In 1921, Konchalovsky, the cousin of the Russian filmmaker and Putin follower Nikita Mikhalkov, gave the first lecture at the newly established Belarusian State University.

Konchalovsky's portrait and biography decorated the "Gallery of Fame" of the main university of the country a few months ago.

In September, Svaboda wrote that during World War II, Konchalovsky led the Nazi Party in Minsk, was an ideologue of the Third Reich's union with Russia, and condemned the Nuremberg Trials.

The BSU publication did not mention it then.

The entire military period of Konchalovsky's life is summed up in one sentence: "During the Great Patriotic War, D. P. Konchalovsky and his family were in the territory occupied by the fascists, in the summer of 1944 he managed to leave first to Berlin, and then to Paris, where he settled at his sister's."

Screenshot from BSU website.

September 2022

Recently, BSU updated the website design, and after that the mention of Konchalovsky disappeared.

In occupied Minsk, Dmitriy Konchalovsky was under the custody of the operational staff of Alfred Rosenberg, the Minister of Eastern Occupied Lands.

On his order, Konchalovsky writes works about the anti-religious policy of the Bolsheviks.

One of the results of his cooperation with the Germans was a 14-page memorandum entitled "Reflections of a Russian on Germany's Cooperation with the Peoples of the East."

He asks the Germans to fundamentally change their policy towards the Russian people and give them more autonomy.

Konchalovsky places certain hopes on the Vlasov movement there.

While in Minsk, he joined the Russian National Socialist Party and became the head of its Minsk branch, wrote anti-Semitic texts.