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Gulag

Page 84

by Anne Applebaum


  Rapoport, Yakov, The Doctors’ Plot: Stalin’s Last Crime, London, 1991

  Reagan, Ronald, An American Life, New York, 1990

  Reavey, George, ed. and trans., The New Russian Poets, 1953–1968 , London and Boston, 1981

  Reddaway, Peter, “Dissent in the Soviet Union,” Problems of Communism, 32/6, November– December 1983, pp. 1–15

  ———, The Forced Labour Camps in the USSR Today: An Unrecognized Example of Modern Inhumanity, International Committee for the Defence of Human Rights in the USSR, 1973

  ———, Uncensored Russia: Protest and Dissent in the Soviet Union, New York, 1972

  Reddaway, Peter, and Bloch, Sidney, Psychiatric Terror: How Soviet Psychiatry Is Used to Suppress Dissent, New York, 1977

  Remnick, David, Lenin’s Tomb, New York, 1994

  Revel, Jean-François, The Totalitarian Temptation, trans. D. Hapgood, London, 1977

  Reznikova, Irina, Pravoslavie na Solovkakh, St. Petersburg, 1994

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  Rigoulot, Pierre, Les Paupières Lourdes, Paris, 1991

  Rogovin, Vadim, 1937, Moscow, 1996

  Rossi, Jacques, The Gulag Handbook, trans. William Burhans, New York, 1989

  Rothberg, Abraham, The Heirs of Stalin: Dissidence and the Soviet Regime , 1953–1970, Ithaca, NY, and London, 1972

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  Rozanov, Mikhail, Solovetskii Kontslager v monastire, Moscow, 1979

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  Ruud, Charles, and Stepanov, Sergei, Fontanka 16: The Tsar’s Secret Police, Montreal, 1999

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  Sbornik zakonodatelnykh i normativnykh aktov o repressiyakh i reabilitatsii zhertv politicheskikh repressii, Verkhovnyr Sovet Rossiiskoi Federatsii, Moscow, 1993

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  Scammell, Michael, ed., The Solzhenitsyn Files, Chicago, 1995

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  Sergeev, I. N., Tsaritsyno, Sukhanovo: lyudi, sobytiya , fakty, Moscow, 1998

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  ———, Lenin: A Biography, London, 2000

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  Shmirov, Viktor, “Lager kak model Realnosti,” speech made at the conference “Sudba Rossii v kontekste mirovoi istorii dvadtsatogo veka,” Moscow, October 17, 1999

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  Slave Labor in Russia, American Federation of Labor, excerpts from the report of the International Labor Relations Committee of the 66th convention of the American Federation of Labor, San Francisco, CA, October 6–16, 1947

  Slovar tyuremno-lagerno-blatnogo zhargona, Moscow, 1992

  Smith, Kathleen, Remember Stalin’s Victims, Ithaca, NY, 1996

  Sobolev, S. A., et al., Lubyanka, 2, Moscow, 1999

  Sobranie dokumentov samizdata, Radio Liberty Committee, Munich, Germany (LOC)

  Sofsky, Wolfgang, The Order of Terror: The Concentration Camp, trans. William Templer, Princeton, 1997

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  Stalin’s Slave Camps, Brussels, International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, 1951

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  Teatr Gulaga, Moscow, 1995

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  Todorov, Tzvetan, Facing the Extreme, trans. Arthur Denner and Abigail Pollak, New York, 1996

  ———, Voices from the Gulag, trans. Robert Zaretsky, University Park, PA, 1999

  Tokes, Rudolf, Dissent in the USSR, Baltimore, 1975

  Tolczyk, Dariusz, See No Evil: Literary Cover-Ups and Discoveries of the Soviet Camp Experience, New Haven and London, 1999

  Tolstoi, Nikolai, Stalin’s Secret War, New York, 1981

  ———, Victims of Yalta, New York, 1977

  Tsigankov, Anatoly, ed., Ikh nazvali KR, Petrozavodsk, 1992

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  ———, Stalin in Power: The Revolution from Above, New York, 1990

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  Uimanov, V. N., ed., Repressii: kak éto bylo, Tomsk, 199

  USSR: Human Rights in a Time of Change, Amnesty International publications, October 1989

