Literary work Konstanty then returned to the
Grodno area in 1861. Konstanty started publishing (''Peasants' Truth
), the first newspaper in Belarusian, written in Łacinka, first published in June 1862. The Peasants' Truth'' was issued seven times until 1863. Konstanty was more aligned with the
Reds which represented a democratic movement uniting peasants, workers, and some clergy rather than the more moderate
Whites. In his literary work, Kalinowski underlined the need to liberate all people of the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth from
Russia's occupation and to conserve and promote the
Greek Catholic faith and
Belarusian language. He also promoted the idea of activisation of peasants for the cause of national liberation, the idea that was until then dominated by the
gentry. He favored the Commonwealth's traditions of democracy, tolerance and freedom, as opposed to national oppression of cultures dominated by
Imperial Russia: There is some academic debate about which texts to attribute to Konstanty. Konstanty was unhappy with the timing and objectives of the January Uprising, which broke out on 23 January 1863. There had been a growing rift between him and other leaders of the uprising in Warsaw. After the outbreak of the January Uprising, he was involved in the secret in
Vilnius. Soon he was promoted to the commissar of the
Polish National Government for the
Grodno Governorate. His writings made him popular both among the peasants and the gentry, which enabled the
partisan units under his command to grow rapidly. Because of his successes he was promoted to the rank of Plenipotentiary Commissar of the Government for Lithuania (), which made him the commander-in-chief of all partisan units fighting in the areas of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania, which are in modern
Lithuania,
Belarus, eastern
Poland and
Ukraine. == Last months, capture, imprisonment, execution and burial ==