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Gulag

The Gulag[c][d] was a system of forced labor camps in the Soviet Union.[10][11][12][9] The word Gulag originally referred only to the division of the Soviet secret police that was in charge of running the forced labor camps from the 1930s to the early 1950s during Joseph Stalin's rule, but in English literature the term is popularly used for the system of forced labor throughout the Soviet era. The abbreviation GULAG (ГУЛАГ) stands for "Гла́вное Управле́ние исправи́тельно-трудовы́х ЛАГере́й" (Main Directorate of Correctional Labour Camps), but the full official name of the agency changed several times.

Gulag

Trademark logo (1939)

Map of the camps between 1923 and 1961[a]
  • 18,000,000 people passed through the Gulag's camps[1][2][3]
  • 53 Gulag camp directorates (colloquially referred to as simply "camps") and 423 labor colonies in the Soviet Union as of March 1940[4]
  • The tentative consensus in contemporary Soviet historiography is that roughly 1,600,000[b] died due to detention in the camps.[1][2][3]
Gulag
RussianГУЛАГ
RomanizationGulag
Literal meaningMain Administration of Camps / General Authority of Camps
A punishment cell block in one of the subcamps of Vorkutlag, 1945

The Gulag is recognized as a major instrument of political repression in the Soviet Union. The camps housed a wide range of convicts, from petty criminals to political prisoners, a large number of whom were convicted by simplified procedures, such as NKVD troikas or other instruments of extrajudicial punishment. In 1918–1922, the agency was administered by the Cheka, followed by the GPU (1922–1923), the OGPU (1923–1934), later known as the NKVD (1934–1946), and the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) in the final years. The Solovki prison camp, the first correctional labour camp which was constructed after the revolution, was opened in 1918 and legalized by a decree, "On the creation of the forced-labor camps", on April 15, 1919.

The internment system grew rapidly, reaching a population of 100,000 in the 1920s. By the end of 1940, the population of the Gulag camps amounted to 1.5 million.[13] The emergent consensus among scholars is that, of the 14 million prisoners who passed through the Gulag camps and the 4 million prisoners who passed through the Gulag colonies from 1930 to 1953, roughly 1.5 to 1.7 million prisoners perished there or they died soon after they were released.[1][2][3] Some journalists and writers who question the reliability of such data heavily rely on memoir sources that come to higher estimations.[1][7] Archival researchers have found "no plan of destruction" of the gulag population and no statement of official intent to kill them, and prisoner releases vastly exceeded the number of deaths in the Gulag.[1] This policy can partially be attributed to the common practice of releasing prisoners who were suffering from incurable diseases as well as prisoners who were near death.[13][14]

Almost immediately after the death of Stalin, the Soviet establishment started to dismantle the Gulag system. A mass general amnesty was granted in the immediate aftermath of Stalin's death, but it was only offered to non-political prisoners and political prisoners who had been sentenced to a maximum of five years in prison. Shortly thereafter, Nikita Khrushchev was elected First Secretary, initiating the processes of de-Stalinization and the Khrushchev Thaw, triggering a mass release and rehabilitation of political prisoners. Six years later, on 25 January 1960, the Gulag system was officially abolished when the remains of its administration were dissolved by Khrushchev. The legal practice of sentencing convicts to penal labor continues to exist in the Russian Federation, but its capacity is greatly reduced.[15][16]

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, who survived eight years of Gulag incarceration, gave the term its international repute with the publication of The Gulag Archipelago in 1973. The author likened the scattered camps to "a chain of islands", and as an eyewitness, he described the Gulag as a system where people were worked to death.[17] In March 1940, there were 53 Gulag camp directorates (simply referred to as "camps") and 423 labor colonies in the Soviet Union.[4] Many mining and industrial towns and cities in northern Russia, eastern Russia and Kazakhstan such as Karaganda, Norilsk, Vorkuta and Magadan, were blocks of camps which were originally built by prisoners and subsequently run by ex-prisoners.[18]

Name edit

GULAG (ГУЛАГ) stands for "Гла́вное управле́ние исправи́тельно-трудовы́х лагере́й" (Main Directorate of Correctional Labour Camps). It was renamed several times, e.g., to Main Directorate of Correctional Labor Colonies (Главное управление исправительно-трудовых колоний (ГУИТК)), which names can be seen in the documents describing the subordination of various camps.[19]

Overview edit

 
Genrikh Yagoda (middle) inspecting the construction of the Moscow-Volga canal, 1935. Behind his right shoulder is a young Nikita Khrushchev.

Some historians estimate that 14 million people were imprisoned in the Gulag labor camps from 1929 to 1953 (the estimates for the period from 1918 to 1929 are more difficult to calculate).[20] Other calculations, by historian Orlando Figes, refer to 25 million prisoners of the Gulag in 1928–1953.[21] A further 6–7 million were deported and exiled to remote areas of the USSR, and 4–5 million passed through labor colonies, plus 3.5 million who were already in, or had been sent to, labor settlements.[20]

According to some estimates, the total population of the camps varied from 510,307 in 1934 to 1,727,970 in 1953.[4] According to other estimates, at the beginning of 1953 the total number of prisoners in prison camps was more than 2.4 million of which more than 465,000 were political prisoners.[22] Between the years 1934 to 1953, 20% to 40% of the Gulag population in each given year were released.[23][24]

The institutional analysis of the Soviet concentration system is complicated by the formal distinction between GULAG and GUPVI. GUPVI (ГУПВИ) was the Main Administration for Affairs of Prisoners of War and Internees (Главное управление по делам военнопленных и интернированных, Glavnoye upravleniye po delam voyennoplennyh i internirovannyh), a department of NKVD (later MVD) in charge of handling of foreign civilian internees and POWs (prisoners of war) in the Soviet Union during and in the aftermath of World War II (1939–1953). In many ways the GUPVI system was similar to GULAG.[25]

Its major function was the organization of foreign forced labor in the Soviet Union. The top management of GUPVI came from the GULAG system. The major memoir noted distinction from GULAG was the absence of convicted criminals in the GUPVI camps. Otherwise the conditions in both camp systems were similar: hard labor, poor nutrition and living conditions, and high mortality rate.[26]

For the Soviet political prisoners, like Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, all foreign civilian detainees and foreign POWs were imprisoned in the GULAG; the surviving foreign civilians and POWs considered themselves prisoners in the GULAG. According to the estimates, in total, during the whole period of the existence of the GUPVI, there were over 500 POW camps (within the Soviet Union and abroad), which imprisoned over 4,000,000 POW.[27] Most Gulag inmates were not political prisoners, although significant numbers of political prisoners could be found in the camps at any one time.[28]

Petty crimes and jokes about the Soviet government and officials were punishable by imprisonment.[29][30] About half of political prisoners in the Gulag camps were imprisoned "by administrative means", i.e., without trial at courts; official data suggest that there were over 2.6 million sentences to imprisonment on cases investigated by the secret police throughout 1921–53.[31] Maximum sentences varied depending on the type of crime and changed over time. From 1953 the maximum sentence for petty theft was six months,[32] having previously been one year and seven years. Theft of state property however had a minimum sentence of seven years and a maximum of twenty five.[33] In 1958 the maximum sentence for any crime was reduced from twenty five to fifteen years.[34]

In 1960, the Ministerstvo Vnutrennikh Del (MVD) ceased to function as the Soviet-wide administration of the camps in favour of individual republic MVD branches. The centralised detention administrations temporarily ceased functioning.[35][36]

Contemporary usage of the word and the usage of other terms edit

 
The fence at the old Gulag camp in Perm-36, founded in 1943, turned into a museum. Many Ukrainian nationalists were repressed and held at this camp.

Although the term Gulag was originally used in reference to a government agency, in English and many other languages, the acronym acquired the qualities of a common noun, denoting the Soviet system of prison-based, unfree labor.[37]

Even more broadly, "Gulag" has come to mean the Soviet repressive system itself, the set of procedures that prisoners once called the "meat-grinder": the arrests, the interrogations, the transport in unheated cattle cars, the forced labor, the destruction of families, the years spent in exile, the early and unnecessary deaths.

Western authors use the term Gulag to denote all the prisons and internment camps in the Soviet Union. The term's contemporary usage is at times notably not directly related to the USSR, such as in the expression "North Korea's Gulag"[38] for camps operational today.[39]

The word Gulag was not often used in Russian, either officially or colloquially; the predominant terms were the camps (лагеря, lagerya) and the zone (зона, zona), usually singular, for the labor camp system and for the individual camps. The official term, "correctional labour camp", was suggested for official use by the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in the session of July 27, 1929.

History edit

Background edit

 
Prisoners on a ship on their way to Sakhalin, remote prison island, c. 1903

The Tsar and the Russian Empire both used forced exile and forced labour as forms of judicial punishment. Katorga, a category of punishment which was reserved for those who were convicted of the most serious crimes, had many of the features which were associated with labor-camp imprisonment: confinement, simplified facilities (as opposed to the facilities which existed in prisons), and forced labor, usually involving hard, unskilled or semi-skilled work. According to historian Anne Applebaum, katorga was not a common sentence; approximately 6,000 katorga convicts were serving sentences in 1906 and 28,600 in 1916.[40] Under the Imperial Russian penal system, those who were convicted of less serious crimes were sent to corrective prisons and they were also made to work.[41]

Forced exile to Siberia had been in use for a wide range of offenses since the seventeenth century and it was a common punishment for political dissidents and revolutionaries. In the nineteenth century, the members of the failed Decembrist revolt and Polish nobles who resisted Russian rule were sent into exile. Fyodor Dostoevsky was sentenced to die for reading banned literature in 1849, but the sentence was commuted to banishment to Siberia. Members of various socialist revolutionary groups, including Bolsheviks such as Sergo Ordzhonikidze, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, and Joseph Stalin were also sent into exile.[42]

Convicts who were serving labor sentences and exiles were sent to the underpopulated areas of Siberia and the Russian Far East – regions that lacked towns or food sources as well as organized transportation systems. Despite the isolated conditions, some prisoners successfully escaped to populated areas. Stalin himself escaped three of the four times after he was sent into exile.[43] Since these times, Siberia gained its fearful connotation as a place of punishment, a reputation which was further enhanced by the Soviet GULAG system. The Bolsheviks' own experiences with exile and forced labor provided them with a model which they could base their own system on, including the importance of strict enforcement.

From 1920 to 1950, the leaders of the Communist Party and the Soviet state considered repression a tool that they should use to secure the normal functioning of the Soviet state system and preserve and strengthen their positions within their social base, the working class (when the Bolsheviks took power, peasants represented 80% of the population).[44]

In the midst of the Russian Civil War, Lenin and the Bolsheviks established a "special" prison camp system, separate from its traditional prison system and under the control of the Cheka.[45] These camps, as Lenin envisioned them, had a distinctly political purpose.[46] These early camps of the GULAG system were introduced in order to isolate and eliminate class-alien, socially dangerous, disruptive, suspicious, and other disloyal elements, whose deeds and thoughts were not contributing to the strengthening of the dictatorship of the proletariat.[44]

Forced labor as a "method of reeducation" was applied in the Solovki prison camp as early as the 1920s,[47] based on Trotsky's experiments with forced labor camps for Czech war prisoners from 1918 and his proposals to introduce "compulsory labor service" voiced in Terrorism and Communism.[47][48] Various categories of prisoners were defined: petty criminals, POWs of the Russian Civil War, officials accused of corruption, sabotage and embezzlement, political enemies, dissidents and other people deemed dangerous for the state. In the first decade of Soviet rule, the judicial and penal systems were neither unified nor coordinated, and there was a distinction between criminal prisoners and political or "special" prisoners.

The "traditional" judicial and prison system, which dealt with criminal prisoners, were first overseen by The People's Commissariat of Justice until 1922, after which they were overseen by the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs, also known as the NKVD.[49] The Cheka and its successor organizations, the GPU or State Political Directorate and the OGPU, oversaw political prisoners and the "special" camps to which they were sent.[50] In April 1929, the judicial distinctions between criminal and political prisoners were eliminated, and control of the entire Soviet penal system turned over to the OGPU.[51] In 1928 there were 30,000 individuals interned; the authorities were opposed to compelled labor. In 1927 the official in charge of prison administration wrote:

The exploitation of prison labour, the system of squeezing "golden sweat" from them, the organisation of production in places of confinement, which while profitable from a commercial point of view is fundamentally lacking in corrective significance – these are entirely inadmissible in Soviet places of confinement.[52]

The legal base and the guidance for the creation of the system of "corrective labor camps" (исправи́тельно-трудовые лагеря, Ispravitel'no-trudovye lagerya), the backbone of what is commonly referred to as the "Gulag", was a secret decree from the Sovnarkom of July 11, 1929, about the use of penal labor that duplicated the corresponding appendix to the minutes of the Politburo meeting of June 27, 1929.[citation needed]

One of the Gulag system founders was Naftaly Frenkel. In 1923 he was arrested for illegally crossing borders and smuggling. He was sentenced to 10 years' hard labor at Solovki, which later came to be known as the "first camp of the Gulag". While serving his sentence he wrote a letter to the camp administration detailing a number of "productivity improvement" proposals including the infamous system of labor exploitation whereby the inmates' food rations were to be linked to their rate of production, a proposal known as nourishment scale (шкала питания). This notorious you-eat-as-you-work system would often kill weaker prisoners in weeks and caused countless casualties. The letter caught the attention of a number of high communist officials including Genrikh Yagoda and Frenkel soon went from being an inmate to becoming a camp commander and an important Gulag official. His proposals soon saw widespread adoption in the Gulag system.[53]

After having appeared as an instrument and place for isolating counter-revolutionary and criminal elements, the Gulag, because of its principle of "correction by forced labor", quickly became, in fact, an independent branch of the national economy secured on the cheap labor force presented by prisoners. Hence it is followed by one more important reason for the constancy of the repressive policy, namely, the state's interest in unremitting rates of receiving a cheap labor force that was forcibly used, mainly in the extreme conditions of the east and north.[44] The Gulag possessed both punitive and economic functions.[54]

Formation and expansion under Stalin edit

The Gulag was an administration body that watched over the camps; eventually its name would be used for these camps retrospectively. After Lenin's death in 1924, Stalin was able to take control of the government, and began to form the gulag system. On June 27, 1929, the Politburo created a system of self-supporting camps that would eventually replace the existing prisons around the country.[55] These prisons were meant to receive inmates that received a prison sentence that exceeded three years. Prisoners that had a shorter prison sentence than three years were to remain in the prison system that was still under the purview of the NKVD.

The purpose of these new camps was to colonise the remote and inhospitable environments throughout the Soviet Union. These changes took place around the same time that Stalin started to institute collectivisation and rapid industrial development. Collectivisation resulted in a large scale purge of peasants and so-called Kulaks. The Kulaks were supposedly wealthy, comparatively to other Soviet peasants, and were considered to be capitalists by the state, and by extension enemies of socialism. The term would also become associated with anyone who opposed or even seemed unsatisfied with the Soviet government.

By late 1929 Stalin began a program known as dekulakization. Stalin demanded that the kulak class be completely wiped out, resulting in the imprisonment and execution of Soviet peasants. In a mere four months, 60,000 people were sent to the camps and another 154,000 exiled. This was only the beginning of the dekulakisation process, however. In 1931 alone 1,803,392 people were exiled.[56]

Although these massive relocation processes were successful in getting a large potential free forced labor work force where they needed to be, that is about all it was successful at doing. The "special settlers", as the Soviet government referred to them, all lived on starvation level rations, and many people starved to death in the camps, and anyone who was healthy enough to escape tried to do just that. This resulted in the government having to give rations to a group of people they were getting hardly any use out of, and was just costing the Soviet government money. The Unified State Political Administration (OGPU) quickly realised the problem, and began to reform the dekulakisation process.[57]

To help prevent the mass escapes the OGPU started to recruit people within the colony to help stop people who attempted to leave, and set up ambushes around known popular escape routes. The OGPU also attempted to raise the living conditions in these camps that would not encourage people to actively try and escape, and Kulaks were promised that they would regain their rights after five years. Even these revisions ultimately failed to resolve the problem, and the dekulakisation process was a failure in providing the government with a steady forced labor force. These prisoners were also lucky to be in the gulag in the early 1930s. Prisoners were relatively well off compared to what the prisoners would have to go through in the final years of the gulag.[57] The Gulag was officially established on April 25, 1930, as the GULAG by the OGPU order 130/63 in accordance with the Sovnarkom order 22 p. 248 dated April 7, 1930. It was renamed as the GULAG in November of that year.[58]

The hypothesis that economic considerations were responsible for mass arrests during the period of Stalinism has been refuted on the grounds of former Soviet archives that have become accessible since the 1990s, although some archival sources also tend to support an economic hypothesis.[59][60] In any case, the development of the camp system followed economic lines. The growth of the camp system coincided with the peak of the Soviet industrialisation campaign. Most of the camps established to accommodate the masses of incoming prisoners were assigned distinct economic tasks.[citation needed] These included the exploitation of natural resources and the colonization of remote areas, as well as the realisation of enormous infrastructural facilities and industrial construction projects. The plan to achieve these goals with "special settlements" instead of labor camps was dropped after the revealing of the Nazino affair in 1933.

The 1931–32 archives indicate the Gulag had approximately 200,000 prisoners in the camps; while in 1935, approximately 800,000 were in camps and 300,000 in colonies.[61] Gulag population reached a peak value (1.5 million) in 1941, gradually decreased during the war and then started to grow again, achieving a maximum by 1953.[4] Besides Gulag camps, a significant amount of prisoners, which confined prisoners serving short sentence terms.[4]

 
The population of Gulag camps (blue) and Gulag colonies (red) in 1934–53.[4]

In the early 1930s, a tightening of the Soviet penal policy caused a significant growth of the prison camp population.[62]

During the Great Purge of 1937–38, mass arrests caused another increase in inmate numbers. Hundreds of thousands of persons were arrested and sentenced to long prison terms on the grounds of one of the multiple passages of the notorious Article 58 of the Criminal Codes of the Union republics, which defined punishment for various forms of "counterrevolutionary activities". Under NKVD Order No. 00447, tens of thousands of Gulag inmates were executed in 1937–38 for "continuing counterrevolutionary activities".

Between 1934 and 1941, the number of prisoners with higher education increased more than eight times, and the number of prisoners with high education increased five times.[44] It resulted in their increased share in the overall composition of the camp prisoners.[44] Among the camp prisoners, the number and share of the intelligentsia was growing at the quickest pace.[44] Distrust, hostility, and even hatred for the intelligentsia was a common characteristic of the Soviet leaders.[44] Information regarding the imprisonment trends and consequences for the intelligentsia derive from the extrapolations of Viktor Zemskov from a collection of prison camp population movements data.[44][63]

During World War II edit

Political role edit

On the eve of World War II, Soviet archives indicate a combined camp and colony population upwards of 1.6 million in 1939, according to V. P. Kozlov.[61] Anne Applebaum and Steven Rosefielde estimate that 1.2 to 1.5 million people were in Gulag system's prison camps and colonies when the war started.[64][65]

After the German invasion of Poland that marked the start of World War II in Europe, the Soviet Union invaded and annexed eastern parts of the Second Polish Republic. In 1940 the Soviet Union occupied Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Bessarabia (now the Republic of Moldova) and Bukovina. According to some estimates, hundreds of thousands of Polish citizens[66][67] and inhabitants of the other annexed lands, regardless of their ethnic origin, were arrested and sent to the Gulag camps. However, according to the official data, the total number of sentences for political and anti-state (espionage, terrorism) crimes in the USSR in 1939–41 was 211,106.[31]

Approximately 300,000 Polish prisoners of war were captured by the USSR during and after the "Polish Defensive War".[68] Almost all of the captured officers and a large number of ordinary soldiers were then murdered (see Katyn massacre) or sent to Gulag.[69] Of the 10,000–12,000 Poles sent to Kolyma in 1940–41, most prisoners of war, only 583 men survived, released in 1942 to join the Polish Armed Forces in the East.[70] Out of General Anders' 80,000 evacuees from Soviet Union gathered in Great Britain only 310 volunteered to return to Soviet-controlled Poland in 1947.[71]

During the Great Patriotic War, Gulag populations declined sharply due to a steep rise in mortality in 1942–43. In the winter of 1941 a quarter of the Gulag's population died of starvation.[72] 516,841 prisoners died in prison camps in 1941–43,[73][74] from a combination of their harsh working conditions and the famine caused by the German invasion. This period accounts for about half of all gulag deaths, according to Russian statistics.

In 1943, the term katorga works (каторжные работы) was reintroduced. They were initially intended for Nazi collaborators, but then other categories of political prisoners (for example, members of deported peoples who fled from exile) were also sentenced to "katorga works". Prisoners sentenced to "katorga works" were sent to Gulag prison camps with the most harsh regime and many of them perished.[74]

Economic role edit

 
Central shop in Norilsk built by prisoners of the Norillag
 
Lithuanian deportees preparing logs for rafting on the Mana River

Up until World War II, the Gulag system expanded dramatically to create a Soviet "camp economy". Right before the war, forced labor provided 46.5% of the nation's nickel, 76% of its tin, 40% of its cobalt, 40.5% of its chrome-iron ore, 60% of its gold, and 25.3% of its timber.[75] And in preparation for war, the NKVD put up many more factories and built highways and railroads.

The Gulag quickly switched to the production of arms and supplies for the army after fighting began. At first, transportation remained a priority. In 1940 the NKVD focused most of its energy on railroad construction.[76] This would prove extremely important when the German advance into the Soviet Union started in 1941. In addition, factories converted to produce ammunition, uniforms, and other supplies. Moreover, the NKVD gathered skilled workers and specialists from throughout the Gulag into 380 special colonies which produced tanks, aircraft, armaments, and ammunition.[75]

Despite its low capital costs, the camp economy suffered from serious flaws. For one, actual productivity almost never matched estimates: the estimates proved far too optimistic. In addition, scarcity of machinery and tools plagued the camps and the tools that the camps did have quickly broke. The Eastern Siberian Trust of the Chief Administration of Camps for Highway Construction destroyed ninety-four trucks in just three years.[75] But the greatest problem was simple – forced labor was less efficient than free labor. In fact, prisoners in the Gulag were, on average, half as productive as free laborers in the USSR at the time,[75] which may be partially explained by malnutrition.

