The project is being carried out at the instruction of the President of the Russian Federation, Vladimir Putin.
Today, July 10, the traveling exhibition Without a Statute of Limitations opens at the Ufa multimedia historical park “Russia – My History.”
The exhibition uses archival documents to shed light on various aspects of the genocide of the Soviet people committed by the Nazis and their collaborators during the Great Patriotic War — including mass executions, inhumane living conditions, and crimes against children, women, and the elderly. The display also features newly uncovered crimes that remain subject to prosecution due to having no statute of limitations.
This year, the traveling exhibition has already visited Novosibirsk, Tambov, Barnaul, and Saransk. In Ufa, it will be open until July 20.
Earlier, Bashinform reported on the screening in Ufa of the documentary Bringing to Light, which tells the story of Nazi collaborators who committed crimes against Soviet citizens during the occupation and later hid in Bashkiria.
Author: Gulfiya Akulova