  “USSR Labor Camps,” Hearings before the Subcommittee to investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and other Internal Security Laws of the Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. Senate, Ninety-third Congress, First Session, February 1, 1973

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  Vidal, Gore, The Last Empire, London, 2002

  Vilensky, Simeon, ed., Soprotivlenia v Gulage, Moscow, 1992

  Viola, Lynne, “The Role of the OGPU in Dekulakization, Mass Deportations, and Special Resettlement in 1930,” Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies, no. 1406, 2000

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  Volkogonov, Dmitri, Lenin: Life and Legacy, trans. Harold Shukman, London, 1994

  ———, Stalin: Triumph and Tragedy, trans. Harold Shukman, London, 1991

  ———, Trotsky: The Eternal Revolutionary, trans. Harold Shukman, London, 1996

  Vostochnaya Evropa v dokumentakh rossiiskikh archivov, 1944–1953: tom I, 1944–48 (collection of documents published by the Institute for Slavic and Balkan Studies), Moscow and Novosibirsk, 1997

  Vozvrashchenie k pravde (collection of documents from the Tver archives) Tver, Arkhivnyi Otdel Administratsii Tverskoi Oblasti, Tverskoi Tsentr Dokumentatsii Noveishii Istorii, 1995

  Vozvrashchenie pamyati, vols. I–III (historical anthology), Novosibirsk Memorial, Novosibirsk, 1991, 1994, 1997

  Walker, Martin, The Waking Giant: The Soviet Union Under Gorbachev, London, 1986

  Wallace, Henry, Soviet Asia Mission, New York, 1946

  Webb, Sidney and Beatrice, Soviet Communism: A New Civilisation?, London, 1936

  Weiner, Amir, Making Sense of War, Princeton, NJ, and Oxford, 2001

  ———, “Nature, Nurture and Memory in a Socialist Utopia: Delineating the Soviet Socio-Ethnic Body in the Age of Socialism,” The American Historical Review, vol. 104, no. 4, October 1999, pp. 1121–36

  Werth, Nicolas, Les Proces de Moscou, Brussells, 1987

  ———, Rapports Secrets Sovietiques, 1921–1991 , Paris, 1994

  Yurasova, D., “Reabilitatsionnoe opredelenie po delu rabotnikov Gulaga,” Zvenya, vol. I, Moscow, pp. 389–99

  Zagorulko, M. M., ed., Voennoplennye v SSSR: 1939–1956, Moscow, 2000


  aron, Piotr, Ludnos c Polska w Związku Radzieckim w Czasie II Wojny Swiatowej, Warsaw, 1990

  Zemskov, V. N., “Arkhipelag Gulag: glazami pisatelya i statistika,” Argumenty i Fakty, no. 45, 1989

  ———, “Gulag (istoriko-sotsiologicheskii aspekt),” Sotsiologicheskie Issledovaniya, no. 6, 1991, pp. 4–6.

  ———, “Spetsposelentsy (po dokumentam NKVD-MVD-SSSR),” Sotsiologicheskie Issledovaniya, no. 11, 1990, pp. 3–17

  ———, “Sudba Kulatskoi ssylki (1934–1954 gg),” Otechestvennaya Istoriya, 1/1994, pp. 118–47 ———, “Zaklyuchennie v 1930-e gody: sotsialno-demograficheskie problemy,” Otechestvennaya Istoriya, no. 4, July/August 1997

  Zubkova, Elena, Russia After the War: Hopes, Illusions and Disappointments , 1945–1957, trans. Hugh Ragsdale, Armonk, NY, 1998

  Zvenya (historical anthology), vol. I, Moscow, 1991

  ARCHIVES

  AKB—Arkhangelsk Local Lore Library, Arkhangelsk

  APRF—Archive of the President of the Russian Federation, Moscow

  GAOPDFRK—State Archive of Social-Political Movements and the Formation of the Republic of Karelia (former Communist Party archives), Petrozavodsk

  GARF—State Archive of the Russian Federation, Moscow

  Hoover—Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford, CA

  IKM—Iskitim Local Lore Museum Collections, Iskitim

  Info-Russ—Vladimir Bukovsky’s document collection

  [http://psi.ece.jhu.edu/-kaplan/IRUSS/BUK/GBARC/buk. html]