To make up for this disparity, the NKVD worked prisoners harder than ever. To meet rising demand, prisoners worked longer and longer hours, and on lower food-rations than ever before. A camp administrator said in a meeting: "There are cases when a prisoner is given only four or five hours out of twenty-four for rest, which significantly lowers his productivity." In the words of a former Gulag prisoner: "By the spring of 1942, the camp ceased to function. It was difficult to find people who were even able to gather firewood or bury the dead."[75]

The scarcity of food stemmed in part from the general strain on the entire Soviet Union, but also the lack of central aid to the Gulag during the war. The central government focused all its attention on the military and left the camps to their own devices. In 1942 the Gulag set up the Supply Administration to find their own food and industrial goods. During this time, not only did food become scarce, but the NKVD limited rations in an attempt to motivate the prisoners to work harder for more food, a policy that lasted until 1948.[77]

In addition to food shortages, the Gulag suffered from labor scarcity at the beginning of the war. The Great Terror of 1936–1938 had provided a large supply of free labor, but by the start of World War II the purges had slowed down. In order to complete all of their projects, camp administrators moved prisoners from project to project.[76] To improve the situation, laws were implemented in mid-1940 that allowed giving short camp sentences (4 months or a year) to those convicted of petty theft, hooliganism, or labor-discipline infractions. By January 1941 the Gulag workforce had increased by approximately 300,000 prisoners.[76] But in 1942 serious food shortages began, and camp populations dropped again. The camps lost still more prisoners to the war effort as the Soviet Union went into a total war footing in June 1941. Many laborers received early releases so that they could be drafted and sent to the front.[77]

Even as the pool of workers shrank, demand for outputs continued to grow rapidly. As a result, the Soviet government pushed the Gulag to "do more with less". With fewer able-bodied workers and few supplies from outside the camp system, camp administrators had to find a way to maintain production. The solution they found was to push the remaining prisoners still harder. The NKVD employed a system of setting unrealistically high production goals, straining resources in an attempt to encourage higher productivity. As the Axis armies pushed into Soviet territory from June 1941 on, labor resources became further strained, and many of the camps had to evacuate out of Western Russia.[77]

From the beginning of the war to halfway through 1944, 40 camps were set up, and 69 were disbanded. During evacuations, machinery received priority, leaving prisoners to reach safety on foot. The speed of Operation Barbarossa's advance prevented the evacuation of all prisoners in good time, and the NKVD massacred many to prevent them from falling into German hands. While this practice denied the Germans a source of free labor, it also further restricted the Gulag's capacity to keep up with the Red Army's demands. When the tide of the war turned, however, and the Soviets started pushing the Axis invaders back, fresh batches of laborers replenished the camps. As the Red Army recaptured territories from the Germans, an influx of Soviet ex-POWs greatly increased the Gulag population.[77]

After World War II edit

 
The Transpolar Railway was a project of the Gulag system that took place from 1947 to 1953.

After World War II the number of inmates in prison camps and colonies, again, rose sharply, reaching approximately 2.5 million people by the early 1950s (about 1.7 million of whom were in camps).

When the war in Europe ended in May 1945, as many as two million former Russian citizens were forcefully repatriated into the USSR.[78] On February 11, 1945, at the conclusion of the Yalta Conference, the United States and United Kingdom signed a Repatriation Agreement with the Soviet Union.[79] One interpretation of this agreement resulted in the forcible repatriation of all Soviets. British and United States civilian authorities ordered their military forces in Europe to deport to the Soviet Union up to two million former residents of the Soviet Union, including persons who had left the Russian Empire and established different citizenship years before. The forced repatriation operations took place from 1945 to 1947.[80]

Multiple sources state that Soviet POWs, on their return to the Soviet Union, were treated as traitors (see Order No. 270).[81][82][83] According to some sources, over 1.5 million surviving Red Army soldiers imprisoned by the Germans were sent to the Gulag.[84][85][86] However, that is a confusion with two other types of camps. During and after World War II, freed POWs went to special "filtration" camps. Of these, by 1944, more than 90 percent were cleared, and about 8 percent were arrested or condemned to penal battalions. In 1944, they were sent directly to reserve military formations to be cleared by the NKVD.

Furthermore, in 1945, about 100 filtration camps were set for repatriated Ostarbeiter, POWs, and other displaced persons, which processed more than 4,000,000 people. By 1946, the major part of the population of these camps were cleared by NKVD and either sent home or conscripted (see table for details).[87] 226,127 out of 1,539,475 POWs were transferred to the NKVD, i.e. the Gulag.[87][88]

Results of the checks and the filtration of the repatriants (by March 1, 1946)[87]
Category Total % Civilian % POWs %
Released and sent home[e] 2,427,906 57.81 2,146,126 80.68 281,780 18.31
Conscripted 801,152 19.08 141,962 5.34 659,190 42.82
Sent to labor battalions of the Ministry of Defence 608,095 14.48 263,647 9.91 344,448 22.37
Sent to NKVD as spetskontingent[f] (i.e. sent to GULAG) 272,867 6.50 46,740 1.76 226,127 14.69
Were waiting for transportation and worked for Soviet military units abroad 89,468 2.13 61,538 2.31 27,930 1.81
Total 4,199,488 100 2,660,013 100 1,539,475 100

After Nazi Germany's defeat, ten NKVD-run "special camps" subordinate to the Gulag were set up in the Soviet Occupation Zone of post-war Germany. These "special camps" were former Stalags, prisons, or Nazi concentration camps such as Sachsenhausen (special camp number 7) and Buchenwald (special camp number 2). According to German government estimates "65,000 people died in those Soviet-run camps or in transportation to them."[89] According to German researchers, Sachsenhausen, where 12,500 Soviet era victims have been uncovered, should be seen as an integral part of the Gulag system.[90]

 
During the Stalin era, Magadan was a major transit center for prisoners sent to the Kolyma camps.

Yet the major reason for the post-war increase in the number of prisoners was the tightening of legislation on property offences in summer 1947 (at this time there was a famine in some parts of the Soviet Union, claiming about 1 million lives), which resulted in hundreds of thousands of convictions to lengthy prison terms, sometimes on the basis of cases of petty theft or embezzlement. At the beginning of 1953, the total number of prisoners in prison camps was more than 2.4 million of which more than 465,000 were political prisoners.[74]

 
Political prisoners eating lunch in the Minlag "special camp" coal mine. In "special camps" prisoners had to wear prison garb with personal numbers.

In 1948 the system of "special camps" was established exclusively for a "special contingent" of political prisoners, convicted according to the more severe sub-articles of Article 58 (Enemies of people): treason, espionage, terrorism, etc., for various real political opponents, such as Trotskyites, "nationalists" (Ukrainian nationalism), white émigré, as well as for fabricated ones.

The state continued to maintain the extensive camp system for a while after Stalin's death in March 1953, although the period saw the grip of the camp authorities weaken, and a number of conflicts and uprisings occur (see Bitch Wars; Kengir uprising; Vorkuta uprising).

The amnesty of 1953 was limited to non-political prisoners and for political prisoners sentenced to not more than 5 years, therefore mostly those convicted for common crimes were then freed. The release of political prisoners started in 1954 and became widespread, and also coupled with mass rehabilitations, after Nikita Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalinism in his Secret Speech at the 20th Congress of the CPSU in February 1956.

The Gulag institution was closed by the MVD order No 020 of January 25, 1960[58] but forced labor colonies for political and criminal prisoners continued to exist. Political prisoners continued to be kept in one of the most famous camps Perm-36[91] until 1987 when it was closed.[92]

The Russian penal system, despite reforms and a reduction in prison population, informally or formally continues many practices endemic to the Gulag system, including forced labor, inmates policing inmates, and prisoner intimidation.[16]

In the late 2000s, some human rights activists accused authorities of gradual removal of Gulag remembrance from places such as Perm-36 and Solovki prison camp.[93]

According to Encyclopædia Britannica,

At its height the Gulag consisted of many hundreds of camps, with the average camp holding 2,000–10,000 prisoners. Most of these camps were "corrective labour colonies" in which prisoners felled timber, laboured on general construction projects (such as the building of canals and railroads), or worked in mines. Most prisoners laboured under the threat of starvation or execution if they refused. It is estimated that the combination of very long working hours, harsh climatic and other working conditions, inadequate food, and summary executions killed tens of thousands of prisoners each year. Western scholarly estimates of the total number of deaths in the Gulag in the period from 1918 to 1956 ranged from 1.2 to 1.7 million.[94]

Death toll edit

 
The Vorkuta Gulag

Prior to the dissolution of the Soviet Union, estimates of Gulag victims ranged from 2.3 to 17.6 million (see History of Gulag population estimates). Mortality in Gulag camps in 1934–40 was 4–6 times higher than average in the Soviet Union. Post-1991 research by historians accessing archival materials brought this range down considerably.[95][96] In a 1993 study of archival Soviet data, a total of 1,053,829 people died in the Gulag from 1934 to 1953.[4]: 1024 

It was common practice to release prisoners who were either suffering from incurable diseases or near death,[13][14] so a combined statistics on mortality in the camps and mortality caused by the camps was higher. The tentative historical consensus is that, of the 18 million people who passed through the gulag from 1930 to 1953, between 1.6 million[2][3] and 1.76 million[97] perished as a result of their detention,[1] and about half of all deaths occurred between 1941 and 1943 following the German invasion.[97][98] If prisoner deaths from labor colonies and special settlements are included, the death toll rises to 2,749,163, according to J. Otto Pohl's incomplete data.[14][5]

In her 2018 study, Golfo Alexopoulos attempted to challenge this consensus figure by encompassing those whose life was shortened due to GULAG conditions.[1] Alexopoulos concluded from her research that a systematic practice of the Gulag was to release sick prisoners on the verge of death; and that all prisoners who received the health classification "invalid", "light physical labor", "light individualised labor", or "physically defective" that together according to Alexopoulos encompassed at least one third of all inmates who passed through the Gulag died or had their lives shortened due to detention in the Gulag in captivity or shortly after release.[99]

The GULAG mortality estimated in this way yields the figure of 6 million deaths.[6] Historian Orlando Figes and Russian writer Vadim Erlikman have posited similar estimates.[7][8] The estimate of Alexopoulos, however, has obvious methodological difficulties[1] and is supported by misinterpreted evidence, such as presuming that hundreds of thousands of prisoners "directed to other places of detention" in 1948 was a euphemism for releasing prisoners on the verge of death into labor colonies, when it was really referring to internal transport in the Gulag rather than release.[100]

In a University of Oxford doctoral dissertation, in 2020, the problem of medical release ('aktirovka') and of mortality among 'certified invalids' ('aktirovannye') was considered in detail by Mikhail Nakonechnyi. He concluded that the number of terminally ill people discharged early on medical grounds from the Gulag was about 1 million. Mikhail added 800,000–850,000 excess deaths to the death toll directly caused by the results of GULAG incarceration, which brings the death toll to 2.5 million people.[101]

Mortality rate edit

In 2009, Steven Rosefielde stated more complete archival data increases camp deaths by 19.4 percent to 1,258,537, "the best archivally-based estimate of Gulag excess deaths at present is 1.6 million from 1929 to 1953."[3] Certificates of death in the Gulag system for the period from 1930 to 1956[102] Dan Healey in 2018 also stated the same thing "New studies using declassified Gulag archives have provisionally established a consensus on mortality and "inhumanity." The tentative consensus says that once secret records of the Gulag administration in Moscow show a lower death toll than expected from memoir sources, generally between 1.5 and 1.7 million (out of 18 million who passed through) for the years from 1930 to 1953."[103]

Certificates of death in the Gulag system for the period from 1930 to 1956[102]

Year Deaths Mortality rate %
1930 7,980 4.2
1931 7,283 2.9
1932 13,197 4.8
1933 67,297 15.3
1934 25,187 4.28
1935 31,636 2.75
1936 24,993 2.11
1937 31,056 2.42
1938 108,654 5.35
1939 44,750 3.1
1940 41,275 2.72
1941 115,484 6.1
1942 352,560 24.9
1943 267,826 22.4
1944 114,481 9.2
1945 81,917 5.95
1946 30,715 2.2
1947 66,830 3.59
1948 50,659 2.28
1949 29,350 1.21
1950 24,511 0.95
1951 22,466 0.92
1952 20,643 0.84
1953 9,628 0.67
1954 8,358 0.69
1955 4,842 0.53
1956 3,164 0.4
Total 1,606,748 8.88

Gulag administrators edit

Name Years[104][105][106]
Feodor (Teodors) Ivanovich Eihmans April 25, 1930 – June 16, 1930
Lazar Iosifovich Kogan June 16, 1930 – June 9, 1932
Matvei Davidovich Berman June 9, 1932 – August 16, 1937
Israel Israelevich Pliner August 16, 1937 – November 16, 1938
Gleb Vasilievich Filaretov November 16, 1938 – February 18, 1939
Vasili Vasilievich Chernyshev February 18, 1939 – February 26, 1941
Victor Grigorievich Nasedkin February 26, 1941 – September 2, 1947
Georgy Prokopievich Dobrynin September 2, 1947 – January 31, 1951
Ivan Ilich Dolgikh January 31, 1951 – October 5, 1954
Sergei Yegorovich Yegorov October 5, 1954 – April 4, 1956

Conditions edit

Living and working conditions in the camps varied significantly across time and place, depending, among other things, on the impact of broader events (World War II, countrywide famines and shortages, waves of terror, sudden influx or release of large numbers of prisoners) and the type of crime committed. Instead of being used for economic gain, political prisoners were typically given the worst work or were dumped into the less productive parts of the gulag. For example Victor Herman, in his memoirs, compares the Burepolom [ru] and the Nuksha [ru] 2 camps, which were both near Vyatka.[107][108]

In Burepolom there were roughly 3,000 prisoners, all non-political, in the central compound. They could walk around at will, were lightly guarded, had unlocked barracks with mattresses and pillows, and watched western movies[clarification needed]. However Nuksha 2, which housed serious criminals and political prisoners, featured guard towers with machine guns and locked barracks.[108] In some camps prisoners were only permitted to send one letter a year and were not allowed to have photos of loved ones.[109]

Some prisoners were released early if they displayed good performance.[108] There were several productive activities for prisoners in the camps. For example, in early 1935, a course in livestock raising was held for prisoners at a state farm; those who took it had their workday reduced to four hours.[108] During that year the professional theater group in the camp complex gave 230 performances of plays and concerts to over 115,000 spectators.[108] Camp newspapers also existed.[108]

Andrei Vyshinsky, chief procurator of the Soviet Union, wrote a memorandum to NKVD chief Nikolai Yezhov in 1938, during the Great Purge, which stated:[110]

Among the prisoners there are some so ragged and lice-ridden that they pose a sanitary danger to the rest. These prisoners have deteriorated to the point of losing any resemblance to human beings. Lacking food…they collect orts [refuse] and, according to some prisoners, eat rats and dogs.

According to Yevgenia Ginzburg Gulag inmates could tell when Yezhov was no longer in charge as one day the conditions relaxed. A few days later Beria's name appeared in official prison notices.[111]

In general, the central administrative bodies showed a discernible interest in maintaining the labor force of prisoners in a condition allowing the fulfilment of construction and production plans handed down from above. Besides a wide array of punishments for prisoners refusing to work (which, in practice, were sometimes applied to prisoners that were too enfeebled to meet production quota), they instituted a number of positive incentives intended to boost productivity. These included monetary bonuses (since the early 1930s) and wage payments (from 1950 onward), cuts of individual sentences, general early-release schemes for norm fulfilment and overfulfilment (until 1939, again in selected camps from 1946 onward), preferential treatment, sentence reduction and privileges for the most productive workers (shock workers or Stakhanovites in Soviet parlance).[112][108]

Inmates were used as camp guards and could purchase camp newspapers as well as bonds. Robert W. Thurston writes that this was "at least an indication that they were still regarded as participants in society to some degree."[108] Sports team, particularly soccer teams were set up by the prison authorities.[113]

 
A shack in a gulag – a reconstruction in the Museum of the Occupation of Latvia. The number of prisoners confined to each shack is not stated

Boris Sulim, a former prisoner who had worked in the Omsuchkan camp, close to Magadan, when he was a teenager stated:[114]

I was 18 years old and Magadan seemed a very romantic place to me. I got 880 rubles a month and a 3000 ruble installation grant, which was a hell of a lot of money for a kid like me. I was able to give my mother some of it. They even gave me membership in the Komsomol. There was a mining and ore-processing plant which sent out parties to dig for tin. I worked at the radio station which kept contact with the parties. [...] If the inmates were good and disciplined they had almost the same rights as the free workers. They were trusted and they even went to the movies. As for the reason they were in the camps, well, I never poked my nose into details. We all thought the people were there because they were guilty.

Immediately after the German attack on the Soviet Union in June 1941 the conditions in camps worsened drastically: quotas were increased, rations cut, and medical supplies came close to none, all of which led to a sharp increase in mortality. The situation slowly improved in the final period and after the end of the war.

Considering the overall conditions and their influence on inmates, it is important to distinguish three major strata of Gulag inmates:

Gulag and famine (1932–1933) edit

The Soviet famine of 1932–1933 swept across many different regions of the Soviet Union. During this time, it is estimated that around six to seven million people starved to death.[115] On 7 August 1932, a new decree drafted by Stalin (Law of Spikelets) specified a minimum sentence of ten years or execution for theft from collective farms or of cooperative property. Over the next few months, prosecutions rose fourfold. A large share of cases prosecuted under the law were for the theft of small quantities of grain worth less than fifty rubles. The law was later relaxed on 8 May 1933.[116] Overall, during the first half of 1933, prisons saw more new incoming inmates than the three previous years combined.

Prisoners in the camps faced harsh working conditions. One Soviet report stated that, in early 1933, up to 15% of the prison population in Soviet Uzbekistan died monthly. During this time, prisoners were getting around 300 calories (1,300 kJ) worth of food a day. Many inmates attempted to flee, causing an upsurge in coercive and violent measures. Camps were directed "not to spare bullets".[117]

Social conditions edit

The convicts in such camps were actively involved in all kinds of labor with one of them being logging. The working territory of logging presented by itself a square and was surrounded by forest clearing. Thus, all attempts to exit or escape from it were well observed from the four towers set at each of its corners.

Locals who captured a runaway were given rewards.[118] It is also said that camps in colder areas were less concerned with finding escaped prisoners as they would die anyhow from the severely cold winters. In such cases prisoners who did escape without getting shot were often found dead kilometres away from the camp.

Geography edit

 
Siberian taiga in the river valley near Verkhoyansk. The lowest temperature recorded there was −68°C (−90°F).
 
Memorial in Astana, Kazakhstan, dedicated to the wives of Akmola Labor Camp prisoners.

In the early days of Gulag, the locations for the camps were chosen primarily for the isolated conditions involved. Remote monasteries in particular were frequently reused as sites for new camps. The site on the Solovetsky Islands in the White Sea is one of the earliest and also most noteworthy, taking root soon after the Revolution in 1918.[17] The colloquial name for the islands, "Solovki", entered the vernacular as a synonym for the labor camp in general. It was presented to the world as an example of the new Soviet method for "re-education of class enemies" and reintegrating them through labor into Soviet society. Initially the inmates, largely Russian intelligentsia, enjoyed relative freedom within the natural confinement of the islands.[119]

Local newspapers and magazines were published. Even some scientific research was carried out, e.g., a local botanical garden was maintained but unfortunately later lost completely. Eventually Solovki turned into an ordinary Gulag camp. Some historians maintain that it was a pilot camp of this type. In 1929 Maxim Gorky visited the camp and published an apology for it. The report of Gorky's trip to Solovki was included in the cycle of impressions titled "Po Soiuzu Sovetov", Part V, subtitled "Solovki." In the report, Gorky wrote that "camps such as 'Solovki' were absolutely necessary."[119]

With the new emphasis on Gulag as the means of concentrating cheap labor, new camps were then constructed throughout the Soviet sphere of influence, wherever the economic task at hand dictated their existence, or was designed specifically to avail itself of them, such as the White Sea–Baltic Canal or the Baikal–Amur Mainline, including facilities in big cities — parts of the famous Moscow Metro and the Moscow State University new campus were built by forced labor. Many more projects during the rapid industrialisation of the 1930s, war-time and post-war periods were fulfilled on the backs of convicts. The activity of Gulag camps spanned a wide cross-section of Soviet industry. Gorky organized in 1933 a trip of 120 writers and artists to the White Sea–Baltic Canal, 36 of them wrote a propaganda book about the construction published in 1934 and destroyed in 1937.

The majority of Gulag camps were positioned in extremely remote areas of northeastern Siberia (the best known clusters are Sevvostlag (The North-East Camps) along Kolyma river and Norillag near Norilsk) and in the southeastern parts of the Soviet Union, mainly in the steppes of Kazakhstan (Luglag, Steplag, Peschanlag). A detailed map was made by the Memorial Foundation.[120]

These were vast and sparsely inhabited regions with no roads or sources of food, but rich in minerals and other natural resources, such as timber. The construction of the roads was assigned to the inmates of specialised railway camps. Camps were generally spread throughout the entire Soviet Union, including the European parts of Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine.

There were several camps outside the Soviet Union, in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and Mongolia, which were under the direct control of the Gulag.[citation needed]

 
Part of 'Project 503' to build a railroad from Salekhard to Igarka near Turukhansk on the Yenisey

Throughout the history of the Soviet Union, there were at least 476 separate camp administrations.[121][122] The Russian researcher Galina Ivanova stated that,[122]

to date, Russian historians have discovered and described 476 camps that existed at different times on the territory of the USSR. It is well known that practically every one of them had several branches, many of which were quite large. In addition to the large numbers of camps, there were no less than 2,000 colonies. It would be virtually impossible to reflect the entire mass of Gulag facilities on a map that would also account for the various times of their existence.

