Radio Amateurs members of the SP4PZM will be active with special call SO39SYBIR from Bialystok, Poland, on the occasion of the opening of the Siberian Memorial Museum in Białystok on 17/09/2021.
They will operate on HF Bands.
QSL via SP4PZM buro.
Information from their QRZ page:
The Sybir Memorial Museum - a nationwide narrative museum presenting the history of the Polish presence in Siberia from the 18th century, the tsarist deportations of Poles into Russia as well as Soviet repressions and crimes, including deportations to Siberia and Kazakhstan.
Museum is dedicated to people who, from the end of the 16th century until the middle of the 20th century, were enslaved and sent deep into Russia, and later the Soviet Union, as well as to those who went there voluntarily. We tell about prisoners of war, prisoners, exiles and deportees. We also talk about those who discovered Siberia before World War I and actively participated in the development of its vast areas. We combine the results of research and historians’ narrative with the memories of participants and witnesses of the events. We show great emotions hidden in seemingly ordinary objects, taking visitors to an extraordinary land — mysterious, beautiful, and at the same time cruel and ruthless Sybir.
They will operate on HF Bands.
QSL via SP4PZM buro.
Information from their QRZ page:
The Sybir Memorial Museum - a nationwide narrative museum presenting the history of the Polish presence in Siberia from the 18th century, the tsarist deportations of Poles into Russia as well as Soviet repressions and crimes, including deportations to Siberia and Kazakhstan.
Museum is dedicated to people who, from the end of the 16th century until the middle of the 20th century, were enslaved and sent deep into Russia, and later the Soviet Union, as well as to those who went there voluntarily. We tell about prisoners of war, prisoners, exiles and deportees. We also talk about those who discovered Siberia before World War I and actively participated in the development of its vast areas. We combine the results of research and historians’ narrative with the memories of participants and witnesses of the events. We show great emotions hidden in seemingly ordinary objects, taking visitors to an extraordinary land — mysterious, beautiful, and at the same time cruel and ruthless Sybir.
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