The newspaper was distinguished by ardent nationalism and chauvinism, hatred of Russians, Poles and Jews, searches for the "Aryan roots" of the Belarusian people, an attempt to prove their allegedly historically conditioned attraction to Germany, identification of Marxism and Zionism, etc.
The first of them, "Traces of Years", written by the Belarusian poet Vladimir Duditsky [be], summed up the twenty-year history of Soviet Belarus, or, as the author wrote, "Bolshevik‑Jewish domination" in the country.
In another issue of Menskaya Gazeta, an article was published by U. Glybinny (pseudonym of Vladimir Seduro) "In the hands of the executioners," also soaked through with anti-Semitism, for example, "the Bolsheviks as oppressors of the people in the interests of the Jews."
Newspaper paid a lot of attention to the problems of language policy, teaching in primary schools, teacher training, education of national identity, organization of cultural life in the field.
For the first time, some texts of the repressed dead writers of the USSR were printed: the poem "Tastament" ("Testament") of Uładzimir Žyłka and the novel "Vilna Communards" (in excerpts) of Maksim Haretski.