Since many of these existed only for short periods, the number of camp administrations at any given point was lower. It peaked in the early 1950s when there were more than 100 camp administrations across the Soviet Union. Most camp administrations oversaw several single camp units, some as many as dozens or even hundreds.[123] The infamous complexes were those at Kolyma, Norilsk, and Vorkuta, all in arctic or subarctic regions. However, prisoner mortality in Norilsk in most periods was actually lower than across the camp system as a whole.[124]

Special institutions edit

  • There were separate camps or zones within camps for juveniles (малолетки, maloletki), the disabled (in Spassk), and mothers (мамки, mamki) with babies.
  • Family members of "Traitors of the Motherland" (ЧСИР, член семьи изменника Родины, ChSIR, Chlyen sem'i izmennika Rodini) were placed under a special category of repression.
  • Secret research laboratories known as Sharashka (шарашка) held arrested and convicted scientists, some of them prominent, where they anonymously developed new technologies and also conducted basic research.

Historiography edit

Origins and functions of the Gulag edit

According to historian Stephen Barnes, the origins and functions of the Gulag can be looked at in four major ways:[125]

  • The first approach was championed by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, and is what Barnes terms the moral explanation. According to this view, Soviet ideology eliminated the moral checks on the darker side of human nature – providing convenient justifications for violence and evil-doing on all levels: from political decision-making to personal relations.
  • Another approach is the political explanation, according to which the Gulag (along with executions) was primarily a means for eliminating the regime's perceived political enemies (this understanding is favoured by historian Robert Conquest, amongst others).
  • The economic explanation, in turn as set out by historian Anne Applebaum, argues that the Soviet regime instrumentalised the Gulag for its economic development projects. Although never economically profitable, it was perceived as such right up to Stalin's death in 1953.
  • Finally, Barnes advances his own, fourth explanation, which situates the Gulag in the context of modern projects of 'cleansing' the social body of hostile elements, through spatial isolation and physical elimination of individuals defined as harmful.

Hannah Arendt argues that as part of a totalitarian system of government, the camps of the Gulag system were experiments in "total domination." In her view, the goal of a totalitarian system was not merely to establish limits on liberty, but rather to abolish liberty entirely in service of its ideology. She argues that the Gulag system was not merely political repression because the system survived and grew long after Stalin had wiped out all serious political resistance. Although the various camps were initially filled with criminals and political prisoners, eventually they were filled with prisoners who were arrested irrespective of anything relating to them as individuals, but rather only on the basis of their membership in some ever shifting category of imagined threats to the state.[126]: 437–59 

She also argues that the function of the Gulag system was not truly economic. Although the Soviet government deemed them all "forced labor" camps, this in fact highlighted that the work in the camps was deliberately pointless, since all Russian workers could be subject to forced labor.[126]: 444–5  The only real economic purpose they typically served was financing the cost of their own supervision. Otherwise the work performed was generally useless, either by design or made that way through extremely poor planning and execution; some workers even preferred more difficult work if it was actually productive. She differentiated between "authentic" forced-labor camps, concentration camps, and "annihilation camps".[126]: 444–5 

In authentic labor camps, inmates worked in "relative freedom and are sentenced for limited periods." Concentration camps had extremely high mortality rates and but were still "essentially organized for labor purposes." Annihilation camps were those where the inmates were "systematically wiped out through starvation and neglect." She criticizes other commentators' conclusion that the purpose of the camps was a supply of cheap labor. According to her, the Soviets were able to liquidate the camp system without serious economic consequences, showing that the camps were not an important source of labor and were overall economically irrelevant.[126]: 444–5 

Arendt argues that together with the systematized, arbitrary cruelty inside the camps, this served the purpose of total domination by eliminating the idea that the arrestees had any political or legal rights. Morality was destroyed by maximizing cruelty and by organizing the camps internally to make the inmates and guards complicit. The terror resulting from the operation of the Gulag system caused people outside of the camps to cut all ties with anyone who was arrested or purged and to avoid forming ties with others for fear of being associated with anyone who was targeted. As a result, the camps were essential as the nucleus of a system that destroyed individuality and dissolved all social bonds. Thereby, the system attempted to eliminate any capacity for resistance or self-directed action in the greater population.[126]: 437–59 

Archival documents edit

Statistical reports made by the OGPUNKVDMGBMVD between the 1930s and 1950s are kept in the State Archive of the Russian Federation formerly called Central State Archive of the October Revolution (CSAOR). These documents were highly classified and inaccessible. Amid glasnost and democratization in the late 1980s, Viktor Zemskov and other Russian researchers managed to gain access to the documents and published the highly classified statistical data collected by the OGPU-NKVD-MGB-MVD and related to the number of the Gulag prisoners, special settlers, etc. In 1995, Zemskov wrote that foreign scientists have begun to be admitted to the restricted-access collection of these documents in the State Archive of the Russian Federation since 1992.[127] However, only one historian, namely Zemskov, was admitted to these archives, and later the archives were again "closed", according to Leonid Lopatnikov.[128] Pressure from the Putin administration has exacerbated the difficulties of Gulag researchers.[129]

While considering the issue of reliability of the primary data provided by corrective labor institutions, it is necessary to take into account the following two circumstances. On the one hand, their administration was not interested to understate the number of prisoners in its reports, because it would have automatically led to a decrease in the food supply plan for camps, prisons, and corrective labor colonies. The decrement in food would have been accompanied by an increase in mortality that would have led to wrecking of the vast production program of the Gulag. On the other hand, overstatement of data of the number of prisoners also did not comply with departmental interests, because it was fraught with the same (i.e., impossible) increase in production tasks set by planning bodies. In those days, people were highly responsible for non-fulfilment of plan. It seems that a resultant of these objective departmental interests was a sufficient degree of reliability of the reports.[130]

Between 1990 and 1992, the first precise statistical data on the Gulag based on the Gulag archives were published by Viktor Zemskov.[131] These had been generally accepted by leading Western scholars,[20][13] despite the fact that a number of inconsistencies were found in this statistics.[132] It is also necessary to note that not all the conclusions drawn by Zemskov based on his data have been generally accepted. Thus, Sergei Maksudov alleged that although literary sources, for example the books of Lev Razgon or Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, did not envisage the total number of the camps very well and markedly exaggerated their size. On the other hand, Viktor Zemskov, who published many documents by the NKVD and KGB, was far from understanding of the Gulag essence and the nature of socio-political processes in the country. He added that without distinguishing the degree of accuracy and reliability of certain figures, without making a critical analysis of sources, without comparing new data with already known information, Zemskov absolutizes the published materials by presenting them as the ultimate truth. As a result, Maksudov charges that Zemskov's attempts to make generalized statements with reference to a particular document, as a rule, do not hold water.[133]

 
OGPU chiefs responsible for construction of the White Sea–Baltic Canal, 1932: right: Frenkel; center: Berman; left: Afanasev (Head of the southern part of BelBaltLag)

In response, Zemskov wrote that the charge that he allegedly did not compare new data with already known information could not be called fair. In his words, the trouble with most western writers is that they do not benefit from such comparisons. Zemskov added that when he tried not to overuse the juxtaposition of new information with "old" one, it was only because of a sense of delicacy, not to once again psychologically traumatize the researchers whose works used incorrect figures, as it turned out after the publication of the statistics by the OGPU-NKVD-MGB-MVD.[127]

According to French historian Nicolas Werth, the mountains of the materials of the Gulag archives, which are stored in funds of the State Archive of the Russian Federation and were being constantly exposed during the last fifteen years, represent only a very small part of bureaucratic prose of immense size left over after the decades of "creativity" by the "dull and reptile" organization managing the Gulag. In many cases, local camp archives, which had been stored in sheds, barracks, or other rapidly disintegrating buildings, simply disappeared in the same way as most of the camp buildings did.[134]

In 2004 and 2005, some archival documents were published in the edition Istoriya Stalinskogo Gulaga. Konets 1920-kh — Pervaya Polovina 1950-kh Godov. Sobranie Dokumentov v 7 Tomakh (The History of Stalin's Gulag. From the Late 1920s to the First Half of the 1950s. Collection of Documents in Seven Volumes), wherein each of its seven volumes covered a particular issue indicated in the title of the volume:

  1. Mass Repression in the USSR (Massovye Repressii v SSSR);[135]
  2. Punitive System. Structure and Cadres (Karatelnaya Sistema. Struktura i Kadry);[136]
  3. Economy of the Gulag (Ekonomika Gulaga);[137]
  4. The Population of the Gulag. The Number and Conditions of Confinement (Naselenie Gulaga. Chislennost i Usloviya Soderzhaniya);[138]
  5. Specsettlers in the USSR (Specpereselentsy v SSSR);[139]
  6. Uprisings, Riots, and Strikes of Prisoners (Vosstaniya, Bunty i Zabastovki Zaklyuchyonnykh);[140] and
  7. Soviet Repressive and Punitive Policy. Annotated Index of Cases of the SA RF (Sovetskaya Pepressivno-karatelnaya Politika i Penitentsiarnaya Sistema. Annotirovanniy Ukazatel Del GA RF).[141]

The edition contains the brief introductions by the two "patriarchs of the Gulag science", Robert Conquest and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, and 1431 documents, the overwhelming majority of which were obtained from funds of the State Archive of the Russian Federation.[142]

History of Gulag population estimates edit

During the decades before the dissolution of the USSR, the debates about the population size of GULAG failed to arrive at generally accepted figures; wide-ranging estimates have been offered,[143] and the bias toward higher or lower side was sometimes ascribed to political views of the particular author.[143] Some of those earlier estimates (both high and low) are shown in the table below.

Historical estimates of the GULAG population size (in chronological order)
GULAG population Year the estimate was made for Source Methodology
15 million 1940–42 Mora & Zwiernag (1945)[144]
2.3 million December 1937 Timasheff (1948)[145] Calculation of disenfranchised population
Up to 3.5 million 1941 Jasny (1951)[146] Analysis of the output of the Soviet enterprises run by NKVD
50 million total number of persons
passed through GULAG
Solzhenitsyn (1975)[147] Analysis of various indirect data,
including own experience and testimonies of numerous witnesses
17.6 million 1942 Anton Antonov-Ovseenko (1999)[148] NKVD documents[149]
4–5 million 1939 Wheatcroft (1981)[150] Analysis of demographic data.a
10.6 million 1941 Rosefielde (1981)[151] Based on data of Mora & Zwiernak and annual mortality.a
5.5–9.5 million late 1938 Conquest (1991)[152] 1937 Census figures, arrest and deaths
estimates, variety of personal and literary sources.a
4–5 million every single year Volkogonov (1990s)[153]
a.^ Note: Later numbers from Rosefielde, Wheatcroft and Conquest were revised down by the authors themselves.[20][64]
 
Yurshor, Vorkuta area

The glasnost political reforms in the late 1980s and the subsequent dissolution of the USSR led to the release of a large amount of formerly classified archival documents,[154] including new demographic and NKVD data.[13] Analysis of the official GULAG statistics by Western scholars immediately demonstrated that, despite their inconsistency, they do not support previously published higher estimates.[143] Importantly, the released documents made possible to clarify terminology used to describe different categories of forced labor population, because the use of the terms "forced labor", "GULAG", "camps" interchangeably by early researchers led to significant confusion and resulted in significant inconsistencies in the earlier estimates.[143]

Archival studies revealed several components of the NKVD penal system in the Stalinist USSR: prisons, labor camps, labor colonies, as well as various "settlements" (exile) and of non-custodial forced labor.[4] Although most of them fit the definition of forced labor, only labor camps, and labor colonies were associated with punitive forced labor in detention.[4] Forced labor camps ("GULAG camps") were hard regime camps, whose inmates were serving more than three-year terms. As a rule, they were situated in remote parts of the USSR, and labor conditions were extremely hard there. They formed a core of the GULAG system. The inmates of "corrective labor colonies" served shorter terms; these colonies were located in less remote parts of the USSR, and they were run by local NKVD administration.[4]

Preliminary analysis of the GULAG camps and colonies statistics (see the chart on the right) demonstrated that the population reached the maximum before the World War II, then dropped sharply, partially due to massive releases, partially due to wartime high mortality, and then was gradually increasing until the end of Stalin era, reaching the global maximum in 1953, when the combined population of GULAG camps and labor colonies amounted to 2,625,000.[155]

The results of these archival studies convinced many scholars, including Robert Conquest[20] or Stephen Wheatcroft to reconsider their earlier estimates of the size of the GULAG population, although the 'high numbers' of arrested and deaths are not radically different from earlier estimates.[20] Although such scholars as Rosefielde or Vishnevsky point at several inconsistencies in archival data with Rosefielde pointing out the archival figure of 1,196,369 for the population of the Gulag and labor colonies combined on December 31, 1936, is less than half the 2.75 million labor camp population given to the Census Board by the NKVD for the 1937 census,[156][132] it is generally believed that these data provide more reliable and detailed information that the indirect data and literary sources available for the scholars during the Cold War era.[13] Although Conquest cited Beria's report to the Politburo of the labor camp numbers at the end of 1938 stating there were almost 7 million prisoners in the labor camps, more than three times the archival figure for 1938 and an official report to Stalin by the Soviet minister of State Security in 1952 stating there were 12 million prisoners in the labor camps.[157]

These data allowed scholars to conclude that during the period of 1928–53, about 14 million prisoners passed through the system of GULAG labor camps and 4–5 million passed through the labor colonies.[20] Thus, these figures reflect the number of convicted persons, and do not take into account the fact that a significant part of Gulag inmates had been convicted more than one time, so the actual number of convicted is somewhat overstated by these statistics.[13] From other hand, during some periods of Gulag history the official figures of GULAG population reflected the camps' capacity, not the actual number of inmates, so the actual figures were 15% higher in, e.g. 1946.[20]

The USSR implemented a number of labor disciplinary measures, due to the lack of productivity of its labour force in the early 1930s. 1.8 million workers were sentenced to 6 months in forced labor with a quarter of their original pay, 3.3 million faced sanctions, and 60k were imprisoned for absentees in 1940 alone. The conditions of Soviet workers worsened in WW2 as 1.3 million were punished in 1942, and 1 million each were punished in subsequent 1943 and 1944 with the reduction of 25% of food rations. Further more, 460 thousand were imprisoned throughout these years.[158]

Impact edit

Culture edit

The Gulag spanned nearly four decades of Soviet and East European history and affected millions of individuals. Its cultural impact was enormous.

The Gulag has become a major influence on contemporary Russian thinking, and an important part of modern Russian folklore. Many songs by the authors-performers known as the bards, most notably Vladimir Vysotsky and Alexander Galich, neither of whom ever served time in the camps, describe life inside the Gulag and glorified the life of "zeks". Words and phrases which originated in the labor camps became part of the Russian/Soviet vernacular in the 1960s and 1970s. The memoirs of Alexander Dolgun, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Varlam Shalamov and Yevgenia Ginzburg, among others, became a symbol of defiance in Soviet society. These writings harshly chastised the Soviet people for their tolerance and apathy regarding the Gulag, but at the same time provided a testament to the courage and resolve of those who were imprisoned.

Another cultural phenomenon in the Soviet Union linked with the Gulag was the forced migration of many artists and other people of culture to Siberia. This resulted in a Renaissance of sorts in places like Magadan, where, for example, the quality of theatre production was comparable to Moscow's and Eddie Rosner played jazz.

Literature edit

Many eyewitness accounts of Gulag prisoners have been published:

  • Varlam Shalamov's Kolyma Tales is a short-story collection, cited by most major works on the Gulag, and widely considered one of the main Soviet accounts.
  • Victor Kravchenko wrote I Chose Freedom after defecting to the United States in 1944. As a leader of industrial plants he had encountered forced labor camps in across the Soviet Union from 1935 to 1941. He describes a visit to one camp at Kemerovo on the Tom River in Siberia. Factories paid a fixed sum to the KGB for every convict they employed.
  • Anatoli Granovsky wrote I Was an NKVD Agent after defecting to Sweden in 1946 and included his experiences seeing gulag prisoners as a young boy, as well as his experiences as a prisoner himself in 1939. Granovsky's father was sent to the gulag in 1937.
  • Julius Margolin's book A Travel to the Land Ze-Ka was finished in 1947, but it was impossible to publish such a book about the Soviet Union at the time, immediately after World War II.
  • Gustaw Herling-Grudziński wrote A World Apart, which was translated into English by Andrzej Ciolkosz and published with an introduction by Bertrand Russell in 1951. By describing life in the gulag in a harrowing personal account, it provides an in-depth, original analysis of the nature of the Soviet communist system.
  • Victor Herman's book Coming out of the Ice: An Unexpected Life. Herman experienced firsthand many places, prisons, and experiences that Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was able to reference in only passing or through brief second hand accounts.
  • Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's book The Gulag Archipelago was not the first literary work about labor camps. His previous book on the subject, "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich", about a typical day in the life of a Gulag inmate, was originally published in the most prestigious Soviet monthly, Novy Mir (New World), in November 1962, but was soon banned and withdrawn from all libraries. It was the first work to demonstrate the Gulag as an instrument of governmental repression against its own citizens on a massive scale. The First Circle, an account of three days in the lives of prisoners in the Marfino sharashka or special prison was submitted for publication to the Soviet authorities shortly after One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich but was rejected and later published abroad in 1968.
  • Slavomir Rawicz's book "The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom": In 1941, the author and six other fellow prisoners escaped a Soviet labor camp in Yakutsk.
  • János Rózsás, a Hungarian writer, often referred to as the Hungarian Solzhenitsyn,[159] wrote many books and articles on the issue of the Gulag.
  • Zoltan Szalkai, a Hungarian documentary filmmaker, made several films about gulag camps.
  • Karlo Štajner, a Croatian communist who was active in the former Kingdom of Yugoslavia and the manager of the Comintern Publishing House in Moscow 1932–39, was arrested one night and taken from his Moscow home after being accused of anti-revolutionary activities. He spent the next 20 years in camps from Solovki to Norilsk. After USSR–Yugoslavian political normalization he was re-tried and quickly found innocent. He left the Soviet Union with his wife, who had been waiting for him for 20 years, in 1956 and spent the rest of his life in Zagreb, Croatia. He wrote an impressive book titled 7000 days in Siberia.
  • Dancing Under the Red Star by Karl Tobien (ISBN 1-4000-7078-3) tells the story of Margaret Werner, an athletic girl who moves to Russia right before Stalin came to power. She faces many hardships, as her father is taken away from her and imprisoned. Werner is the only American woman who was held in the Gulag to tell about it.
  • Alexander Dolgun's Story: An American in the Gulag (ISBN 0-394-49497-0), by a member of the US Embassy, and I Was a Slave in Russia (ISBN 0-8159-5800-5), an American factory owner's son, were two more American citizens interned who wrote of their ordeal. They were interned due to their American citizenship for about eight years c. 1946–55.
  • Yevgenia Ginzburg wrote two famous books about her remembrances, Journey Into the Whirlwind and Within the Whirlwind.
  • Savić Marković Štedimlija, a pro-Croatian Montenegrin ideologist. Caught in Austria by the Red Army in 1945, he was sent to the USSR and spent ten years in the Gulag. After his release, Marković wrote his autobiographical account in two volumes titled Ten years in Gulag (Deset godina u Gulagu, Matica crnogorska, Podgorica, Montenegro 2004).
  • Anița Nandriș-Cudla's book, 20 Years in Siberia [20 de ani în Siberia] is the own life's account written by a Romanian peasant woman from Bucovina (Mahala village near Cernăuți) who managed to survive the harsh, forced labor system together with her three sons. Together with her husband and her three underage children, she was deported from Mahala village to the Soviet Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, at the Polar Circle, without a trial or even a communicated accusation. The same night of June 12 to 13, 1941, (that is, just before Germany's invasion of the USSR), overall 602 fellow villagers were arrested and deported, without any prior notice. Her mother received the same sentence but was spared from deportation after the fact that she was a paraplegic was acknowledged by the authorities. It was later discovered that the reason for her deportation and forced labor was the fake and nonsensical claim that, allegedly, her husband had been a mayor in the Romanian administration, a politician and a rich peasant, none of the latter of which was true. Separated from her husband, she brought up the three boys, overcame typhus, scorbutus, malnutrition, extreme cold and harsh toils, to later return to Bucovina after rehabilitation. Her manuscript was written toward the end of her life, in the simple and direct language of a peasant with three years of public school education, and was secretly brought to Romania before the fall of Romanian communism, in 1982. Her manuscript was first published in 1991. Her deportation was shared mainly with Romanians from Bucovina and Basarabia, Finnish and Polish prisoners, as token proof to show that Gulag labor camps had also been used for the shattering/ extermination of the natives in the newly occupied territories of the Soviet Union.
  • Frantsishak Alyakhnovich – Solovki prisoner
  • Blagoy Popov, a Bulgarian communist and a defendant in the Leipzig trial, along with Georgi Dimitrov and Vasil Tanev, was arrested in 1937 during the Stalinist purges and spent seventeen years in Norillag. Popov was released in 1954, after the death of Stalin, and returned to Bulgaria.[160] He wrote his autobiographical account in the book From the Leipzig trial to the Siberia camps (От Лайпцигския процес в Сибирските лагери, Изток-Запад, София, България, 2012 ISBN 978-619-152-025-1).
  • Mkrtich Armen, an Armenian writer who was imprisoned in 1937 and rehabilitated in 1945, published a collection of his memories under the title "They Ordered to Give You" in 1964.
  • Gurgen Mahari, an Armenian writer and poet, who was arrested in 1936, released in 1947, arrested again in 1948 and sent into Siberian exile as an "unreliable type" until 1954, wrote "Barbed Wires in Blossom", a novella based largely on his personal experiences in a Soviet gulag.
  • Gulag Boss: A Soviet Memoir is a 2011 memoir by Fyodor Vasilevich Mochulsky (1918–1999), a Soviet Engineer and eventual head of numerous Gulag camps in the northern Russian region of Pechorlag, Pechora, from 1940 to 1946.