  Karta—The Karta Society, Warsaw

  Kedrovyi Shor—Archives of the Kedrovyi Shor lagpunkt, Intlag, in the author’s collection

  Komi Memorial—Archive of the Memorial Society, Syktyvkar

  LOC—Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

  Memorial—Archive of the Memorial Society, Moscow

  ML—Marylebone Library, Amnesty International Documents Collection, London

  NARK—National Archives of the Republic of Karelia, Petrozavodsk

  RGASPI—Russian State Archive of Social and Political History, Moscow

  RGVA—Russian State Military Archive, Moscow

  St. Petersburg Memorial—Archives of the Memorial Society, St. Petersburg

  SKM—Solovetsky Local Lore Museum Collections, Solovetsky Islands

  TsKhIDK—Center for Preservation of Historic Document Collections, Moscow

  VKM—Vorkuta Local Lore Museum Collections, Vorkuta

  INTERVIEWS

  Anonymous ex-director of camp orphanage (Moscow, July 24, 2001)

  Anna Andreeva (Moscow, May 28, 1999)

  Anton Antonov-Ovseenko (Moscow, November 14, 1998)

  Irena Arginskaya (Moscow, May 24, 1998)

  Olga Astafyeva (Moscow, November 14, 1998)

  David Berdzenishvili (Moscow, March 2, 1999)

  Viktor Bulgakov (Moscow, May 25, 1998)

  Zhenya Fedorov (Elektrostal, May 29, 1999)

  Isaak Filshtinsky (Peredelkino, May 30, 1998)

  Leonid Finkelstein (London, June 28, 1997)

  Lyudmila Khachatryan (Moscow, May 23, 1998)

  Marlen Korallov (Moscow, November 13, 1998)

  Natasha Koroleva (Moscow, July 25, 2001)

  Paulina Myasnikova (Moscow, May 29, 1998)

  Pavel Negretov (Vorkuta, July 15, 2001)

  Susanna Pechora (Moscow, May 24, 1998)

  Ada Purizhinskaya (Moscow, May 31, 1998)

  Alla Shister (Moscow, November 14, 1998)

  Leonid Sitko (Moscow, May 31, 1998)

  Galina Smirnova (Moscow, May 30, 1998)

  Leonid Trus (Novosibirsk, February 28, 1999)

  Galina Usakova (Moscow, May 23, 1998)

  Olga Vasileeva (Moscow, November 17, 1998)

  Simeon Vilensky (Moscow, March 6, 1999)

  Danuta Waydenfeld (London, January 22, 1998)

  Stefan Waydenfeld (London, January 22, 1998)

  Maria Wyganowska (London, January 22, 1998)

  Valentina Yurganova (Iskitim, March 1, 1999)

  Yuri Zorin (Arkhangelsk, September 13, 1998)

  GLOSSARY

  THE POLITICAL POLICE

  Cheka Chrezvychainaya komissiya (Extraordinary Commission): secret police, during the civil war era

  GPU Gosudarstvennoe politicheskoe upravlenie (State Political Administration): secret police during the early 1920s, successor to the Cheka

  MGB/KGB Ministerstvo/Komitet gosudarstvennoe bezopasnosti (Ministry of/Committee on State Security): secret police in charge of internal and external surveillance in the postwar era

  MVD Ministerstvo vnutrennikh del (Ministry of Internal Affairs): secret police in charge of jails and camps in the postwar era

  NKVD Narodnyi komissariat vnutrennikh del (People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs): secret police during the 1930s and the Second World War, successor to OGPU

  OGPU Obedinennoe gosudarstvennoe politicheskoe upravlenie (Unified State Political Administration): secret police during the late 1920s and early 1930s, successor to GPU

  Okhrana Czarist-era secret police

  FOREIGN WORDS AND SOVIET INSTITUTIONS

  balanda: prison soup

  banya: a Russian steam bath

  Barbarossa: Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union—Operation Barbarossa—on June 22, 1941

  beskonvoinyi: a prisoner who has the right to travel within different camp divisions without an armed guard

  besprizornye: Soviet street children. Most were orphans, products of the civil war and collectivization

  blatnoi slovo: thieves’ jargon (see urka)

