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Published byAllen Owens Modified over 9 years ago
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IT’S A GULAG LIFE The USSR’s Prison System
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GULAG Glavnoe Upravlenie ispravitel’no-trudovykh LAGerei (Main Administration of Corrective Labor Camps)
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Not a new idea Prison camps had been used in tsarist Russia Many Soviet gulags were actually revamped prison camps many new ones were also made, and they were overcrowded compared to tsarist use
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Three Big Arrest Periods 1. 1930-1933 Campaigns against the “Kulaks” Peasants were arrested, sent to exile, or shot for being “enemies of the people.” Peasants were required to turn over all grain to the government—collectivization “Hoarding” grain, or keeping any for yourself, was seen as anti-Soviet “Kulaks” were “rich” peasants—ones who owned an extra cow, had a successful crop, or who had a jealous neighbor that turned them in Between 1930-33, 2,000,000 were exiled to Siberia, 100,000 to gulags
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1934: Kirov Affair Assassination of Sergei Kirov—leader in the Communist party & close to Stalin Set off mass arrests and executions 40,000 residents of Leningrad were arrested and sent to prison camps or shot Called “the Kirov flood”
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1937-1938: The Great Terror One of the most brutal times under Stalin Directed at anyone, peasant or leader, deemed an “enemy of the people” Arrests began with Communist Party members accused of counter-revolutionary activities, then their family members and the public During this time 1,575,259 people were arrested, half of them shot (If 700,000 people were shot, that is 1500 a day during the Great Terror)
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Success of the Camps Gold mined in Siberia helped boost the USSR’s financial status Russia became an industrialized nation through forced labor, public works projects like the White Sea Canal were built Other stats you found earlier…
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Gulags than Nazi Camps? Important distinction: Nazi camps were used to exterminate whole groups of people GULAG was used as a weapon to control the country—all ethnicities, nationalities, and religions were persecuted Soviet prisoners, if they survived their sentence, could be released at the end of it. This never happened with Nazi camps More people passed through gulags than Nazi camps (roughly 14-18 million people vs. 11ish million in concentration camps) Both had labor camps; some Nazi camps were purely for extermination purposes Gulags: 1930-1953 (Stalin’s Death) Nazi Camps: 1933-1945 (End of WWII/Death of Hitler)
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Siberia
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Let’s go here!
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