Colonization edit

 
The city of Vorkuta

Soviet state documents show that the goals of the gulag included colonization of sparsely populated remote areas and exploiting its resources using forced labor. In 1929, OGPU was given the task to colonize these areas.[161] To this end, the notion of "free settlement" was introduced. On 12 April 1930 Genrikh Yagoda wrote to the OGPU Commission:

The camps must be transformed into colonizing settlements, without waiting for the end of periods of confinement... Here is my plan: to turn all the prisoners into a settler population until they have served their sentences.[161]

When well-behaved persons had served the majority of their terms, they could be released for "free settlement" (вольное поселение, volnoye poseleniye) outside the confinement of the camp. They were known as "free settlers" (вольнопоселенцы, volnoposelentsy; not to be confused with the term ссыльнопоселенцы, ssyl'noposelentsy, "exile settlers"). In addition, for persons who served full term, but who were denied the free choice of place of residence, it was recommended to assign them for "free settlement" and give them land in the general vicinity of the place of confinement.

The gulag inherited this approach from the katorga system.

It is estimated that of the 40,000 people collecting state pensions in Vorkuta, 32,000 are trapped former gulag inmates, or their descendants.[162]

Life after a term was served edit

Persons who served a term in a camp or prison were restricted from taking a wide range of jobs. Concealment of a previous imprisonment was a triable offence. Persons who served terms as "politicals" were nuisances for "First Departments" (Первый Отдел, Pervyj Otdel, outlets of the secret police at all enterprises and institutions), because former "politicals" had to be monitored.[citation needed]

Many people who were released from camps were restricted from settling in larger cities.

Memorialization edit

Gulag memorials edit

 
Map of Stalin's Gulag camps in Gulag Museum in Moscow
 
Memorial in St. Petersburg

Both Moscow and St. Petersburg have memorials to the victims of the Gulag made of boulders from the Solovki camp — the first prison camp in the Gulag system. Moscow's memorial is on Lubyanka Square, the site of the headquarters of the NKVD. People gather at these memorials every year on the Day of Victims of the Repression (October 30).

Gulag Museum edit

 
Gulag Museum in Moscow, founded in 2001 by historian Anton Antonov-Ovseyenko

Moscow has the State Gulag Museum whose first director was Anton Antonov-Ovseyenko.[163][164][165][166] In 2015, another museum dedicated to the Gulag was opened in Moscow.[167]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Based on data from Memorial, a human-rights group.
  2. ^ Some disputed[1] estimates range from over 2.7[5] to 6[6][7][8] million.[1]
  3. ^ /ˈɡlɑːɡ/, UK also /-læɡ/; Russian: [ɡʊˈlak] .[9] Also spelled GULAG, or GULag.
  4. ^ ГУЛАГ, ГУЛаг, an acronym for Глaвное управлeние лагерeй, Glavnoye upravleniye lagerey, "chief administration of the camps". The original name given to the system of camps controlled by the GPU was the Main Administration of Correctional Labor Camps (Главное управление исправительно-трудовых лагерей, Glavnoje upravlenije ispraviteljno-trudovyh lagerej).
  5. ^ Including those who died in custody.
  6. ^ Special contingent.

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d Wheatcroft, Stephen G. (1999). "Victims of Stalinism and the Soviet Secret Police: The Comparability and Reliability of the Archival Data. Not the Last Word" (PDF). Europe-Asia Studies. 51 (2): 320. doi:10.1080/09668139999056.
  3. ^ a b c d e Rosefielde, Steven. 2009. Red Holocaust. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-77757-7. p. 67 "...more complete archival data increases camp deaths by 19.4 percent to 1,258,537"; pg 77: "The best archivally-based estimate of Gulag excess deaths at present is 1.6 million from 1929 to 1953."
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Further reading edit

Articles edit

  • Barenberg, Alan. 2015. "The Gulag in Vorkuta: Beyond Space and Time." Laboratorium: Russian Review of Social Research 7(1)
  • Barenberg, Alan, Wilson T. Bell, Sean Kinnear, Steven Maddox, and Lynne Viola. 2017. "New directions in Gulag studies: a roundtable discussion." Canadian Slavonic Papers 59(3/4):376–95. doi:10.1080/00085006.2017.1384665
  • Bell, Wilson T. 2013. "Was the Gulag an Archipelago? De‐Convoyed Prisoners and Porous Borders in the Camps of Western Siberia." The Russian Review 72(1).
  • Kravchuk, Pavel. 2013. .
  • Viola, Lynne. 2018. "New sources on Soviet perpetrators of mass repression: a research note." Canadian Slavonic Papers 60(3/4):592–604. doi:10.1080/00085006.2018.1497393.
  • Hardy, Jeffrey S. 2017. "Of pelicans and prisoners: avian–human interactions in the Soviet Gulag." Canadian Slavonic Papers 60(3/4):375–406. doi:10.1080/00085006.2017.1396837.
  • Healey, Dan. 2015. "Lives in the Balance: Weak and Disabled Prisoners and the Biopolitics of the Gulag." Kritika 16(3)

Memoirs edit

  • Baghirov, Ayyub. [1999] 2006. "Bitter Days of Kolyma." Azerbaijan International 14(1):58–71.
  • Bardach, Janusz. 1999. Man Is Wolf to Man: Surviving the Gulag. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-22152-4.
  • Ciszek, Walter. 1997. He Leadeth Me: An Extraordinary Testament of Faith. Doubleday. 216 pp., ISBN 978-0385040518.
  • Dolgun, Alexander, and Patrick Watson. 1975. Alexander Dolgun's Story: An American in the Gulag." New York: Knopf. 370 pp., ISBN 978-0-394-49497-5.
  • Ginzburg, Eugenia. [1967] 2002. Journey into the Whirlwind, Harvest/HBJ Book. 432 pp., ISBN 0-15-602751-8.
  • —— 1982. Within the Whirlwind, Harvest/HBJ Book, 448 pp., ISBN 0-15-697649-8.
  • Gliksman, Jerzy. 1948. Tell the West: An account of his experiences as a slave laborer in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Gresham Press. 358pp.
  • Hollander, Paul, ed. 2006. "." Pp. xv–lxxviii in From the Gulag to the Killing Fields: Personal Accounts of Political Violence and Repression in Communist States, with a foreword by A. Applebaum. Intercollegiate Studies Institute. ISBN 1-932236-78-3. (From the annotation: "more than forty dramatic personal memoirs of Communist violence and repression from political prisoners across the globe.")
  • Margolin, Julius. 1952. ПУТЕШЕСТВИЕ В СТРАНУ ЗЭ-КА A Travel to the Land Ze-Ka, full text, according to the original manuscript (written in 1947) (in Russian)
  • Margolin, Julius. 2020 (1952). Journey into the Land of the Zeks and Back: A Memoir of the Gulag (S. Hoffman, trans.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780197502143
  • Mochulsky, Fyodor V. Gulag Boss: A Soviet Memoir. Oxford University Press. 272 pp., the first memoir from an NKVD employee translated into English
  • Noble, John H. 1961. I Was a Slave in Russia, Broadview, Illinois: Cicero Bible Press.
  • Petkevich, Tamara. 2010. Memoir of a Gulag Actress. Northern Illinois University.
  • Rossi, Jacques. 2018. Fragments of Lives: Chronicles of the Gulag (Antonelli-Street trans.). Prague: Karolinum. ISBN 9788024637006
  • Sadigzade, Ummugulsum. [2005] 2006. "Prison Diary: Tears Are My Only Companions", translated by A. Mustafayeva, edited by B. Blair. Azerbaijan International 14(1):40–45.
  • Sadigzade, Ummugulsum, and her children. 2006. "Letters from Prison." Azerbaijan International 14(1):48–53. (Children/family: Seyid Husein, Sayyara Sadigzade, Ogtay Sadigzade, Jighatay Sadigzade, Toghrul Sadigzade, and Gumral Sadigzade.)
  • Sadikhli, Murtuz. [1991] 2006. "Memory of Blood." Azerbaijan International 14(1):18–19.
  • Shalamov, Varlam. 1995. Kolyma Tales. Penguin Books. 528 pp., ISBN 0-14-018695-6.
  • Shumuk, Danylo. 1974. Za Chidnim Obriyam [Beyond the Eastern Horizon]. Paris: Smoloskyp. 447 pp.
  • —— 1984. Life sentence: Memoirs of a Ukrainian political prisoner. Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Study. 401 pp., ISBN 978-0-920862-17-9.
  • Solomon, Michel. 1971. Magadan. New York: Auerbach. ISBN 0877690855.
  • Volovich, Hava. 1999. Till My Tale is Told: Women's Memoirs of Gulag, ed. Simeon Vilensky. Indiana University Press.
  • Solzhenitsyn's, Shalamov's, Ginzburg's works at Lib.ru (in original Russian)
  • Вернон Кресс (alias of Петр Зигмундович Демант) "Зекамерон XX века", autobiographical novel (in Russian)
  • Бирюков А.М. Колымские истории: очерки. Новосибирск, 2004

Fiction edit

External links edit

  • Gulag: Forced Labor Camps, Online Exhibition, Blinken Open Society Archives
  • The website of the Virtual Gulag Museum August 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine projected by the scientific information center Memorial
  • GULAG History Museum in Moscow
  • Photo album at NYPL Digital Gallery
  • The GULAG, Revelations from the Russian Archives at Library of Congress
  • Brutal! Drawings from the Gulag by Danzig Baldaev, a retired Soviet prison guard (YT)