  Bolsheviks: the radical faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party, which under Lenin’s leadership became the Russian Communist Party in 1918

  bushlat: a long-sleeved prisoners’ or workers’ jacket lined with cotton wadding

  Central Committee: the chief policy-making body of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. In between Party Congresses, it met two or three times a year. When it was not in session, decisions were made by the Politburo, which was technically a body elected by the Central Committee

  chifir: extremely strong tea. When ingested, produces something resembling a narcotic high

  collectivization: policy of forcing all peasants to abandon private farming, and to pool all of their land and other resources into a collective, pursued from 1929 to 1932. Collectivization created the conditions for the rural famine of 1932–34, and permanently weakened Soviet agriculture

  Council of People’s Commissars (or Sovnarkom): theoretically the ruling government body, the equivalent of a ministerial cabinet. In practice, subordinate to the Politburo

  Comintern: The Third (Communist International), an organization of the world’s communist parties, formed in 1919 under the leadership of the Soviet Communist Party. The Soviet Union shut it down in 1943

  dezhurnaya or dnevalnyi: in normal parlance, a concierge. In a camp, the man or woman who stays behind in the barracks all day, cleaning and guarding against theft

  dokhodyaga: someone on the verge of death; usually translated as “goner”

  Dom Svidanii: literally “House of Meetings,” where prisoners were allowed to meet their relatives

  étap: prisoner transport

  feldsher: a medical assistant, sometimes trained and sometimes not

  glasnost: literally “openness.” A policy of open debate and freedom of speech launched by Mikhail Gorbachev in the 1980s

  Gulag: from Glavnoe Upravlenie Lagerei (Main Camp Administration), the secret police division which managed the Soviet concentration camps

  Izvestiya: the Soviet government newspaper

  Karelia: the Republic of Karelia, in the northwest corner of the Soviet Union, bordering Finland.

  katorga: Czarist term for forced labor. During the Second World War, the Soviet regime also adopted the word to describe strict-regime camps for war criminals

  kolkhoz: a collective farm. Peasants were forced to work on them after the
policy of collectivization was put into practice in 1929–31

  kolkhoznik: inhabitant of a kolkhoz

  Kolyma: the Kolyma River valley, in the far northeastern corner of Russia, on the Pacific coast. Home to one of the largest camp networks in the USSR

  Komi: the Republic of Komi, the northeastern section of European Russia, west of the Ural Mountains. The Komi people are the indigenous inhabitants of the Komi Republic, and speak an Ugro-Finnic language

  Komsomol: Communist Party youth organization, for young people ages fourteen to twenty-eight. Younger children belonged to the Pioneers

  kontslager: Russian for concentration camp

  Kronstadt rebellion: a major uprising against the Bolsheviks, led by the sailors of the Kronstadt naval base, in 1921

  kulak: traditionally, a prosperous peasant. In the Soviet era kulak came to mean any peasant accused of opposing Soviet authority or the collectivization policy. Between 1930 and 1933, over two million kulaks were arrested and deported

  kum: the camp administrator responsible for managing the informers’ network

  KVCh: Kulturno-Vospitatelnaya Chast, the Cultural-Educational Department of each camp, responsible for the political education of the prisoners, as well as theatrical and musical productions

  lagpunkt: the smallest camp division

  laogai: Chinese concentration camp

  Leningrad/St. Petersburg: the same city. Founded in 1703 by Peter the Great, St. Petersburg briefly became (the more Russified) Petrograd in 1914, when Russia went to war with Germany, and was then renamed Leningrad after Lenin’s death in 1924

  makhorka: rough tobacco smoked by Soviet workers and prisoners

  maloletki: juvenile prisoners

  mamka: female prisoner, the mother of a child born in prison

  Memorial: organization founded in the 1980s to count, describe, and assist the victims of Stalin. Now one of the most prominent human rights advocacy groups in Russia, as well as the premier historical research institute

  Mensheviks: The non-Leninist wing of the Russian Social Democratic Workers’ Party. After the Bolshevik Revolution, the Mensheviks tried to become a legal opposition, but their leaders were sent into exile in 1922. Many were later executed or sent to the Gulag

  monashki: religious women, of various faiths. Literally “nuns”

  nadziratel: prison or camp guard

  naryadshchik: the camp clerk responsible for assigning prisoners to work tasks

 

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