Stalin’s Gulag
Stalin’s Gulag is amongst the most overlooked events, specifically genocide, in the history of humankind. The ruthless dictator killed close to 50 million people.
It was usual for up to sixty or more people to be crammed into one carriage, which was constructed from wooden planks and had a few rows of horizontal boards to sleep on. There was no illumination, and rats and vermin abounded (Rossi 182). Through varying weather, the captives were only allowed to wear the clothes they were arrested in. Food rations included bread every two or three days and salted herring that caused severe thirst.
Prisoners being transported by sea simultaneously experienced these living conditions. Though transport by sea only occurred eight to fifteen times a year, it was generally more perilous than railroad transfer. In the late summer of 1933, the Dzhurma (transport ship) with 12,000 prisoners aboard was blocked in the ice flows. Rescuing the prisoners was determined to be uneconomical and they all perished (Rossi 103). Those who did not die while trying to make it to the camps were once again the unlucky individuals.
Gulag camps existed throughout the Soviet Union, but the largest camps lay in the most extreme geographical and climatic regions of the country from the Arctic north to the Siberian east and the Central Asian south (Introduction: Stalin’s Gulag).
Prisoners were engaged in a variety of economic activities, but their work was typically unskilled, manual, and economically inefficient. The combination of endemic violence, extreme climate, hard labor, meager food rations and unsanitary conditions led to extremely high death rates in the camps. (Introduction: Stalin’s Gulag).
The prisoners worked up to 14 hours per day cutting trees, mining, and performing other physically exhausting activities. When some were not working, they would be called to line up in the forest and would all be shot down by machine guns. This cruel camp life lingered on until eventually, the entire Gulag system was deemed inefficient and abandoned (Killer File: Joseph Stalin).
Camp output almost never compensated for the cost of running the Gulags. Most of the felled trees rotted and never reached lumber mills; many of the railroad lines and canals the prisoners built were never used; and most of the construction was hopelessly shoddy. Not only had the USSR not gained anything economically from the camps, they were also responsible for the deaths of approximately 18 million Russian people. Even though Stalin died on March 5, 1963, his Gulag system meagerly survived.
Soon, Stalin’s successors deemed the Gulag a complete economic failure and closed the operation (Solzhenitsyn One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich). In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet Union. He was a great believer in the superiority of socialism and in the possibility to create a socialist system without the violence and repression of the earlier Soviet eras (Introduction: After the USSR). The vast majority of information regarding the Gulag system was unknown to him, but once he learned of it, he unwittingly started a movement that led to the final collapse of the Gulag system, and the entire Soviet Empire (Introduction: After the USSR).
During Joseph Stalin’s reign, approximately 18 million people died in his Gulag camps, the majority being innocent people who committed no crimes or injustices. It is a revealing, yet sickening discovery that people know what the Holocaust is, but have never heard of Stalin’s Gulag and the millions that perished. The Global Community cannot allow events like this to vanish into the library shelves.
The greatest weakness of mankind is forgetting; without the past, we are eternally lost in the future. Without mistakes to learn from, humans cannot expect to move forwards in correcting their occurrences. When those who were silenced finally speak up, there will be a final solution to our problems, and it will not be genocide. Instead, it will be a culmination of the ideas every human being that walks free and believes in liberty.
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Post Commentthis guy
On May 12, 2009 at 3:23 pm
hey.. how you doin?
this girl
On May 18, 2009 at 11:31 pm
good, want to meet up?
this pedophile
On June 11, 2009 at 5:05 am
so whats the address?
j davis
On November 8, 2009 at 9:32 pm
I have studies the Soviet Gulag for over 30 years but your connection to Beck’s ‘book’ destroys any credibility you might have had. Keep on posting verifiable history and leave the extremist ‘literature’ to others.
hugo
On March 22, 2010 at 3:25 am
is this information at all reliable?
anonymous
On June 28, 2010 at 3:26 pm
It is reliable indeed. I have a grandmother still alive, who is a survival of one of these Stalin’s gulags. It IS true. Over 40 million people (mainly Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians, Ukrainians Polish, Germans ets.) were killed in these gulags and the World just closed its eyes. It’s still the most overlooked genocide and definitely was the most terrible death factory.