gulag, other, uses, disambiguation, system, forced, labor, camps, soviet, union, word, originally, referred, only, division, soviet, secret, police, that, charge, running, forced, labor, camps, from, 1930s, early, 1950s, during, joseph, stalin, rule, english, . For other uses see Gulag disambiguation The Gulag c d was a system of forced labor camps in the Soviet Union 10 11 12 9 The word Gulag originally referred only to the division of the Soviet secret police that was in charge of running the forced labor camps from the 1930s to the early 1950s during Joseph Stalin s rule but in English literature the term is popularly used for the system of forced labor throughout the Soviet era The abbreviation GULAG GULAG stands for Gla vnoe Upravle nie ispravi telno trudovy h LAGere j Main Directorate of Correctional Labour Camps but the full official name of the agency changed several times GulagTrademark logo 1939 Map of the camps between 1923 and 1961 a 18 000 000 people passed through the Gulag s camps 1 2 3 53 Gulag camp directorates colloquially referred to as simply camps and 423 labor colonies in the Soviet Union as of March 1940 4 The tentative consensus in contemporary Soviet historiography is that roughly 1 600 000 b died due to detention in the camps 1 2 3 GulagRussianGULAGRomanizationGulagLiteral meaningMain Administration of Camps General Authority of CampsA punishment cell block in one of the subcamps of Vorkutlag 1945The Gulag is recognized as a major instrument of political repression in the Soviet Union The camps housed a wide range of convicts from petty criminals to political prisoners a large number of whom were convicted by simplified procedures such as NKVD troikas or other instruments of extrajudicial punishment In 1918 1922 the agency was administered by the Cheka followed by the GPU 1922 1923 the OGPU 1923 1934 later known as the NKVD 1934 1946 and the Ministry of Internal Affairs MVD in the final years The Solovki prison camp the first correctional labour camp which was constructed after the revolution was opened in 1918 and legalized by a decree On the creation of the forced labor camps on April 15 1919 The internment system grew rapidly reaching a population of 100 000 in the 1920s By the end of 1940 the population of the Gulag camps amounted to 1 5 million 13 The emergent consensus among scholars is that of the 14 million prisoners who passed through the Gulag camps and the 4 million prisoners who passed through the Gulag colonies from 1930 to 1953 roughly 1 5 to 1 7 million prisoners perished there or they died soon after they were released 1 2 3 Some journalists and writers who question the reliability of such data heavily rely on memoir sources that come to higher estimations 1 7 Archival researchers have found no plan of destruction of the gulag population and no statement of official intent to kill them and prisoner releases vastly exceeded the number of deaths in the Gulag 1 This policy can partially be attributed to the common practice of releasing prisoners who were suffering from incurable diseases as well as prisoners who were near death 13 14 Almost immediately after the death of Stalin the Soviet establishment started to dismantle the Gulag system A mass general amnesty was granted in the immediate aftermath of Stalin s death but it was only offered to non political prisoners and political prisoners who had been sentenced to a maximum of five years in prison Shortly thereafter Nikita Khrushchev was elected First Secretary initiating the processes of de Stalinization and the Khrushchev Thaw triggering a mass release and rehabilitation of political prisoners Six years later on 25 January 1960 the Gulag system was officially abolished when the remains of its administration were dissolved by Khrushchev The legal practice of sentencing convicts to penal labor continues to exist in the Russian Federation but its capacity is greatly reduced 15 16 Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature who survived eight years of Gulag incarceration gave the term its international repute with the publication of The Gulag Archipelago in 1973 The author likened the scattered camps to a chain of islands and as an eyewitness he described the Gulag as a system where people were worked to death 17 In March 1940 there were 53 Gulag camp directorates simply referred to as camps and 423 labor colonies in the Soviet Union 4 Many mining and industrial towns and cities in northern Russia eastern Russia and Kazakhstan such as Karaganda Norilsk Vorkuta and Magadan were blocks of camps which were originally built by prisoners and subsequently run by ex prisoners 18 Contents 1 Name 2 Overview 3 Contemporary usage of the word and the usage of other terms 4 History 4 1 Background 4 2 Formation and expansion under Stalin 4 3 During World War II 4 3 1 Political role 4 3 2 Economic role 4 4 After World War II 5 Death toll 5 1 Mortality rate 6 Gulag administrators 7 Conditions 7 1 Gulag and famine 1932 1933 7 2 Social conditions 8 Geography 9 Special institutions 10 Historiography 10 1 Origins and functions of the Gulag 10 2 Archival documents 10 3 History of Gulag population estimates 11 Impact 11 1 Culture 11 1 1 Literature 11 2 Colonization 11 3 Life after a term was served 12 Memorialization 12 1 Gulag memorials 12 2 Gulag Museum 13 See also 13 1 Similar establishments elsewhere 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 16 1 Articles 16 2 Memoirs 16 3 Fiction 17 External linksName editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2022 GULAG GULAG stands for Gla vnoe upravle nie ispravi telno trudovy h lagere j Main Directorate of Correctional Labour Camps It was renamed several times e g to Main Directorate of Correctional Labor Colonies Glavnoe upravlenie ispravitelno trudovyh kolonij GUITK which names can be seen in the documents describing the subordination of various camps 19 Overview edit nbsp Genrikh Yagoda middle inspecting the construction of the Moscow Volga canal 1935 Behind his right shoulder is a young Nikita Khrushchev Some historians estimate that 14 million people were imprisoned in the Gulag labor camps from 1929 to 1953 the estimates for the period from 1918 to 1929 are more difficult to calculate 20 Other calculations by historian Orlando Figes refer to 25 million prisoners of the Gulag in 1928 1953 21 A further 6 7 million were deported and exiled to remote areas of the USSR and 4 5 million passed through labor colonies plus 3 5 million who were already in or had been sent to labor settlements 20 According to some estimates the total population of the camps varied from 510 307 in 1934 to 1 727 970 in 1953 4 According to other estimates at the beginning of 1953 the total number of prisoners in prison camps was more than 2 4 million of which more than 465 000 were political prisoners 22 Between the years 1934 to 1953 20 to 40 of the Gulag population in each given year were released 23 24 The institutional analysis of the Soviet concentration system is complicated by the formal distinction between GULAG and GUPVI GUPVI GUPVI was the Main Administration for Affairs of Prisoners of War and Internees Glavnoe upravlenie po delam voennoplennyh i internirovannyh Glavnoye upravleniye po delam voyennoplennyh i internirovannyh a department of NKVD later MVD in charge of handling of foreign civilian internees and POWs prisoners of war in the Soviet Union during and in the aftermath of World War II 1939 1953 In many ways the GUPVI system was similar to GULAG 25 Its major function was the organization of foreign forced labor in the Soviet Union The top management of GUPVI came from the GULAG system The major memoir noted distinction from GULAG was the absence of convicted criminals in the GUPVI camps Otherwise the conditions in both camp systems were similar hard labor poor nutrition and living conditions and high mortality rate 26 For the Soviet political prisoners like Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn all foreign civilian detainees and foreign POWs were imprisoned in the GULAG the surviving foreign civilians and POWs considered themselves prisoners in the GULAG According to the estimates in total during the whole period of the existence of the GUPVI there were over 500 POW camps within the Soviet Union and abroad which imprisoned over 4 000 000 POW 27 Most Gulag inmates were not political prisoners although significant numbers of political prisoners could be found in the camps at any one time 28 Petty crimes and jokes about the Soviet government and officials were punishable by imprisonment 29 30 About half of political prisoners in the Gulag camps were imprisoned by administrative means i e without trial at courts official data suggest that there were over 2 6 million sentences to imprisonment on cases investigated by the secret police throughout 1921 53 31 Maximum sentences varied depending on the type of crime and changed over time From 1953 the maximum sentence for petty theft was six months 32 having previously been one year and seven years Theft of state property however had a minimum sentence of seven years and a maximum of twenty five 33 In 1958 the maximum sentence for any crime was reduced from twenty five to fifteen years 34 In 1960 the Ministerstvo Vnutrennikh Del MVD ceased to function as the Soviet wide administration of the camps in favour of individual republic MVD branches The centralised detention administrations temporarily ceased functioning 35 36 Contemporary usage of the word and the usage of other terms edit nbsp The fence at the old Gulag camp in Perm 36 founded in 1943 turned into a museum Many Ukrainian nationalists were repressed and held at this camp Although the term Gulag was originally used in reference to a government agency in English and many other languages the acronym acquired the qualities of a common noun denoting the Soviet system of prison based unfree labor 37 Even more broadly Gulag has come to mean the Soviet repressive system itself the set of procedures that prisoners once called the meat grinder the arrests the interrogations the transport in unheated cattle cars the forced labor the destruction of families the years spent in exile the early and unnecessary deaths Western authors use the term Gulag to denote all the prisons and internment camps in the Soviet Union The term s contemporary usage is at times notably not directly related to the USSR such as in the expression North Korea s Gulag 38 for camps operational today 39 The word Gulag was not often used in Russian either officially or colloquially the predominant terms were the camps lagerya lagerya and the zone zona zona usually singular for the labor camp system and for the individual camps The official term correctional labour camp was suggested for official use by the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in the session of July 27 1929 History editBackground edit nbsp Prisoners on a ship on their way to Sakhalin remote prison island c 1903The Tsar and the Russian Empire both used forced exile and forced labour as forms of judicial punishment Katorga a category of punishment which was reserved for those who were convicted of the most serious crimes had many of the features which were associated with labor camp imprisonment confinement simplified facilities as opposed to the facilities which existed in prisons and forced labor usually involving hard unskilled or semi skilled work According to historian Anne Applebaum katorga was not a common sentence approximately 6 000 katorga convicts were serving sentences in 1906 and 28 600 in 1916 40 Under the Imperial Russian penal system those who were convicted of less serious crimes were sent to corrective prisons and they were also made to work 41 Forced exile to Siberia had been in use for a wide range of offenses since the seventeenth century and it was a common punishment for political dissidents and revolutionaries In the nineteenth century the members of the failed Decembrist revolt and Polish nobles who resisted Russian rule were sent into exile Fyodor Dostoevsky was sentenced to die for reading banned literature in 1849 but the sentence was commuted to banishment to Siberia Members of various socialist revolutionary groups including Bolsheviks such as Sergo Ordzhonikidze Vladimir Lenin Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin were also sent into exile 42 Convicts who were serving labor sentences and exiles were sent to the underpopulated areas of Siberia and the Russian Far East regions that lacked towns or food sources as well as organized transportation systems Despite the isolated conditions some prisoners successfully escaped to populated areas Stalin himself escaped three of the four times after he was sent into exile 43 Since these times Siberia gained its fearful connotation as a place of punishment a reputation which was further enhanced by the Soviet GULAG system The Bolsheviks own experiences with exile and forced labor provided them with a model which they could base their own system on including the importance of strict enforcement From 1920 to 1950 the leaders of the Communist Party and the Soviet state considered repression a tool that they should use to secure the normal functioning of the Soviet state system and preserve and strengthen their positions within their social base the working class when the Bolsheviks took power peasants represented 80 of the population 44 In the midst of the Russian Civil War Lenin and the Bolsheviks established a special prison camp system separate from its traditional prison system and under the control of the Cheka 45 These camps as Lenin envisioned them had a distinctly political purpose 46 These early camps of the GULAG system were introduced in order to isolate and eliminate class alien socially dangerous disruptive suspicious and other disloyal elements whose deeds and thoughts were not contributing to the strengthening of the dictatorship of the proletariat 44 Forced labor as a method of reeducation was applied in the Solovki prison camp as early as the 1920s 47 based on Trotsky s experiments with forced labor camps for Czech war prisoners from 1918 and his proposals to introduce compulsory labor service voiced in Terrorism and Communism 47 48 Various categories of prisoners were defined petty criminals POWs of the Russian Civil War officials accused of corruption sabotage and embezzlement political enemies dissidents and other people deemed dangerous for the state In the first decade of Soviet rule the judicial and penal systems were neither unified nor coordinated and there was a distinction between criminal prisoners and political or special prisoners The traditional judicial and prison system which dealt with criminal prisoners were first overseen by The People s Commissariat of Justice until 1922 after which they were overseen by the People s Commissariat of Internal Affairs also known as the NKVD 49 The Cheka and its successor organizations the GPU or State Political Directorate and the OGPU oversaw political prisoners and the special camps to which they were sent 50 In April 1929 the judicial distinctions between criminal and political prisoners were eliminated and control of the entire Soviet penal system turned over to the OGPU 51 In 1928 there were 30 000 individuals interned the authorities were opposed to compelled labor In 1927 the official in charge of prison administration wrote The exploitation of prison labour the system of squeezing golden sweat from them the organisation of production in places of confinement which while profitable from a commercial point of view is fundamentally lacking in corrective significance these are entirely inadmissible in Soviet places of confinement 52 The legal base and the guidance for the creation of the system of corrective labor camps ispravi telno trudovye lagerya Ispravitel no trudovye lagerya the backbone of what is commonly referred to as the Gulag was a secret decree from the Sovnarkom of July 11 1929 about the use of penal labor that duplicated the corresponding appendix to the minutes of the Politburo meeting of June 27 1929 citation needed One of the Gulag system founders was Naftaly Frenkel In 1923 he was arrested for illegally crossing borders and smuggling He was sentenced to 10 years hard labor at Solovki which later came to be known as the first camp of the Gulag While serving his sentence he wrote a letter to the camp administration detailing a number of productivity improvement proposals including the infamous system of labor exploitation whereby the inmates food rations were to be linked to their rate of production a proposal known as nourishment scale shkala pitaniya This notorious you eat as you work system would often kill weaker prisoners in weeks and caused countless casualties The letter caught the attention of a number of high communist officials including Genrikh Yagoda and Frenkel soon went from being an inmate to becoming a camp commander and an important Gulag official His proposals soon saw widespread adoption in the Gulag system 53 After having appeared as an instrument and place for isolating counter revolutionary and criminal elements the Gulag because of its principle of correction by forced labor quickly became in fact an independent branch of the national economy secured on the cheap labor force presented by prisoners Hence it is followed by one more important reason for the constancy of the repressive policy namely the state s interest in unremitting rates of receiving a cheap labor force that was forcibly used mainly in the extreme conditions of the east and north 44 The Gulag possessed both punitive and economic functions 54 Formation and expansion under Stalin edit The Gulag was an administration body that watched over the camps eventually its name would be used for these camps retrospectively After Lenin s death in 1924 Stalin was able to take control of the government and began to form the gulag system On June 27 1929 the Politburo created a system of self supporting camps that would eventually replace the existing prisons around the country 55 These prisons were meant to receive inmates that received a prison sentence that exceeded three years Prisoners that had a shorter prison sentence than three years were to remain in the prison system that was still under the purview of the NKVD The purpose of these new camps was to colonise the remote and inhospitable environments throughout the Soviet Union These changes took place around the same time that Stalin started to institute collectivisation and rapid industrial development Collectivisation resulted in a large scale purge of peasants and so called Kulaks The Kulaks were supposedly wealthy comparatively to other Soviet peasants and were considered to be capitalists by the state and by extension enemies of socialism The term would also become associated with anyone who opposed or even seemed unsatisfied with the Soviet government By late 1929 Stalin began a program known as dekulakization Stalin demanded that the kulak class be completely wiped out resulting in the imprisonment and execution of Soviet peasants In a mere four months 60 000 people were sent to the camps and another 154 000 exiled This was only the beginning of the dekulakisation process however In 1931 alone 1 803 392 people were exiled 56 Although these massive relocation processes were successful in getting a large potential free forced labor work force where they needed to be that is about all it was successful at doing The special settlers as the Soviet government referred to them all lived on starvation level rations and many people starved to death in the camps and anyone who was healthy enough to escape tried to do just that This resulted in the government having to give rations to a group of people they were getting hardly any use out of and was just costing the Soviet government money The Unified State Political Administration OGPU quickly realised the problem and began to reform the dekulakisation process 57 To help prevent the mass escapes the OGPU started to recruit people within the colony to help stop people who attempted to leave and set up ambushes around known popular escape routes The OGPU also attempted to raise the living conditions in these camps that would not encourage people to actively try and escape and Kulaks were promised that they would regain their rights after five years Even these revisions ultimately failed to resolve the problem and the dekulakisation process was a failure in providing the government with a steady forced labor force These prisoners were also lucky to be in the gulag in the early 1930s Prisoners were relatively well off compared to what the prisoners would have to go through in the final years of the gulag 57 The Gulag was officially established on April 25 1930 as the GULAG by the OGPU order 130 63 in accordance with the Sovnarkom order 22 p 248 dated April 7 1930 It was renamed as the GULAG in November of that year 58 The hypothesis that economic considerations were responsible for mass arrests during the period of Stalinism has been refuted on the grounds of former Soviet archives that have become accessible since the 1990s although some archival sources also tend to support an economic hypothesis 59 60 In any case the development of the camp system followed economic lines The growth of the camp system coincided with the peak of the Soviet industrialisation campaign Most of the camps established to accommodate the masses of incoming prisoners were assigned distinct economic tasks citation needed These included the exploitation of natural resources and the colonization of remote areas as well as the realisation of enormous infrastructural facilities and industrial construction projects The plan to achieve these goals with special settlements instead of labor camps was dropped after the revealing of the Nazino affair in 1933 The 1931 32 archives indicate the Gulag had approximately 200 000 prisoners in the camps while in 1935 approximately 800 000 were in camps and 300 000 in colonies 61 Gulag population reached a peak value 1 5 million in 1941 gradually decreased during the war and then started to grow again achieving a maximum by 1953 4 Besides Gulag camps a significant amount of prisoners which confined prisoners serving short sentence terms 4 nbsp The population of Gulag camps blue and Gulag colonies red in 1934 53 4 In the early 1930s a tightening of the Soviet penal policy caused a significant growth of the prison camp population 62 During the Great Purge of 1937 38 mass arrests caused another increase in inmate numbers Hundreds of thousands of persons were arrested and sentenced to long prison terms on the grounds of one of the multiple passages of the notorious Article 58 of the Criminal Codes of the Union republics which defined punishment for various forms of counterrevolutionary activities Under NKVD Order No 00447 tens of thousands of Gulag inmates were executed in 1937 38 for continuing counterrevolutionary activities Between 1934 and 1941 the number of prisoners with higher education increased more than eight times and the number of prisoners with high education increased five times 44 It resulted in their increased share in the overall composition of the camp prisoners 44 Among the camp prisoners the number and share of the intelligentsia was growing at the quickest pace 44 Distrust hostility and even hatred for the intelligentsia was a common characteristic of the Soviet leaders 44 Information regarding the imprisonment trends and consequences for the intelligentsia derive from the extrapolations of Viktor Zemskov from a collection of prison camp population movements data 44 63 During World War II edit Political role edit On the eve of World War II Soviet archives indicate a combined camp and colony population upwards of 1 6 million in 1939 according to V P Kozlov 61 Anne Applebaum and Steven Rosefielde estimate that 1 2 to 1 5 million people were in Gulag system s prison camps and colonies when the war started 64 65 After the German invasion of Poland that marked the start of World War II in Europe the Soviet Union invaded and annexed eastern parts of the Second Polish Republic In 1940 the Soviet Union occupied Estonia Latvia Lithuania Bessarabia now the Republic of Moldova and Bukovina According to some estimates hundreds of thousands of Polish citizens 66 67 and inhabitants of the other annexed lands regardless of their ethnic origin were arrested and sent to the Gulag camps However according to the official data the total number of sentences for political and anti state espionage terrorism crimes in the USSR in 1939 41 was 211 106 31 Approximately 300 000 Polish prisoners of war were captured by the USSR during and after the Polish Defensive War 68 Almost all of the captured officers and a large number of ordinary soldiers were then murdered see Katyn massacre or sent to Gulag 69 Of the 10 000 12 000 Poles sent to Kolyma in 1940 41 most prisoners of war only 583 men survived released in 1942 to join the Polish Armed Forces in the East 70 Out of General Anders 80 000 evacuees from Soviet Union gathered in Great Britain only 310 volunteered to return to Soviet controlled Poland in 1947 71 During the Great Patriotic War Gulag populations declined sharply due to a steep rise in mortality in 1942 43 In the winter of 1941 a quarter of the Gulag s population died of starvation 72 516 841 prisoners died in prison camps in 1941 43 73 74 from a combination of their harsh working conditions and the famine caused by the German invasion This period accounts for about half of all gulag deaths according to Russian statistics In 1943 the term katorga works katorzhnye raboty was reintroduced They were initially intended for Nazi collaborators but then other categories of political prisoners for example members of deported peoples who fled from exile were also sentenced to katorga works Prisoners sentenced to katorga works were sent to Gulag prison camps with the most harsh regime and many of them perished 74 Economic role edit nbsp Central shop in Norilsk built by prisoners of the Norillag nbsp Lithuanian deportees preparing logs for rafting on the Mana RiverUp until World War II the Gulag system expanded dramatically to create a Soviet camp economy Right before the war forced labor provided 46 5 of the nation s nickel 76 of its tin 40 of its cobalt 40 5 of its chrome iron ore 60 of its gold and 25 3 of its timber 75 And in preparation for war the NKVD put up many more factories and built highways and railroads The Gulag quickly switched to the production of arms and supplies for the army after fighting began At first transportation remained a priority In 1940 the NKVD focused most of its energy on railroad construction 76 This would prove extremely important when the German advance into the Soviet Union started in 1941 In addition factories converted to produce ammunition uniforms and other supplies Moreover the NKVD gathered skilled workers and specialists from throughout the Gulag into 380 special colonies which produced tanks aircraft armaments and ammunition 75 Despite its low capital costs the camp economy suffered from serious flaws For one actual productivity almost never matched estimates the estimates proved far too optimistic In addition scarcity of machinery and tools plagued the camps and the tools that the camps did have quickly broke The Eastern Siberian Trust of the Chief Administration of Camps for Highway Construction destroyed ninety four trucks in just three years 75 But the greatest problem was simple forced labor was less efficient than free labor In fact prisoners in the Gulag were on average half as productive as free laborers in the USSR at the time 75 which may be partially explained by malnutrition To make up for this disparity the NKVD worked prisoners harder than ever To meet rising demand prisoners worked longer and longer hours and on lower food rations than ever before A camp administrator said in a meeting There are cases when a prisoner is given only four or five hours out of twenty four for rest which significantly lowers his productivity In the words of a former Gulag prisoner By the spring of 1942 the camp ceased to function It was difficult to find people who were even able to gather firewood or bury the dead 75 The scarcity of food stemmed in part from the general strain on the entire Soviet Union but also the lack of central aid to the Gulag during the war The central government focused all its attention on the military and left the camps to their own devices In 1942 the Gulag set up the Supply Administration to find their own food and industrial goods During this time not only did food become scarce but the NKVD limited rations in an attempt to motivate the prisoners to work harder for more food a policy that lasted until 1948 77 In addition to food shortages the Gulag suffered from labor scarcity at the beginning of the war The Great Terror of 1936 1938 had provided a large supply of free labor but by the start of World War II the purges had slowed down In order to complete all of their projects camp administrators moved prisoners from project to project 76 To improve the situation laws were implemented in mid 1940 that allowed giving short