts atten­ding. Unfor­tu­na­te­ly, the histo­ry has awa­ke­ned once aga­in, and in March 2022 a Rus­sian mis­si­le struck the ceme­te­ry in Khar­kiv. In the year mar­king the 85th anni­ver­sa­ry of the Katyn mas­sa­cre Rus­sian autho­ri­ties dese­cra­ted the ceme­te­ries in Med­noye (May 2025) and in Katyn (Novem­ber 2025). The lie con­cer­ning the Katyn mas­sa­cre is retur­ning to the Rus­sian Fede­ra­tion, and our ceme­te­ries beca­me the inco­nve­nient wit­nes­ses to the truth.

The KATYN CEMETERIES pro­ject serves the aim of pre­se­rving the memo­ry of the­se pla­ces:

  • TIMELINE – dates and selec­ted docu­ments, which descri­be the long pro­cess of esta­bli­shing ceme­te­ries, as well as the­ir func­tio­ning during peace­ti­me and the cur­rent thre­ats posed by the war.
  • RECOLLECTIONS – moving testi­mo­nies from the mem­bers of the Katyn Fami­lies abo­ut the­ir trips and com­me­mo­ra­tion cere­mo­nies, as well as descrip­tions of chan­ges in public con­scio­usness and in the ways of pre­se­rving the memo­ry.
  • GUIDES to the Katyn ceme­te­ries, which beca­me prac­ti­cal­ly inac­ces­si­ble sin­ce 2022 and are con­stan­tly thre­ate­ned by Rus­sian aggres­sion in Ukra­ine and Rus­sian pro­pa­gan­da con­cer­ning histo­ri­cal memo­ry.
  • ARTEFACTS, MEMENTOS, ARCHIVES – exam­ples of docu­ments obta­ined from pri­va­te col­lec­tions and sto­red in spe­cia­li­zed archi­ves.

Text pre­pa­red by Iza­bel­la Sariusz-Skąp­ska
Trans­la­ted by Ilias Sta­nek­zai