camp sentences 4 months or a year to those convicted of petty theft hooliganism or labor discipline infractions By January 1941 the Gulag workforce had increased by approximately 300 000 prisoners 76 But in 1942 serious food shortages began and camp populations dropped again The camps lost still more prisoners to the war effort as the Soviet Union went into a total war footing in June 1941 Many laborers received early releases so that they could be drafted and sent to the front 77 Even as the pool of workers shrank demand for outputs continued to grow rapidly As a result the Soviet government pushed the Gulag to do more with less With fewer able bodied workers and few supplies from outside the camp system camp administrators had to find a way to maintain production The solution they found was to push the remaining prisoners still harder The NKVD employed a system of setting unrealistically high production goals straining resources in an attempt to encourage higher productivity As the Axis armies pushed into Soviet territory from June 1941 on labor resources became further strained and many of the camps had to evacuate out of Western Russia 77 From the beginning of the war to halfway through 1944 40 camps were set up and 69 were disbanded During evacuations machinery received priority leaving prisoners to reach safety on foot The speed of Operation Barbarossa s advance prevented the evacuation of all prisoners in good time and the NKVD massacred many to prevent them from falling into German hands While this practice denied the Germans a source of free labor it also further restricted the Gulag s capacity to keep up with the Red Army s demands When the tide of the war turned however and the Soviets started pushing the Axis invaders back fresh batches of laborers replenished the camps As the Red Army recaptured territories from the Germans an influx of Soviet ex POWs greatly increased the Gulag population 77 After World War II edit nbsp The Transpolar Railway was a project of the Gulag system that took place from 1947 to 1953 After World War II the number of inmates in prison camps and colonies again rose sharply reaching approximately 2 5 million people by the early 1950s about 1 7 million of whom were in camps When the war in Europe ended in May 1945 as many as two million former Russian citizens were forcefully repatriated into the USSR 78 On February 11 1945 at the conclusion of the Yalta Conference the United States and United Kingdom signed a Repatriation Agreement with the Soviet Union 79 One interpretation of this agreement resulted in the forcible repatriation of all Soviets British and United States civilian authorities ordered their military forces in Europe to deport to the Soviet Union up to two million former residents of the Soviet Union including persons who had left the Russian Empire and established different citizenship years before The forced repatriation operations took place from 1945 to 1947 80 Multiple sources state that Soviet POWs on their return to the Soviet Union were treated as traitors see Order No 270 81 82 83 According to some sources over 1 5 million surviving Red Army soldiers imprisoned by the Germans were sent to the Gulag 84 85 86 However that is a confusion with two other types of camps During and after World War II freed POWs went to special filtration camps Of these by 1944 more than 90 percent were cleared and about 8 percent were arrested or condemned to penal battalions In 1944 they were sent directly to reserve military formations to be cleared by the NKVD Furthermore in 1945 about 100 filtration camps were set for repatriated Ostarbeiter POWs and other displaced persons which processed more than 4 000 000 people By 1946 the major part of the population of these camps were cleared by NKVD and either sent home or conscripted see table for details 87 226 127 out of 1 539 475 POWs were transferred to the NKVD i e the Gulag 87 88 Results of the checks and the filtration of the repatriants by March 1 1946 87 Category Total Civilian POWs Released and sent home e 2 427 906 57 81 2 146 126 80 68 281 780 18 31Conscripted 801 152 19 08 141 962 5 34 659 190 42 82Sent to labor battalions of the Ministry of Defence 608 095 14 48 263 647 9 91 344 448 22 37Sent to NKVD as spetskontingent f i e sent to GULAG 272 867 6 50 46 740 1 76 226 127 14 69Were waiting for transportation and worked for Soviet military units abroad 89 468 2 13 61 538 2 31 27 930 1 81Total 4 199 488 100 2 660 013 100 1 539 475 100After Nazi Germany s defeat ten NKVD run special camps subordinate to the Gulag were set up in the Soviet Occupation Zone of post war Germany These special camps were former Stalags prisons or Nazi concentration camps such as Sachsenhausen special camp number 7 and Buchenwald special camp number 2 According to German government estimates 65 000 people died in those Soviet run camps or in transportation to them 89 According to German researchers Sachsenhausen where 12 500 Soviet era victims have been uncovered should be seen as an integral part of the Gulag system 90 nbsp During the Stalin era Magadan was a major transit center for prisoners sent to the Kolyma camps Yet the major reason for the post war increase in the number of prisoners was the tightening of legislation on property offences in summer 1947 at this time there was a famine in some parts of the Soviet Union claiming about 1 million lives which resulted in hundreds of thousands of convictions to lengthy prison terms sometimes on the basis of cases of petty theft or embezzlement At the beginning of 1953 the total number of prisoners in prison camps was more than 2 4 million of which more than 465 000 were political prisoners 74 nbsp Political prisoners eating lunch in the Minlag special camp coal mine In special camps prisoners had to wear prison garb with personal numbers In 1948 the system of special camps was established exclusively for a special contingent of political prisoners convicted according to the more severe sub articles of Article 58 Enemies of people treason espionage terrorism etc for various real political opponents such as Trotskyites nationalists Ukrainian nationalism white emigre as well as for fabricated ones The state continued to maintain the extensive camp system for a while after Stalin s death in March 1953 although the period saw the grip of the camp authorities weaken and a number of conflicts and uprisings occur see Bitch Wars Kengir uprising Vorkuta uprising The amnesty of 1953 was limited to non political prisoners and for political prisoners sentenced to not more than 5 years therefore mostly those convicted for common crimes were then freed The release of political prisoners started in 1954 and became widespread and also coupled with mass rehabilitations after Nikita Khrushchev s denunciation of Stalinism in his Secret Speech at the 20th Congress of the CPSU in February 1956 The Gulag institution was closed by the MVD order No 020 of January 25 1960 58 but forced labor colonies for political and criminal prisoners continued to exist Political prisoners continued to be kept in one of the most famous camps Perm 36 91 until 1987 when it was closed 92 The Russian penal system despite reforms and a reduction in prison population informally or formally continues many practices endemic to the Gulag system including forced labor inmates policing inmates and prisoner intimidation 16 In the late 2000s some human rights activists accused authorities of gradual removal of Gulag remembrance from places such as Perm 36 and Solovki prison camp 93 According to Encyclopaedia Britannica At its height the Gulag consisted of many hundreds of camps with the average camp holding 2 000 10 000 prisoners Most of these camps were corrective labour colonies in which prisoners felled timber laboured on general construction projects such as the building of canals and railroads or worked in mines Most prisoners laboured under the threat of starvation or execution if they refused It is estimated that the combination of very long working hours harsh climatic and other working conditions inadequate food and summary executions killed tens of thousands of prisoners each year Western scholarly estimates of the total number of deaths in the Gulag in the period from 1918 to 1956 ranged from 1 2 to 1 7 million 94 Death toll edit nbsp The Vorkuta GulagPrior to the dissolution of the Soviet Union estimates of Gulag victims ranged from 2 3 to 17 6 million see History of Gulag population estimates Mortality in Gulag camps in 1934 40 was 4 6 times higher than average in the Soviet Union Post 1991 research by historians accessing archival materials brought this range down considerably 95 96 In a 1993 study of archival Soviet data a total of 1 053 829 people died in the Gulag from 1934 to 1953 4 1024 It was common practice to release prisoners who were either suffering from incurable diseases or near death 13 14 so a combined statistics on mortality in the camps and mortality caused by the camps was higher The tentative historical consensus is that of the 18 million people who passed through the gulag from 1930 to 1953 between 1 6 million 2 3 and 1 76 million 97 perished as a result of their detention 1 and about half of all deaths occurred between 1941 and 1943 following the German invasion 97 98 If prisoner deaths from labor colonies and special settlements are included the death toll rises to 2 749 163 according to J Otto Pohl s incomplete data 14 5 In her 2018 study Golfo Alexopoulos attempted to challenge this consensus figure by encompassing those whose life was shortened due to GULAG conditions 1 Alexopoulos concluded from her research that a systematic practice of the Gulag was to release sick prisoners on the verge of death and that all prisoners who received the health classification invalid light physical labor light individualised labor or physically defective that together according to Alexopoulos encompassed at least one third of all inmates who passed through the Gulag died or had their lives shortened due to detention in the Gulag in captivity or shortly after release 99 The GULAG mortality estimated in this way yields the figure of 6 million deaths 6 Historian Orlando Figes and Russian writer Vadim Erlikman have posited similar estimates 7 8 The estimate of Alexopoulos however has obvious methodological difficulties 1 and is supported by misinterpreted evidence such as presuming that hundreds of thousands of prisoners directed to other places of detention in 1948 was a euphemism for releasing prisoners on the verge of death into labor colonies when it was really referring to internal transport in the Gulag rather than release 100 In a University of Oxford doctoral dissertation in 2020 the problem of medical release aktirovka and of mortality among certified invalids aktirovannye was considered in detail by Mikhail Nakonechnyi He concluded that the number of terminally ill people discharged early on medical grounds from the Gulag was about 1 million Mikhail added 800 000 850 000 excess deaths to the death toll directly caused by the results of GULAG incarceration which brings the death toll to 2 5 million people 101 Mortality rate edit In 2009 Steven Rosefielde stated more complete archival data increases camp deaths by 19 4 percent to 1 258 537 the best archivally based estimate of Gulag excess deaths at present is 1 6 million from 1929 to 1953 3 Certificates of death in the Gulag system for the period from 1930 to 1956 102 Dan Healey in 2018 also stated the same thing New studies using declassified Gulag archives have provisionally established a consensus on mortality and inhumanity The tentative consensus says that once secret records of the Gulag administration in Moscow show a lower death toll than expected from memoir sources generally between 1 5 and 1 7 million out of 18 million who passed through for the years from 1930 to 1953 103 Certificates of death in the Gulag system for the period from 1930 to 1956 102 Year Deaths Mortality rate 1930 7 980 4 21931 7 283 2 91932 13 197 4 81933 67 297 15 31934 25 187 4 281935 31 636 2 751936 24 993 2 111937 31 056 2 421938 108 654 5 351939 44 750 3 11940 41 275 2 721941 115 484 6 11942 352 560 24 91943 267 826 22 41944 114 481 9 21945 81 917 5 951946 30 715 2 21947 66 830 3 591948 50 659 2 281949 29 350 1 211950 24 511 0 951951 22 466 0 921952 20 643 0 841953 9 628 0 671954 8 358 0 691955 4 842 0 531956 3 164 0 4Total 1 606 748 8 88Gulag administrators editName Years 104 105 106 Feodor Teodors Ivanovich Eihmans April 25 1930 June 16 1930Lazar Iosifovich Kogan June 16 1930 June 9 1932Matvei Davidovich Berman June 9 1932 August 16 1937Israel Israelevich Pliner August 16 1937 November 16 1938Gleb Vasilievich Filaretov November 16 1938 February 18 1939Vasili Vasilievich Chernyshev February 18 1939 February 26 1941Victor Grigorievich Nasedkin February 26 1941 September 2 1947Georgy Prokopievich Dobrynin September 2 1947 January 31 1951Ivan Ilich Dolgikh January 31 1951 October 5 1954Sergei Yegorovich Yegorov October 5 1954 April 4 1956Conditions editLiving and working conditions in the camps varied significantly across time and place depending among other things on the impact of broader events World War II countrywide famines and shortages waves of terror sudden influx or release of large numbers of prisoners and the type of crime committed Instead of being used for economic gain political prisoners were typically given the worst work or were dumped into the less productive parts of the gulag For example Victor Herman in his memoirs compares the Burepolom ru and the Nuksha ru 2 camps which were both near Vyatka 107 108 In Burepolom there were roughly 3 000 prisoners all non political in the central compound They could walk around at will were lightly guarded had unlocked barracks with mattresses and pillows and watched western movies clarification needed However Nuksha 2 which housed serious criminals and political prisoners featured guard towers with machine guns and locked barracks 108 In some camps prisoners were only permitted to send one letter a year and were not allowed to have photos of loved ones 109 Some prisoners were released early if they displayed good performance 108 There were several productive activities for prisoners in the camps For example in early 1935 a course in livestock raising was held for prisoners at a state farm those who took it had their workday reduced to four hours 108 During that year the professional theater group in the camp complex gave 230 performances of plays and concerts to over 115 000 spectators 108 Camp newspapers also existed 108 Andrei Vyshinsky chief procurator of the Soviet Union wrote a memorandum to NKVD chief Nikolai Yezhov in 1938 during the Great Purge which stated 110 Among the prisoners there are some so ragged and lice ridden that they pose a sanitary danger to the rest These prisoners have deteriorated to the point of losing any resemblance to human beings Lacking food they collect orts refuse and according to some prisoners eat rats and dogs According to Yevgenia Ginzburg Gulag inmates could tell when Yezhov was no longer in charge as one day the conditions relaxed A few days later Beria s name appeared in official prison notices 111 In general the central administrative bodies showed a discernible interest in maintaining the labor force of prisoners in a condition allowing the fulfilment of construction and production plans handed down from above Besides a wide array of punishments for prisoners refusing to work which in practice were sometimes applied to prisoners that were too enfeebled to meet production quota they instituted a number of positive incentives intended to boost productivity These included monetary bonuses since the early 1930s and wage payments from 1950 onward cuts of individual sentences general early release schemes for norm fulfilment and overfulfilment until 1939 again in selected camps from 1946 onward preferential treatment sentence reduction and privileges for the most productive workers shock workers or Stakhanovites in Soviet parlance 112 108 Inmates were used as camp guards and could purchase camp newspapers as well as bonds Robert W Thurston writes that this was at least an indication that they were still regarded as participants in society to some degree 108 Sports team particularly soccer teams were set up by the prison authorities 113 nbsp A shack in a gulag a reconstruction in the Museum of the Occupation of Latvia The number of prisoners confined to each shack is not statedBoris Sulim a former prisoner who had worked in the Omsuchkan camp close to Magadan when he was a teenager stated 114 I was 18 years old and Magadan seemed a very romantic place to me I got 880 rubles a month and a 3000 ruble installation grant which was a hell of a lot of money for a kid like me I was able to give my mother some of it They even gave me membership in the Komsomol There was a mining and ore processing plant which sent out parties to dig for tin I worked at the radio station which kept contact with the parties If the inmates were good and disciplined they had almost the same rights as the free workers They were trusted and they even went to the movies As for the reason they were in the camps well I never poked my nose into details We all thought the people were there because they were guilty Immediately after the German attack on the Soviet Union in June 1941 the conditions in camps worsened drastically quotas were increased rations cut and medical supplies came close to none all of which led to a sharp increase in mortality The situation slowly improved in the final period and after the end of the war Considering the overall conditions and their influence on inmates it is important to distinguish three major strata of Gulag inmates Kulaks osadniks ukazniks people sentenced for violation of various ukases e g Law of Spikelets decree about work discipline etc occasional violators of criminal law Dedicated criminals thieves in law People sentenced for various political and religious reasons Gulag and famine 1932 1933 edit The Soviet famine of 1932 1933 swept across many different regions of the Soviet Union During this time it is estimated that around six to seven million people starved to death 115 On 7 August 1932 a new decree drafted by Stalin Law of Spikelets specified a minimum sentence of ten years or execution for theft from collective farms or of cooperative property Over the next few months prosecutions rose fourfold A large share of cases prosecuted under the law were for the theft of small quantities of grain worth less than fifty rubles The law was later relaxed on 8 May 1933 116 Overall during the first half of 1933 prisons saw more new incoming inmates than the three previous years combined Prisoners in the camps faced harsh working conditions One Soviet report stated that in early 1933 up to 15 of the prison population in Soviet Uzbekistan died monthly During this time prisoners were getting around 300 calories 1 300 kJ worth of food a day Many inmates attempted to flee causing an upsurge in coercive and violent measures Camps were directed not to spare bullets 117 Social conditions edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The convicts in such camps were actively involved in all kinds of labor with one of them being logging The working territory of logging presented by itself a square and was surrounded by forest clearing Thus all attempts to exit or escape from it were well observed from the four towers set at each of its corners Locals who captured a runaway were given rewards 118 It is also said that camps in colder areas were less concerned with finding escaped prisoners as they would die anyhow from the severely cold winters In such cases prisoners who did escape without getting shot were often found dead kilometres away from the camp Geography editFurther information List of Gulag camps nbsp Siberian taiga in the river valley near Verkhoyansk The lowest temperature recorded there was 68 C 90 F nbsp Memorial in Astana Kazakhstan dedicated to the wives of Akmola Labor Camp prisoners This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the early days of Gulag the locations for the camps were chosen primarily for the isolated conditions involved Remote monasteries in particular were frequently reused as sites for new camps The site on the Solovetsky Islands in the White Sea is one of the earliest and also most noteworthy taking root soon after the Revolution in 1918 17 The colloquial name for the islands Solovki entered the vernacular as a synonym for the labor camp in general It was presented to the world as an example of the new Soviet method for re education of class enemies and reintegrating them through labor into Soviet society Initially the inmates largely Russian intelligentsia enjoyed relative freedom within the natural confinement of the islands 119 Local newspapers and magazines were published Even some scientific research was carried out e g a local botanical garden was maintained but unfortunately later lost completely Eventually Solovki turned into an ordinary Gulag camp Some historians maintain that it was a pilot camp of this type In 1929 Maxim Gorky visited the camp and published an apology for it The report of Gorky s trip to Solovki was included in the cycle of impressions titled Po Soiuzu Sovetov Part V subtitled Solovki In the report Gorky wrote that camps such as Solovki were absolutely necessary 119 With the new emphasis on Gulag as the means of concentrating cheap labor new camps were then constructed throughout the Soviet sphere of influence wherever the economic task at hand dictated their existence or was designed specifically to avail itself of them such as the White Sea Baltic Canal or the Baikal Amur Mainline including facilities in big cities parts of the famous Moscow Metro and the Moscow State University new campus were built by forced labor Many more projects during the rapid industrialisation of the 1930s war time and post war periods were fulfilled on the backs of convicts The activity of Gulag camps spanned a wide cross section of Soviet industry Gorky organized in 1933 a trip of 120 writers and artists to the White Sea Baltic Canal 36 of them wrote a propaganda book about the construction published in 1934 and destroyed in 1937 The majority of Gulag camps were positioned in extremely remote areas of northeastern Siberia the best known clusters are Sevvostlag The North East Camps along Kolyma river and Norillag near Norilsk and in the southeastern parts of the Soviet Union mainly in the steppes of Kazakhstan Luglag Steplag Peschanlag A detailed map was made by the Memorial Foundation 120 These were vast and sparsely inhabited regions with no roads or sources of food but rich in minerals and other natural resources such as timber The construction of the roads was assigned to the inmates of specialised railway camps Camps were generally spread throughout the entire Soviet Union including the European parts of Russia Belarus and Ukraine There were several camps outside the Soviet Union in Czechoslovakia Hungary Poland and Mongolia which were under the direct control of the Gulag citation needed nbsp Part of Project 503 to build a railroad from Salekhard to Igarka near Turukhansk on the YeniseyThroughout the history of the Soviet Union there were at least 476 separate camp administrations 121 122 The Russian researcher Galina Ivanova stated that 122 to date Russian historians have discovered and described 476 camps that existed at different times on the territory of the USSR It is well known that practically every one of them had several branches many of which were quite large In addition to the large numbers of camps there were no less than 2 000 colonies It would be virtually impossible to reflect the entire mass of Gulag facilities on a map that would also account for the various times of their existence Since many of these existed only for short periods the number of camp administrations at any given point was lower It peaked in the early 1950s when there were more than 100 camp administrations across the Soviet Union Most camp administrations oversaw several single camp units some as many as dozens or even hundreds 123 The infamous complexes were those at Kolyma Norilsk and Vorkuta all in arctic or subarctic regions However prisoner mortality in Norilsk in most periods was actually lower than across the camp system as a whole 124 Special institutions editThere were separate camps or zones within camps for juveniles maloletki maloletki the disabled in Spassk and mothers mamki mamki with babies Family members of Traitors of the Motherland ChSIR chlen semi izmennika Rodiny ChSIR Chlyen sem i izmennika Rodini were placed under a special category of repression Secret research laboratories known as Sharashka sharashka held arrested and convicted scientists some of them prominent where they anonymously developed new technologies and also conducted basic research Historiography editOrigins and functions of the Gulag edit According to historian Stephen Barnes the origins and functions of the Gulag can be looked at in four major ways 125 The first approach was championed by Alexander Solzhenitsyn and is what Barnes terms the moral explanation According to this view Soviet ideology eliminated the moral checks on the darker side of human nature providing convenient justifications for violence and evil doing on all levels from political decision making to personal relations Another approach is the political explanation according to which the Gulag along with executions was primarily a means for eliminating the regime s perceived political enemies this understanding is favoured by historian Robert Conquest amongst others The economic explanation in turn as set out by historian Anne Applebaum argues that the Soviet regime instrumentalised the Gulag for its economic development projects Although never economically profitable it was perceived as such right up to Stalin s death in 1953 Finally Barnes advances his own fourth explanation which situates the Gulag in the context of modern projects of cleansing the social body of hostile elements through spatial isolation and physical elimination of individuals defined as harmful Hannah Arendt argues that as part of a totalitarian system of government the camps of the Gulag system were experiments in total domination In her view the goal of a totalitarian system was not merely to establish limits on liberty but rather to abolish liberty entirely in service of its ideology She argues that the Gulag system was not merely political repression because the system survived and grew long after Stalin had wiped out all serious political resistance Although the various camps were initially filled with criminals and political prisoners eventually they were filled with prisoners who were arrested irrespective of anything relating to them as individuals but rather only on the basis of their membership in some ever shifting category of imagined threats to the state 126 437 59 She also argues that the function of the Gulag system was not truly economic Although the Soviet government deemed them all forced labor camps this in fact highlighted that the work in the camps was deliberately pointless since all Russian workers could be subject to forced labor 126 444 5 The only real economic purpose they typically served was financing the cost of their own supervision Otherwise the work performed was generally useless either by design or made that way through extremely poor planning and execution some workers even preferred more difficult work if it was actually productive She differentiated between authentic forced labor camps concentration camps and annihilation camps 126 444 5 In authentic labor camps inmates worked in relative freedom and are sentenced for limited periods Concentration camps had extremely high mortality rates and but were still essentially organized for labor purposes Annihilation camps were those where the inmates were systematically wiped out through starvation and neglect She criticizes other commentators conclusion that the purpose of the camps was a supply of cheap labor According to her the Soviets were able to liquidate the camp system without serious economic consequences showing that the camps were not an important source of labor and were overall economically irrelevant 126 444 5 Arendt argues that together with the systematized arbitrary cruelty inside the camps this served the purpose of total domination by eliminating the idea that the arrestees had any political or legal rights Morality was destroyed by maximizing cruelty and by organizing the camps internally to make the inmates and guards complicit The terror resulting from the operation of the Gulag system caused people outside of the camps to cut all ties with anyone who was arrested or purged and to avoid forming ties with others for fear of being associated with anyone who was targeted As a result the camps were essential as the nucleus of a system that destroyed individuality and dissolved all social bonds Thereby the system attempted to eliminate any capacity for resistance or self directed action in the greater population 126 437 59 Archival documents edit Statistical reports made by the OGPU NKVD MGB MVD between the 1930s and 1950s are kept in the State Archive of the Russian Federation formerly called Central State Archive of the October Revolution CSAOR These documents were highly classified and inaccessible Amid glasnost and democratization in the late 1980s Viktor Zemskov and other Russian researchers managed to gain access to the documents and published the highly classified statistical data collected by the OGPU NKVD MGB MVD and related to the number of the Gulag prisoners special settlers etc In 1995 Zemskov wrote that foreign scientists have begun to be admitted to the restricted access collection of these documents in the State Archive of the Russian Federation since 1992 127 However only one historian namely Zemskov was admitted to these archives and later the archives were again closed according to Leonid Lopatnikov 128 Pressure from the Putin administration has exacerbated the difficulties of Gulag researchers 129 While considering the issue of reliability of the primary data provided by corrective labor institutions it is necessary to take into account the following two circumstances On the one hand their administration was not interested to understate the number of prisoners in its reports because it would have automatically led to a decrease in the food supply plan for camps prisons and corrective labor colonies The decrement in food would have been accompanied by an increase in mortality that would have led to wrecking of the vast production program of the Gulag On the other hand overstatement of data of the number of prisoners also did not comply with departmental interests because it was fraught with the same i e impossible increase in production tasks set by planning bodies In those days people were highly responsible for non fulfilment of plan It seems that a resultant of these objective departmental interests was a sufficient degree of reliability of the reports 130 Between 1990 and 1992 the first precise statistical data on the Gulag based on the Gulag archives were published by Viktor Zemskov 131 These had been generally accepted by leading Western scholars 20 13 despite the fact that a number of inconsistencies were found in this statistics 132 It is also necessary to note that not all the conclusions drawn by Zemskov based on his data have been generally accepted Thus Sergei Maksudov alleged that although literary sources for example the books of Lev Razgon or Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn did not envisage the total number of the camps very well and markedly exaggerated their size On the other hand Viktor Zemskov who published many documents by the NKVD and KGB was far from understanding of the Gulag essence and the nature of socio political processes in the country He added that without distinguishing the degree of accuracy and reliability of certain figures without making a critical analysis of sources without comparing new data with already known information Zemskov absolutizes the published materials by presenting them as the ultimate truth As a result Maksudov charges that Zemskov s attempts to make generalized statements with reference to a particular document as a rule do not hold water 133 nbsp OGPU chiefs responsible for construction of the White Sea Baltic Canal 1932 right Frenkel center Berman left Afanasev Head of the southern part of BelBaltLag In response Zemskov wrote that the charge that he allegedly did not compare new data with already known information could not be called fair In his words the trouble with most western writers is that they do not benefit from such comparisons Zemskov added that when he tried not to overuse the juxtaposition of new information with old one it was only because of a sense of delicacy not to once again psychologically traumatize the researchers whose works used incorrect figures as it turned out after the publication of the statistics by the OGPU NKVD MGB MVD 127 According to French historian Nicolas Werth the mountains of the materials of the Gulag archives which are stored in funds of the State Archive of the Russian Federation and were being constantly exposed during the last fifteen years represent only a very small part of bureaucratic prose of immense size left over after the decades of creativity by the dull and reptile organization managing the Gulag In many cases local camp archives which had been stored in sheds barracks or other rapidly disintegrating buildings simply disappeared in the same way as most of the camp buildings did 134 In 2004 and 2005 some archival documents were published in the edition Istoriya Stalinskogo Gulaga Konets 1920 kh Pervaya Polovina 1950 kh Godov Sobranie Dokumentov v 7 Tomakh The History of Stalin s Gulag From the Late 1920s to the First Half of the 1950s Collection of Documents in Seven Volumes wherein each of its seven volumes covered a particular issue indicated in the title of the volume Mass Repression in the USSR Massovye Repressii v SSSR 135 Punitive System Structure and Cadres Karatelnaya Sistema Struktura i Kadry 136 Economy of the Gulag Ekonomika Gulaga 137 The Population of the Gulag The Number and Conditions of Confinement Naselenie Gulaga Chislennost i Usloviya Soderzhaniya 138 Specsettlers in the USSR Specpereselentsy v SSSR 139 Uprisings Riots and Strikes of Prisoners Vosstaniya Bunty i Zabastovki Zaklyuchyonnykh 140 and Soviet Repressive and Punitive Policy Annotated Index of Cases of the SA RF Sovetskaya Pepressivno karatelnaya Politika i Penitentsiarnaya Sistema Annotirovanniy Ukazatel Del GA RF 141 The edition contains the brief introductions by the two patriarchs of the Gulag science Robert Conquest and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and 1431 documents the overwhelming majority of which were obtained from funds of the State Archive of the Russian Federation 142 History of Gulag population estimates edit During the decades before the dissolution of the USSR the debates about the population size of GULAG failed to arrive at generally accepted figures wide ranging estimates have been offered 143 and the bias toward higher or lower side was sometimes ascribed to political views of the particular author 143 Some of those earlier estimates both high and low are shown in the table below Historical estimates of the GULAG population size in chronological order GULAG population Year the estimate was made for Source Methodology15 million 1940 42 Mora amp Zwiernag 1945 144 2 3 million December 1937 Timasheff 1948 145 Calculation of disenfranchised populationUp to 3 5 million 1941 Jasny 1951 146 Analysis of the output of the Soviet enterprises run by NKVD50 million total number of personspassed through GULAG Solzhenitsyn 1975 147 Analysis of various indirect data including own experience and testimonies of numerous witnesses17 6 million 1942 Anton Antonov Ovseenko 1999 148 NKVD documents 149 4 5 million 1939 Wheatcroft 1981 150 Analysis of demographic data a10 6 million 1941 Rosefielde 1981 151 Based on data of Mora amp Zwiernak and annual mortality a5 5 9 5 million late 1938 Conquest 1991 152 1937 Census figures arrest and deaths estimates variety of personal and literary sources a4 5 million every single year Volkogonov 1990s 153 a Note Later numbers from Rosefielde Wheatcroft and Conquest were revised down by the authors themselves 20 64 nbsp Yurshor Vorkuta areaThe glasnost political reforms in the late 1980s and the subsequent dissolution of the USSR led to the release of a large amount of formerly classified archival documents 154 including new demographic and NKVD data 13 Analysis of the official GULAG statistics by Western scholars immediately demonstrated that despite their inconsistency they do not support previously published higher estimates 143 Importantly the released documents made possible to clarify terminology used to describe different categories of forced labor population because the use of the terms forced labor GULAG camps interchangeably by early researchers led to significant confusion and resulted in significant inconsistencies in the earlier estimates 143 Archival studies revealed several components of the NKVD penal system in the Stalinist USSR prisons labor camps labor colonies as well as various settlements exile and of non custodial forced labor 4 Although most of them fit the definition of forced labor only labor camps and labor colonies were associated with punitive forced labor in detention 4 Forced labor camps GULAG camps were hard regime camps whose inmates were serving more than three year terms As a rule they were situated in remote parts of the USSR and labor conditions were extremely hard there They formed a core of the GULAG system The inmates of corrective labor colonies served shorter terms these colonies were located in less remote parts of the USSR and they were run by local NKVD administration 4 Preliminary analysis of the GULAG camps and colonies statistics see the chart on the right demonstrated that the population reached the maximum before the World War II then dropped sharply partially due to massive releases partially due to wartime high mortality and then was gradually increasing until the end of Stalin era reaching the global maximum in 1953 when the combined population of GULAG camps and labor colonies amounted to 2 625 000 155 The results of these archival studies convinced many scholars including Robert Conquest 20 or Stephen Wheatcroft to reconsider their earlier estimates of the size of the GULAG population although the high numbers of arrested and deaths are not radically different from earlier estimates 20 Although such scholars as Rosefielde or Vishnevsky point at several inconsistencies in archival data with Rosefielde pointing out the archival figure of 1 196 369 for the population of the Gulag and labor colonies combined on December 31 1936 is less than half the 2 75 million labor camp population given to the Census Board by the NKVD for the 1937 census 156 132 it is generally believed that these data provide more reliable and detailed information that the indirect data and literary sources available for the scholars during the Cold War era 13 Although Conquest cited Beria s report to the Politburo of the labor camp numbers at the end of 1938 stating there were almost 7 million prisoners in the labor camps more than three times the archival figure for 1938 and an official report to Stalin by the Soviet minister of State Security in 1952 stating there were 12 million prisoners in the labor camps 157 These data allowed scholars to conclude that during the period of 1928 53 about 14 million prisoners passed through the system of GULAG labor camps and 4 5 million passed through the labor colonies 20 Thus these figures reflect the number of convicted persons and do not take into account the fact that a significant part of Gulag inmates had been convicted more than one time so the actual number of convicted is somewhat overstated by these statistics 13 From other hand during some periods of Gulag history the official figures of GULAG population reflected the camps capacity not the actual number of inmates so the actual figures were 15 higher in e g 1946 20 The USSR implemented a number of labor disciplinary measures due to the lack of productivity of its labour force in the early 1930s 1 8 million workers were sentenced to 6 months in forced labor with a quarter of their original pay 3 3 million faced sanctions and 60k were imprisoned for absentees in 1940 alone The conditions of Soviet workers worsened in WW2 as 1 3 million were punished in 1942 and 1 million each were punished in subsequent 1943 and 1944 with the reduction of 25 of food rations Further more 460 thousand were imprisoned throughout these years 158 Impact editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Culture edit The Gulag spanned nearly four decades of Soviet and East European history and affected millions of individuals Its cultural impact was enormous The Gulag has become a major influence on contemporary Russian thinking and an important part of modern Russian folklore Many songs by the authors performers known as the bards most notably Vladimir Vysotsky and Alexander Galich neither of whom ever served time in the camps describe life inside the Gulag and glorified the life of zeks Words and phrases which originated in the labor camps became part of the Russian Soviet vernacular in the 1960s and 1970s The memoirs of Alexander Dolgun Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Varlam Shalamov and Yevgenia Ginzburg among others became a symbol of defiance in Soviet society These writings harshly chastised the Soviet people for their tolerance and apathy regarding the Gulag but at the same time provided a testament to the courage and resolve of those who were imprisoned Another cultural phenomenon in the Soviet Union linked with the Gulag was the forced migration of many artists and other people of culture to Siberia This resulted in a Renaissance of sorts in places like Magadan where for example the quality of theatre production was comparable to Moscow s and Eddie Rosner played jazz Literature edit Many eyewitness accounts of Gulag prisoners have been published Varlam Shalamov s Kolyma Tales is a short story collection cited by most major works on the Gulag and widely considered one of the main Soviet accounts Victor Kravchenko wrote I Chose Freedom after defecting to the United States in 1944 As a leader of industrial plants he had encountered forced labor camps in across the Soviet Union from 1935 to 1941 He describes a visit to one camp at Kemerovo on the Tom River in Siberia Factories paid a fixed sum to the KGB for every convict they employed Anatoli Granovsky wrote I Was an NKVD Agent after defecting to Sweden in 1946 and included his experiences seeing gulag prisoners as a young boy as well as his experiences as a prisoner himself in 1939 Granovsky s father was sent to the gulag in 1937 Julius Margolin s book A Travel to the Land Ze Ka was finished in 1947 but it was impossible to publish such a book about the Soviet Union at the time immediately after World War II Gustaw Herling Grudzinski wrote A World Apart which was translated into English by Andrzej Ciolkosz and published with an introduction by Bertrand Russell in 1951 By describing life in the gulag in a harrowing personal account it provides an in depth original analysis of the nature of the Soviet communist system Victor Herman s book Coming out of the Ice An Unexpected Life Herman experienced firsthand many places prisons and experiences that Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was able to reference in only passing or through brief second hand accounts Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn s book The Gulag Archipelago was not the first literary work about labor camps His previous book on the subject One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich about a typical day in the life of a Gulag inmate was originally published in the most prestigious Soviet monthly Novy Mir New World in November 1962 but was soon banned and withdrawn from all libraries It was the first work to demonstrate the Gulag as an instrument of governmental repression against its own citizens on a massive scale The First Circle an account of three days in the lives of prisoners in the Marfino sharashka or special prison was submitted for publication to the Soviet authorities shortly after One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich but was rejected and later published abroad in 1968 Slavomir Rawicz s book The Long Walk The True Story of a Trek to Freedom In 1941 the author and six other fellow prisoners escaped a Soviet labor camp in Yakutsk Janos Rozsas a Hungarian writer often referred to as the Hungarian Solzhenitsyn 159 wrote many books and articles on the issue of the Gulag Zoltan Szalkai a Hungarian documentary filmmaker made several films about gulag camps Karlo Stajner a Croatian communist who was active in the former Kingdom of Yugoslavia and the manager of the Comintern Publishing House in Moscow 1932 39 was arrested one night and taken from his Moscow home after being accused of anti revolutionary activities He spent the next 20 years in camps from Solovki to Norilsk After USSR Yugoslavian political normalization he was re tried and quickly found innocent He left the Soviet Union with his wife who had been waiting for him for 20 years in 1956 and spent the rest of his life in Zagreb Croatia He wrote an impressive book titled 7000 days in Siberia Dancing Under the Red Star by Karl Tobien ISBN 1 4000 7078 3 tells the story of Margaret Werner an athletic girl who moves to Russia right before Stalin came to power She faces many hardships as her father is taken away from her and imprisoned Werner is the only American woman who was held in the Gulag to tell about it Alexander Dolgun s Story An American in the Gulag ISBN 0 394 49497 0 by a member of the US Embassy and I Was a Slave in Russia ISBN 0 8159 5800 5 an American factory owner s son were two more American citizens interned who wrote of their ordeal They were interned due to their American citizenship for about eight years c 1946 55 Yevgenia Ginzburg wrote two famous books about her remembrances Journey Into the Whirlwind and Within the Whirlwind Savic Markovic Stedimlija a pro Croatian Montenegrin ideologist Caught in Austria by the Red Army in 1945 he was sent to the USSR and spent ten years in the Gulag After his release Markovic wrote his autobiographical account in two volumes titled Ten years in Gulag Deset godina u Gulagu Matica crnogorska Podgorica Montenegro 2004 Anița Nandriș Cudla s book 20 Years in Siberia 20 de ani in Siberia is the own life s account written by a Romanian peasant woman from Bucovina Mahala village near Cernăuți who managed to survive the harsh forced labor system together with her three sons Together with her husband and her three underage children she was deported from Mahala village to the Soviet Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug at the Polar Circle without a trial or even a communicated accusation The same night of June 12 to 13 1941 that is just before Germany s invasion of the USSR overall 602 fellow villagers were arrested and deported without any prior notice Her mother received the same sentence but was spared from deportation after the fact that she was a paraplegic was acknowledged by the authorities It was later discovered that the reason for her deportation and forced labor was the fake and nonsensical claim that allegedly her husband had been a mayor in the Romanian administration a politician and a rich peasant none of the latter of which was true Separated from her husband she brought up the three boys overcame typhus scorbutus malnutrition extreme cold and harsh toils to later return to Bucovina after rehabilitation Her manuscript was written toward the end of her life in the simple and direct language of a peasant with three years of public school education and was secretly brought to Romania before the fall of Romanian communism in 1982 Her manuscript was first published in 1991 Her deportation was shared mainly with Romanians from Bucovina and Basarabia Finnish and Polish prisoners as token proof to show that Gulag labor camps had also been used for the shattering extermination of the natives in the newly occupied territories of the Soviet Union Frantsishak Alyakhnovich Solovki prisoner Blagoy Popov a Bulgarian communist and a defendant in the Leipzig trial along with Georgi Dimitrov and Vasil Tanev was arrested in 1937 during the Stalinist purges and spent seventeen years in Norillag Popov was released in 1954 after the death of Stalin and returned to Bulgaria 160 He wrote his autobiographical account in the book From the Leipzig trial to the Siberia camps Ot Lajpcigskiya proces v Sibirskite lageri Iztok Zapad Sofiya Blgariya 2012 ISBN 978 619 152 025 1 Mkrtich Armen an Armenian writer who was imprisoned in 1937 and rehabilitated in 1945 published a collection of his memories under the title They Ordered to Give You in 1964 Gurgen Mahari an Armenian writer and poet who was arrested in 1936 released in 1947 arrested again in 1948 and sent into Siberian exile as an unreliable type until 1954 wrote Barbed Wires in Blossom a novella based largely on his personal experiences in a Soviet gulag Gulag Boss A Soviet Memoir is a 2011 memoir by Fyodor Vasilevich Mochulsky 1918 1999 a Soviet Engineer and eventual head of numerous Gulag camps in the northern Russian region of Pechorlag Pechora from 1940 to 1946 Colonization edit nbsp The city of VorkutaSoviet state documents show that the goals of the gulag included colonization of sparsely populated remote areas and exploiting its resources using forced labor In 1929 OGPU was given the task to colonize these areas 161 To this end the notion of free settlement was introduced On 12 April 1930 Genrikh Yagoda wrote to the OGPU Commission The camps must be transformed into colonizing settlements without waiting for the end of periods of confinement Here is my plan to turn all the prisoners into a settler population until they have served their sentences 161 When well behaved persons had served the majority of their terms they could be released for free settlement volnoe poselenie volnoye poseleniye outside the confinement of the camp They were known as free settlers volnoposelency volnoposelentsy not to be confused with the term ssylnoposelency ssyl noposelentsy exile settlers In addition for persons who served full term but who were denied the free choice of place of residence it was recommended to assign them for free settlement and give them land in the general vicinity of the place of confinement The gulag inherited this approach from the katorga system It is estimated that of the 40 000 people collecting state pensions in Vorkuta 32 000 are trapped former gulag inmates or their descendants 162 Life after a term was served edit Persons who served a term in a camp or prison were restricted from taking a wide range of jobs Concealment of a previous imprisonment was a triable offence Persons who served terms as politicals were nuisances for First Departments Pervyj Otdel Pervyj Otdel outlets of the secret police at all enterprises and institutions because former politicals had to be monitored citation needed Many people who were released from camps were restricted from settling in larger cities Memorialization editGulag memorials edit nbsp Map of Stalin s Gulag camps in Gulag Museum in Moscow nbsp Memorial in St PetersburgMain article Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Political Repressions Both Moscow and St Petersburg have memorials to the victims of the Gulag made of boulders from the Solovki camp the first prison camp in the Gulag system Moscow s memorial is on Lubyanka Square the site of the headquarters of the NKVD People gather at these memorials every year on the Day of Victims of the Repression October 30 Gulag Museum edit nbsp Gulag Museum in Moscow founded in 2001 by historian Anton Antonov OvseyenkoMoscow has the State Gulag Museum whose first director was Anton Antonov Ovseyenko 163 164 165 166 In 2015 another museum dedicated to the Gulag was opened in Moscow 167 See also editList of concentration and internment camps Russia and the Soviet Union Excess mortality in the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin Forced labor in the Soviet Union Forced settlements in the Soviet Union Foreign forced labor in the Soviet Union Human rights in the Soviet Union Memorial society a Russian human rights organization Population transfer in the Soviet Union SharashkaSimilar establishments elsewhere edit Concentration camps in the Independent State of Croatia Forced labour camps in Communist Albania Burrel Prison Qafe Bar Prison Spac Prison Francoist concentration camps the equivalent of the Gulag in Francoist Spain Military Units to Aid Production the equivalent of the Gulag in Cuba Nazi concentration camps the equivalent of the Gulag in Nazi Germany and German occupied Europe Prisons in North Korea Kwalliso Penal system in China Laogai Re education through labor Xinjiang internment camps Pitești Prison the equivalent of the Gulag in the Socialist Republic of Romania Re education camp Vietnam the equivalent of the Gulag in Vietnam Prisons in Russia Corrective labor colonyNotes edit Based on data from Memorial a human rights group Some disputed 1 estimates range from over 2 7 5 to 6 6 7 8 million 1 ˈ ɡ uː l ɑː ɡ UK also l ae ɡ Russian ɡʊˈlak 9 Also spelled GULAG or GULag GULAG GULag an acronym for Glavnoe upravlenie lagerej Glavnoye upravleniye lagerey chief administration of the camps The original name given to the system of camps controlled by the GPU was the Main Administration of Correctional Labor Camps Glavnoe upravlenie ispravitelno trudovyh lagerej Glavnoje upravlenije ispraviteljno trudovyh lagerej Including those who died in custody Special contingent References edit a b c d e f g h i j Healey Dan June 1 2018 GOLFO ALEXOPOULOS Illness and Inhumanity in Stalin s Gulag The American Historical Review 123 3 1049 1051 doi 10 1093 ahr 123 3 1049 New studies using declassified Gulag archives have provisionally established a consensus on mortality and inhumanity The tentative consensus says that once secret records of the Gulag administration in Moscow show a lower death toll than expected from memoir sources generally between 1 5 and 1 7 million out of 18 million who passed through for the years from 1930 to 1953 a b c d Wheatcroft Stephen G 1999 Victims of Stalinism and the Soviet Secret Police The Comparability and Reliability of the Archival Data Not the Last Word PDF Europe Asia Studies 51 2 320 doi 10 1080 09668139999056 a b c d e Rosefielde Steven 2009 Red Holocaust Routledge ISBN 0 415 77757 7 p 67 more complete archival data increases camp deaths by 19 4 percent to 1 258 537 pg 77 The best archivally based estimate of Gulag excess deaths at present is 1 6 million from 1929 to 1953 a b c d e f g h i j Getty Arch Rittersporn Gabor Zemskov Viktor October 1993 Victims of the Soviet penal system in the pre war years a first approach on the basis of archival evidence PDF American Historical Review 98 4 1017 1049 doi 10 2307 2166597 JSTOR 2166597 a b Pohl The Stalinist Penal System p 131 a b Alexopoulos Golfo 2017 Illness and Inhumanity in Stalin s Gulag Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 17941 5 a b c Figes Orlando 2009 Uchenyj pri Staline pogiblo bolshe chem v holokost BBC News Hotya dazhe po samym konservativnym ocenkam ot 20 do 25 mln chelovek stali zhertvami repressij iz kotoryh vozmozhno ot pyati do shesti millionov pogibli v rezultate prebyvaniya v GULAGe Translation The most conservative calculations speak of 20 25 million victims of repression 5 to 6 million of whom died in the Gulag a b Erlikman Vadim 2004 Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke spravochnik Moscow 2004 Russkaia panorama ISBN 5 93165 107 1 a b Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Doubleday 2003 pp 50 Applebaum Anne 2017 Gulag An Introduction Victims of Communism Archived from the original on September 5 2017 Introduction Stalin s Gulag GULAG Soviet Labor Camps and the Struggle for Freedom US Center for History and New Media George Mason University Retrieved 23 June 2020 Gulag History com A amp E Networks 2018 Retrieved 23 June 2020 a b c d e f g Michael Ellman Soviet Repression Statistics Some Comments Europe Asia Studies Vol 54 No 7 Nov 2002 pp 1151 1172 a b c Applebaum Anne 2003 Gulag A History Doubleday ISBN 0 7679 0056 1 pg 583 both archives and memoirs indicate that it was a common practice in many camps to release prisoners who were on the point of dying thereby lowering camp death statistics Smirnov M B 1998 Sistema Ispravitelno trudovh lagerej v SSSR Moscow Zvenya ISBN 5 7870 0022 6 a b Slave labour and criminal cultures The Economist October 19 2013 a b Applebaum Anne 2003 Gulag A History Doubleday ISBN 0 7679 0056 1 Gulag a History of the Soviet Camps Arlindo correia org Retrieved January 6 2009 GLAVNOE UPRAVLENIE LAGEREJ OGPU NKVD MVD a section from Sistema ispravitelno trudovyh lagerej v SSSR Moscow 1998 ISBN 5 7870 0022 6 a b c d e f g h Conquest Robert 1997 Victims of Stalinism A Comment Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Europe Asia Studies 49 7 1317 19 We are all inclined to accept the Zemskov totals even if not as complete with their 14 million intake to Gulag camps alone to which must be added 4 5 million going to Gulag colonies to say nothing of the 3 5 million already in or sent to labor settlements However taken these are surely high figures There are reservations to be made For example we now learn that the Gulag reported totals were of capacity rather than actual counts leading to an underestimate in 1946 of around 15 Then as to the numbers freed there is no reason to accept the category simply because the MVD so listed them and in fact we are told of 1947 when the anecdotal evidence is of almost no one released that this category concealed deaths 100000 in the first quarter of the year J Gheith K Jolluck 2011 Gulag Voices Oral Histories of Soviet Incarceration and Exile Palgrave Macmillan US pp 3 ISBN 978 0 230 61062 0 Orlando Figes Estimates that 25 million people circulated through the Gulag system between 1928 and 1953 Repressions Publicist n1 by Retrieved January 6 2009 Barnes Steven A 2011 Death and Redemption The Gulag and the Shaping of Soviet Society Princeton University Press pp 71 72 Alexopoulos Golfo Summer 2005 Amnesty 1945 The Revolving Door of Stalin s Gulag Slavic Review 64 2 274 306 doi 10 2307 3649985 JSTOR 3649985 S2CID 73613155 H Net Reviews Archived from the original on June 27 2007 Retrieved December 27 2014 Repressii protiv polyakov i polskih grazhdan Archived December 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine MVD of Russia An Encyclopedia MVD Rossii enciklopediya 2002 ISBN 5 224 03722 0 p 541 Repressions Publicist n1 by Archived from the original on March 27 2008 Retrieved January 6 2009 What Were Their Crimes Gulaghistory org Archived from the original on November 5 2007 Retrieved January 6 2009 Uschan M Political Leaders Lucent Books 2002 a b Repressions Publicist n1 by Archived from the original on March 11 2008 Retrieved January 6 2009 Daly Jonathan 2018 Crime and Punishment in Russia A Comparative History from Peter the Great to Vladimir Putin Bloomsbury Publishing Filtzer Donald 2002 Soviet Workers and Late Stalinism Labour and the Restoration of the Stalinist System After World War II Cambridge University Press pp 28 9 Hardy Jeffrey S 2016 The Gulag After Stalin Redefining Punishment in Khrushchev s Soviet Union 1953 1964 Cornell University Press p 124 http penpolit ru author item M5cd00dd4488 html dead link News Release Forced labor camp artifacts from Soviet era on display at NWTC Archived August 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine Applebaum Anne GULAG a history Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved December 21 2007 The Hidden Gulag Exposing North Korea s Prison Camps PDF The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea Archived PDF from the original on October 21 2012 Retrieved September 20 2012 Barnett Antony February 1 2004 Revealed the gas chamber horror of North Korea s gulag Guardian Unlimited London Retrieved December 21 2007 Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Anchor 2004 pp xxxi Jakobson Michael Origins of the Gulag E book The University Press of Kentucky 2015 pp 11 Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Anchor 2004 pp xxix xxx Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Anchor 2004 pp xxxiii a b c d e f g h Zemskov Viktor 1991 GULAG istoriko sociologicheskij aspekt Sociologicheskie issledovaniya 6 7 Retrieved August 14 2011 Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Anchor 2003 pp 12 Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Anchor 2003 pp 5 a b Applebaum Gulag A History Chapter 3 The only way to attract the labor power necessary for our economic problems is to introduce compulsory labor service in Trotsky Leon Leon Trotsky Terrorism and Communism Chapter 8 www marxists org Retrieved August 6 2015 Jakobson Michael Origins of the Gulag E book The University Press of Kentucky pp 52 Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Anchor 2004 pp 12 Applebaum Anne Gulag A History Anchor 2003 pp 50 David Dallin and Boris Nicolaevsky Forced Labor in Soviet Russia New Haven Yale University Press 1947 p 153 Applebaum Anne 2004 Gulag a History of the Soviet Camps London Penguin Books p 52 53 Ellman Michael 2002 Soviet Repression Statistics Some Comments PDF Europe Asia Studies 54 2 1151 1172 doi 10 1080 0966813022000017177 S2CID 43510161 Retrieved August 14 2011 Khlevniuk Oleg 2004 The History of the Gulag New Haven Yale University Press p 9 khlevniuk Oleg 2004 The History of the Gulag New Haven Yale University Press p 11 a b Khlevniuk Oleg 2004 The History of the Gulag New Haven Yale University Press p 17 a b Memorial http www memo ru history NKVD GULAG r1 r1 4 htm See e g Jakobson Michael 1993 Origins of the GULag The Soviet Prison Camp System 1917 34 Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky p 88 See e g Ivanova Galina M 2000 Labor Camp Socialism The Gulag in the Totalitarian System Armonk New York M E Sharpe ch 2 a b See for example Gulaga Naselenie 2004 sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomakh Istorija stalinskogo Gulaga konec 1920 kh pervaia polovina 1950 kh godov vol 4 edited by V P Kozlov et al Moskva ROSSPEN Applebaum Anne August 2 2012 The Camps Expand Gulag A History of the Soviet Camps Penguin Books Limited ISBN 9780141975269 Tablica 3 Dvizhenie lagernogo naseleniya GULAGa a b Rosefielde Steven February 12 2007 The Russian economy from Lenin to Putin Wiley ISBN 9781405113373 Applebaum Anne 2003 Gulag a history Doubleday ISBN 9780767900560 Franciszek Proch Poland s Way of the Cross New York 1987 P 146 Project In Posterum Project In Posterum Retrieved December 19 2011 Encyklopedia PWN KAMPANIA WRZESNIOWA 1939 Archived September 27 2005 at the Wayback Machine last retrieved on December 10 2005 Polish language Marek Jan Chodakiewicz 2004 Between Nazis and Soviets Occupation Politics in Poland 1939 1947 Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 0484 2 beanbean May 2 2008 A Polish life 5 Starobielsk and the trans Siberian railway My Telegraph London Archived from the original on May 31 2014 Retrieved May 8 2012 Hope Michael Polish deportees in the Soviet Union Wajszczuk v pl Archived from the original on April 8 2009 Retrieved January 6 2009 GULAG a History Anne Applebaum Zemskov Gulag Sociologiceskije issledovanija 1991 No 6 pp 14 15 a b c Repressions Publicist n1 by Archived from the original on April 19 2009 Retrieved January 6 2009 a b c d e Ivanova Galina Mikhailovna 2000 Labor Camp Socialism The Gulag in the Soviet Totalitarian System Armonk New York Sharpe pp 69 126 a b c Khevniuk Oleg V 2004 The History of the Gulag From Collectivization to the Great Terror Yale University Press pp 236 286 a b c d Bacon Edwin 1994 The Gulag at War Stalin s Forced Labor System in the Light of the Archives New York New York University Press pp 42 63 82 100 123 144 Mark Elliott The United States and Forced Repatriation of Soviet Citizens 1944 47 Political Science Quarterly Vol 88 No 2 June 1973 pp 253 275 Repatriation The Dark Side of World War II Fff org Archived from the original on January 17 2012 Retrieved January 6 2009 Forced Repatriation to the Soviet Union The Secret Betrayal Hillsdale edu September 1 1939 Archived from the original on February 7 2012 Retrieved January 6 2009 The warlords Joseph Stalin Channel4 com March 6 1953 Retrieved January 6 2009 Remembrance Zeithain Memorial Grove Stsg de August 16 1941 Archived from the original on February 27 2008 Retrieved January 6 2009 Soviet Prisoners of War Forgotten Nazi Victims of World War II Historynet com September 8 1941 Archived from the original on March 30 2008 Retrieved January 6 2009 Sorting Pieces of the Russian Past Hoover org October 23 2002 Archived from the original on February 18 2009 Retrieved January 6 2009 Patriots ignore greatest brutality Smh com au August 13 2007 Retrieved January 6 2009 Joseph Stalin killer file Moreorless au com May 23 2001 Archived from the original on August 3 2013 Retrieved January 6 2009 a b c Zemskov V N K voprosu o repatriacii sovetskih grazhdan 1944 1951 gody Istoriya SSSR 1990 4 Zemskov V N On repatriation of Soviet citizens Istoriya SSSR 1990 No 4 Voenno istoricheskij zhurnal Military Historical Magazine 1997 5 page 32 Germans Find Mass Graves at an Ex Soviet Camp New York Times September 24 1992 Ex Death Camp Tells Story Of Nazi and Soviet Horrors New York Times December 17 2001 The museum of history of political repressions Perm 36 Archived from the original on September 2 2013 Retrieved October 29 2013 Perm 36 World Monuments Fund Retrieved November 11 2020 Syuzhety o Permi 36 na NTV sochli kvazizhurnalistskim paskvilem February 13 2015 Retrieved August 31 2015 Gulag Definition History amp Facts Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved February 18 2021 Getty J A Rittersporn G T Zemskov V N 1993 Victims of the Soviet Penal System in the Pre war Years American Historical Review 98 4 1017 1049 doi 10 2307 2166597 JSTOR 2166597 Archived from the original on 11 June 2008 The long awaited archival evidence on repression in the period of the Great Purges shows that levels of arrests political prisoners executions and general camp populations tend to confirm the orders of magnitude indicated by those labeled as revisionists and mocked by those proposing high estimates Wheatcroft Stephen G 1999 Victims of Stalinism and the Soviet Secret Police The Comparability and Reliability of the Archival Data Not the Last Word PDF Europe Asia Studies 51 2 340 342 doi 10 1080 09668139999056 For decades many historians counted Stalin s victims in tens of millions which was a figure supported by Solzhenitsyn Since the collapse of the USSR the lower estimates of the scale of the camps have been vindicated The arguments about excess mortality are far more complex than normally believed R Conquest The Great Terror A Re assessment London 1992 does not really get to grips with the new data and continues to present an exaggerated picture of the repression The view of the revisionists has been largely substantiated J Arch Getty amp R T Manning eds Stalinist Terror New Perspectives Cambridge 1993 The popular press even TLS and The Independent have contained erroneous journalistic articles that should not be cited in respectable academic articles a b Demographic Losses Due to Repressions by Anatoly Vishnevsky Director of the Centre for Human Demography and Ecology Russian Academy of Sciences in Russian The History of the GULAG Archived June 22 2010 at the Wayback Machine by Oleg V Khlevniuk Golfo Alexopoulos Medicine and Mortality in the Gulag NYUJordanCenter Hardy Jeffery Slavic Review Volume 77 Issue 1 Spring 2018 pp 269 270 Cambridge Core c Association for Slavic East European and Eurasian Studies 2018 Archived from the original on April 29 2019 Retrieved July 29 2019 Nakonechnyi Mikhail 2020 Factory of invalids Mortality disability and early release on medical grounds in GULAG 1930 1955 Thesis University of Oxford a b Dokument 103 Spravka o smertnosti zaklyuchyonnyh v sisteme GULaga za period 1930 1956 gg Mezhdunarodnyi Fond Demokratiia 2000 ISBN 5 85646 046 4 Healey Dan June 1 2018 Golfo Alexopoulos Illness and Inhumanity in Stalin s Gulag The American Historical Review 123 3 1049 1051 doi 10 1093 ahr 123 3 1049 ISSN 0002 8762 History of Gulag in 7 Volumes Volume 2 Structure and Personnel documents ed Petrov N V State Archive of the Russian Federation 2004 in Russian The Heads of the Central Committee of NKVD Archived October 21 2011 at the Wayback Machine Petrov N V Sorokyn K V Who Headed NKVD 1934 1941 Moscow Memorial 1999 504 pages ISBN 5 7870 0032 3 Lubyanka VCheka KGB Documents 1917 1960 Archived December 13 2020 at the Wayback Machine Moscow International Democracy Fund 1997 ISBN 5 89511 004 5 The Gulag Collection Paintings of Nikolai Getman Archived November 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h Thurston Robert W Life and Terror in Stalin s Russia 1934 1941 Yale University Press pp 102 104 Stalin s legacy lives on in city that slaves built archive 1994 the Guardian December 29 2017 Retrieved April 12 2021 Brent Jonathan 2008 Introduction Pp 1 18 in Inside the Stalin Archives Discovering the New Russia Atlas amp Co ISBN 0 9777433 3 0 Archived from the original on February 24 2009 p 12 Getty J Arch 1985 Origins of the Great Purges Cambridge University Press p 189 Borodkin Leonid and Simon Ertz 2005 Forced Labor and the Need for Motivation Wages and Bonuses in the Stalinist Camp System Comparative Economic Studies 47 2 418 36 Maddox S 2018 Gulag Football Competitive and Recreational Sport in Stalin s System of Forced Labor Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 19 3 509 536 Remnick David April 2 2014 Lenin s Tomb The Last Days of the Soviet Empire Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 425 ISBN 978 0 8041 7358 2 Khlevniuk Oleg 2004 The History of the Gulag New Haven Yale University Press p 55 Gorlizki Yoram June 28 2001 Theft Under Stalin A Property Rights Analysis PDF Archived PDF from the original on March 7 2017 Retrieved March 7 2017 Khlevniuk Oleg 2004 The History of the Gulag New Haven Yale University Press p 61 Nikolai Getman The Gulag Collection Archived May 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Yedlin Tova 1999 Maxim Gorky A Political Biography Greenwood Publishing Group p 188 ISBN 978 0 275 96605 8 Map of Gulag made by the Memorial Foundation on 1 Sistema ispravitelno trudovyh lagerej v SSSR Memo ru Retrieved January 6 2009 a b Ivanova Galina Flath Carol Raleigh Donald 2000 Labor Camp Socialism The Gulag in the Soviet Totalitarian System London M E Sharpe p 188 ISBN 978 0 7656 0426 2 Anne Applebaum Inside the Gulag Archived October 15 2008 at the Wayback Machine Coercion versus Motivation Forced Labor in Norilsk PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 3 2008 Retrieved January 6 2009 Barnes Stephen A 2011 Death and Redemption The Gulag and the Shaping of Soviet Society Princeton Princeton University Press pp 7 16 ISBN 978 0 691 15112 0 a b c d e Arendt Hannah 1985 The Origins of Totalitarianism Harcourt a b Zemskov Viktor 1995 K voprosu o masshtabah repressij v SSSR Sociologicheskie issledovaniya 9 118 127 Retrieved August 20 2011 Lopatnikov Leonid 2009 K diskussiyam o statistike Bolshogo terrora Vestnik Evropy 26 27 Retrieved August 20 2011 Nechepurenko Ivan March 13 2021 Born in Soviet Exile They Might Die in a Russian One The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 To ensure that the preferred version of history prevailed the Kremlin has squeezed historians researchers and rights groups that focus on gulag research and memory Zemskov Viktor 1994 Politicheskie repressii v SSSR 1917 1990 gg PDF Rossiya XXI 1 2 107 124 Archived from the original PDF on March 30 2012 Retrieved August 17 2011 Rousso Henry Golsan Richard 2004 Stalinism and nazism history and memory compared U of Nebraska Press p 92 ISBN 978 0 8032 9000 6 a b Vishnevsky Alantoly Demograficheskie poteri ot repressij The Demographic Loss of Repression Demoscope Weekly December 31 2007 retrieved April 13 2011 Maksudov Sergej 1995 O publikaciyah v zhurnale Socis Sociologicheskie issledovaniya 9 114 118 Retrieved August 17 2011 Werth Nicolas June 2007 Der Gulag im Prisma der Archive Zugange Erkenntnisse Ergebnisse PDF Osteuropa 57 6 9 30 Archived from the original PDF on January 9 2014 Istoriya stalinskogo Gulaga Konec 1920 h pervaya polovina 1950 h godov Sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomah Tom 1 Massovye repressii v SSSR Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya 2004 ISBN 978 5 8243 0605 7 Istoriya stalinskogo Gulaga Konec 1920 h pervaya polovina 1950 h godov Sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomah Tom 2 Karatelnaya sistema Struktura i kadry Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya 2004 ISBN 978 5 8243 0606 4 Istoriya stalinskogo Gulaga Konec 1920 h pervaya polovina 1950 h godov Sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomah Tom 3 Ekonomika Gulaga Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya 2004 ISBN 978 5 8243 0607 1 Istoriya stalinskogo Gulaga Konec 1920 h pervaya polovina 1950 h godov Sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomah Tom 4 Naselenie Gulaga Chislennost i usloviya soderzhaniya Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya 2004 ISBN 978 5 8243 0608 8 Istoriya stalinskogo Gulaga Konec 1920 h pervaya polovina 1950 h godov Sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomah Tom 5 Specpereselency v SSSR Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya 2004 ISBN 978 5 8243 0608 8 Istoriya stalinskogo Gulaga Konec 1920 h pervaya polovina 1950 h godov Sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomah Tom 6 Vosstaniya bunty i zabastovki zaklyuchennyh Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya 2004 ISBN 978 5 8243 0610 1 Istoriya stalinskogo Gulaga Konec 1920 h pervaya polovina 1950 h godov Sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomah Tom 7 Sovetskaya repressivno karatelnaya politika i penitenciarnaya sistema Annotirovannyj ukazatel del GA RF Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya 2005 ISBN 978 5 8243 0611 8 Polyan Pavel 2006 Novye karty arhipelaga GULAG Neprikosnovennyj zapas 2 46 277 286 Retrieved August 20 2011 a b c d Edwin Bacon Glasnost and the Gulag New Information on Soviet Forced Labor around World War II Soviet Studies Vol 44 No 6 1992 pp 1069 1086 Cited in David Dallin and Boris Nicolaevsky Forced Labor in Soviet Russia New Haven Yale University Press 1947 p 59 62 N S Timasheff The Postwar Population of the Soviet Union American Journal of Sociology Vol 54 No 2 Sep 1948 pp 148 155 Naum Jasny Labor and Output in Soviet Concentration Camps Journal of Political Economy Vol 59 No 5 Oct 1951 pp 405 419 Solzhenitsyn A The Gulag Archipelago Two Harper and Row 1975 Estimate was through 1953 in Russian Beria Moscow ACT 1999 ISBN 5 237 03178 1 page 203 According to Anton Antonov Ovseenko average number of prisoners in Gulag was 17 6 million in 1942 which many times exceeds the declassified official forged data frequently published in press the number was taken from an NKVD document dated January 18 1945 The number of prisoners in 1943 was estimated as 13 million S G Wheatcroft On Assessing the Size of Forced Concentration Camp Labour in the Soviet Union 1929 56 Soviet Studies Vol 33 No 2 Apr 1981 pp 265 295 Steven Rosefielde An Assessment of the Sources and Uses of Gulag Forced Labour 1929 56 Soviet Studies Vol 33 No 1 Jan 1981 pp 51 87 Robert Conquest Excess Deaths and Camp Numbers Some Comments Soviet Studies Vol 43 No 5 1991 pp 949 952 Rappaport H Joseph Stalin A Biographical Companion ABC CLIO Greenwood 1999 Andrea Graziosi The New Soviet Archival Sources Hypotheses for a Critical Assessment Cahiers du Monde russe Vol 40 No 1 2 Archives et nouvelles sources de l histoiresovietique une reevaluation Assessing the New Soviet Archival Sources Jan Jun 1999 pp 13 63 The Total Number of Repressed by Anatoly Vishnevsky Director of the Center for Human Demography and Ecology Russian Academy of Sciences in Russian Archived copy PDF www paulbogdanor com Archived from the original PDF on November 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 18 2012 Retrieved January 31 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Andrei Sokolov January 2003 Forced Labor in Soviet Industry The End of the 1930s to the Mid 1950s An Overview PDF Hoover Press One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich Popov Blagoj 2012 Ot Lajpcigskiya proces v Sibirskite lageri Sofiya Izdatelstvo Iztok Zapad pp 37 57 ISBN 978 619 152 025 1 a b Petrov Nikita 2003 The GULag as Instrument of the USSR s Punitive System 1917 39 In Dundovich Elena Gori Francesca Guercetti Emanuela eds Reflections on the Gulag With a Documentary Index on the Italian Victims of Repression in the USSR Feltrinelli Editore pp 8 10 ISBN 9788807990588 OCLC 803610496 Robert Conquest Paul Hollander Political violence belief behavior and legitimation p 55 Palgrave Macmillan 2008 ISBN 978 0 230 60646 3 Galperovich Danila June 27 2010 Direktor Gosudarstvennogo muzeya GULAGa Anton Vladimirovich Antonov Ovseenko Radio Liberty Archived from the original on November 23 2011 Retrieved August 19 2011 Banerji Arup 2008 Writing history in the Soviet Union making the past work Berghahn Books p 271 ISBN 978 81 87358 37 4 About State Gulag Museum The State Gulag Museum Archived from the original on June 25 2018 Retrieved August 19 2011 Gulag Museum on Communism New Russian Gulag museum recreates Soviet terror BBC October 30 2015 Further reading editSee also Bibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union Terror famine and the Gulag Applebaum Anne 2003 Gulag A History Broadway Books hardcover 720 pp ISBN 0 7679 0056 1 Ciszek Walter 1997 With God in Russia Ignatius Press 433 pp ISBN 0 89870 574 6 David Fox Michael ed 2016 The Soviet Gulag Evidence Interpretation and Comparison illustrated hardcover ed Pittsburgh Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 9780822944645 Retrieved December 2 2021 via Google Books Ertz Simon 2006 Zwangsarbeit im stalinistischen Lagersystem Eine Untersuchung der Methoden Strategien und Ziele ihrer Ausnutzung am Beispiel Norilsk 1935 1953 Duncker amp Humblot 273 pp ISBN 978 3 428 11863 2 Figes Orlando 2007 The Whisperers Private Life in Stalin s Russia Allen Lane hardcover 740 pp ISBN 0 14 101351 6 Getty J Arch and Oleg V Naumov 1999 The Road to Terror Stalin and the Self Destruction of the Bolsheviks 1932 1939 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press 635 pp ISBN 0 300 07772 6 Gheith Jehanne M and Katherine R Jolluck 2010 Gulag Voices Oral Histories of Soviet Detention and Exile Palgrave Studies in Oral History Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 230 61063 3 Rawicz Slawomir 1995 The Long Walk ISBN 1 55821 684 7 Gregory Paul R and Valery Lazarev eds 2003 The Economics of Forced Labor The Soviet Gulag Stanford Hoover Institution Press ISBN 0 8179 3942 3 Herling Grudzinski Gustaw 1996 A World Apart Imprisonment in a Soviet Labor Camp During World War II Penguin 284 pp ISBN 0 14 025184 7 Hochschild Adam 2003 The Unquiet Ghost Russians Remember Stalin Boston Houghton Mifflin 304 pp paperback ISBN 0 618 25747 0 Khlevniuk Oleg V 2004 The History of the Gulag From Collectivization to the Great Terror New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press hardcover 464 pp ISBN 0 300 09284 9 Kizny Tomasz 2004 Gulag Life and Death Inside the Soviet Concentration Camps 1917 1990 Firefly Books Ltd 496 pp ISBN 1 55297 964 4 Kozlov V P et al eds 2004 5 Istorija stalinskogo Gulaga konec 1920 kh pervaia polovina 1950 kh godov sobranie dokumentov v 7 tomach 7 vols Moskva ROSSPEN ISBN 5 8243 0604 4 Mielke Tomas M 2017 The Russian Homosexual Lexicon Consensual and Prison Camp Sexuality Among Men CreateSpace ISBN 9781544658490 Rossi Jacques 1989 The Gulag Handbook An Encyclopedia Dictionary of Soviet Penitentiary Institutions and Terms Related to the Forced Labor Camps ISBN 1 55778 024 2 Solzhenitsyn Aleksandr 1973 The Gulag Archipelago Harper amp Row 660 pp ISBN 0 06 080332 0 The Gulag Archipelago Two Harper amp Row 712 pp ISBN 0 06 080345 2 Tobien Karl 2006 Dancing Under the Red Star The Extraordinary Story of Margaret Werner the Only American Woman to Survive Stalin s Gulag WaterBrook Press ISBN 1 4000 7078 3 Werth Nicolas 1999 A State Against Its People Violence Repression and Terror in the Soviet Union Pp 33 260 in The Black Book of Communism Crimes Terror Repression edited by S Courtois et al Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 07608 7 2007 Cannibal Island Death in a Siberian Gulag Human Rights and Crimes against Humanity with an introduction by J T Gross Princeton University Press 248 pp ISBN 0 691 13083 3 Remembering Stalin Azerbaijan International 13 4 2005 The Literature of Stalin s Repressions Azerbaijan International 14 1 2006 Petrov N V Kokurin A I 2000 GULAG Glavnoe upravlenie lagerej 1918 1960 Gulag Main camp administration 1918 1960 PDF immediate download in Russian Moscow ISBN 978 5 85646 046 8 Archived from the original on November 13 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Articles edit Barenberg Alan 2015 The Gulag in Vorkuta Beyond Space and Time Laboratorium Russian Review of Social Research 7 1 Barenberg Alan Wilson T Bell Sean Kinnear Steven Maddox and Lynne Viola 2017 New directions in Gulag studies a roundtable discussion Canadian Slavonic Papers 59 3 4 376 95 doi 10 1080 00085006 2017 1384665 Bell Wilson T 2013 Was the Gulag an Archipelago De Convoyed Prisoners and Porous Borders in the Camps of Western Siberia The Russian Review 72 1 Kravchuk Pavel 2013 Gulag far and near The story of the penitentiary system Viola Lynne 2018 New sources on Soviet perpetrators of mass repression a research note Canadian Slavonic Papers 60 3 4 592 604 doi 10 1080 00085006 2018 1497393 Hardy Jeffrey S 2017 Of pelicans and prisoners avian human interactions in the Soviet Gulag Canadian Slavonic Papers 60 3 4 375 406 doi 10 1080 00085006 2017 1396837 Healey Dan 2015 Lives in the Balance Weak and Disabled Prisoners and the Biopolitics of the Gulag Kritika 16 3 Memoirs edit Baghirov Ayyub 1999 2006 Bitter Days of Kolyma Azerbaijan International 14 1 58 71 Bardach Janusz 1999 Man Is Wolf to Man Surviving the Gulag University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22152 4 Ciszek Walter 1997 He Leadeth Me An Extraordinary Testament of Faith Doubleday 216 pp ISBN 978 0385040518 Dolgun Alexander and Patrick Watson 1975 Alexander Dolgun s Story An American in the Gulag New York Knopf 370 pp ISBN 978 0 394 49497 5 Ginzburg Eugenia 1967 2002 Journey into the Whirlwind Harvest HBJ Book 432 pp ISBN 0 15 602751 8 1982 Within the Whirlwind Harvest HBJ Book 448 pp ISBN 0 15 697649 8 Gliksman Jerzy 1948 Tell the West An account of his experiences as a slave laborer in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Gresham Press 358pp Abridged edition New York National Committee for a Free Europe 95pp c 1948 Hollander Paul ed 2006 Editor s Introduction The Distinctive Features of Repression in Communist States Pp xv lxxviii in From the Gulag to the Killing Fields Personal Accounts of Political Violence and Repression in Communist States with a foreword by A Applebaum Intercollegiate Studies Institute ISBN 1 932236 78 3 From the annotation more than forty dramatic personal memoirs of Communist violence and repression from political prisoners across the globe Margolin Julius 1952 PUTEShESTVIE V STRANU ZE KA A Travel to the Land Ze Ka full text according to the original manuscript written in 1947 in Russian Margolin Julius 2020 1952 Journey into the Land of the Zeks and Back A Memoir of the Gulag S Hoffman trans New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780197502143 Mochulsky Fyodor V Gulag Boss A Soviet Memoir Oxford University Press 272 pp the first memoir from an NKVD employee translated into English Noble John H 1961 I Was a Slave in Russia Broadview Illinois Cicero Bible Press Petkevich Tamara 2010 Memoir of a Gulag Actress Northern Illinois University Rossi Jacques 2018 Fragments of Lives Chronicles of the Gulag Antonelli Street trans Prague Karolinum ISBN 9788024637006 Sadigzade Ummugulsum 2005 2006 Prison Diary Tears Are My Only Companions translated by A Mustafayeva edited by B Blair Azerbaijan International 14 1 40 45 Sadigzade Ummugulsum and her children 2006 Letters from Prison Azerbaijan International 14 1 48 53 Children family Seyid Husein Sayyara Sadigzade Ogtay Sadigzade Jighatay Sadigzade Toghrul Sadigzade and Gumral Sadigzade Sadikhli Murtuz 1991 2006 Memory of Blood Azerbaijan International 14 1 18 19 Shalamov Varlam 1995 Kolyma Tales Penguin Books 528 pp ISBN 0 14 018695 6 Shumuk Danylo 1974 Za Chidnim Obriyam Beyond the Eastern Horizon Paris Smoloskyp 447 pp 1984 Life sentence Memoirs of a Ukrainian political prisoner Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Study 401 pp ISBN 978 0 920862 17 9 Solomon Michel 1971 Magadan New York Auerbach ISBN 0877690855 Volovich Hava 1999 Till My Tale is Told Women s Memoirs of Gulag ed Simeon Vilensky Indiana University Press Solzhenitsyn s Shalamov s Ginzburg s works at Lib ru in original Russian Vernon Kress alias of Petr Zigmundovich Demant Zekameron XX veka autobiographical novel in Russian Biryukov A M Kolymskie istorii ocherki Novosibirsk 2004Fiction edit Amirejibi Chabua 2001 Gora Mborgali Tbilisi Georgia Chabua 650 pp ISBN 99940 734 1 9 Amis Martin 2006 House of Meetings New York Vintage Books 242 pp ISBN 978 1 4000 9601 5 Booth Martin 1998 The Industry Of Souls United Kingdom Dewi Lewis Publishing 250 pp ISBN 0 312 26753 3 Huseyn Mehdi 1964 2006 Underground Rivers Flow Into the Sea Azerbaijan International 14 1 96 99 First Novel About Exile to the Gulag by an Azerbaijani Writer Muller Herta 2009 Everything I Possess I Carry With Me Solzhenitsyn Aleksandr 1962 One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich Signet Classic 158 pp ISBN 0 451 52310 5 1968 In the First Circle Northwestern University Press 580 pp ISBN 978 0 8101 1590 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gulag nbsp Look up gulag in Wiktionary the free dictionary GULAG Many Days Many Lives Online Exhibit Center for History and New Media George Mason University Gulag Forced Labor Camps Online Exhibition Blinken Open Society Archives The website of the Virtual Gulag Museum Archived August 17 2011 at the Wayback Machine projected by the scientific information center Memorial GULAG History Museum in Moscow Sound Archives European Memories of the Gulag Gulag prisoners at work 1936 1937 Photo album at NYPL Digital Gallery The GULAG Revelations from the Russian Archives at Library of Congress Brutal Drawings from the Gulag by Danzig Baldaev a retired Soviet prison guard YT Portals nbsp Soviet Union nbsp Law Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gulag amp oldid 1194965999, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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