December 5, 1999

 

Conquest, Robert. KOLYMA: THE ARCTIC DEATH CAMPS. NY, The Viking Press.

1978.

 

     This review was written by Edna Boardman. If you would like to

reprint this review and have not already asked the author’s permission

to reprint her reviews, please send an e-mail of request to

[email protected]

 

     Kolyma (accent on the last syllable), an area supplied by ships

that plied the Sea of Okhotsk in far northeastern Russia, was the almost

escape-proof site of prison camps that accounted for the deaths of

between 3,000,000 and 6,000,000 persons during the Stalin era. Its soils

contained ores rich in gold, lead, and even uranium. The Soviet state’s

need for these metals in the 1930s and 1940s, plus an endless supply of

political deportees and petty criminals to dispose of, seemed a perfect

match between needs and the means of fulfilling those needs. Conquest

delved into professionally collected eyewitness accounts, written

reports, and newly available state figures, but could not narrow the

very great spread between the greater and lesser death estimates. Almost

all persons sent there were innocent of crimes, but the supply of

prisoners was fed by the paranoia of Stalin and his cohorts. It has

become clear that the purpose of the Kolyma camps was to kill people;

the production of mineral products was a secondary purpose.

 

     How did so many die? Although the winter temperatures were the

coldest recorded anywhere on earth, the far north had proved a healthful

climate when mined in earlier years by well-supplied and housed persons.

Megadeath was not inevitable. Prisoners under Stalin died in the process

of going to the holding areas near the camps in the jammed cattle cars,

a trip that sometimes took more than a month. They died while enduring

the life within the camps and experienced summary executions, sometimes

of whole groups for minor offenses. Food, raised in part at special farm

camps worked almost entirely by women, was short and doled out in

proportion to work done. (The more a person needed good food, the less

was given.) Medical care and sanitation were poor, and the system did

not discourage criminal activity of the most vicious kind by the

criminals against the political prisoners. The work in the mines was so

onerous that few survived for more than a month. The cold itself killed

thousands, especially when work was required in the darkest and coldest

part of winter, which had not been the case earlier. Then Stalin

decided, in the late 1930s, that warm fur coats and felt boots were

luxuries, a mark of “coddling,” and warm clothing was replaced by canvas

boots and wadding coats, if any.

 

     What could get a person to join the unlucky millions? One could:

grumble about the shortages under communism and waiting in line, be a

kulak or child of a kulak, be a religious leader or child of one, have

fought on a side other than the one which won during the revolutionary

times, refuse to join a collective, praise a Russian book published in a

foreign country, be unmasked as a “wrecker” if a production unit did not

meet its quotas as designated in the Five-year Plan, be a Russian

soldier POW who had been exposed to foreign ideas in Germany, be a

communist official in the early years of the Bolshevik revolution, be

accused of stealing state property because one was caught cutting a few

grains of wheat to feed one’s own hungry children,... Reasons had to do

with both what one did and with one’s origins.

 

     Why should German-Russians be interested in reading this book?

Conquest frequently mentions that Germans, including Volga Germans, of

whose history in Russia he is aware, were among those deported to

Kolyma. One German-Russian doctor, a man named Koch, saved thousands,

but was shot for trying to keep individuals alive. Conquest notes that,

at one camp, all Germans were separated from the other prisoners and put

into a separate barracks so others would not have to have contact with

Russia’s enemies. Still, Russian prisoners tried to get into the German

unit because it was the cleanest and most orderly.

 

     Conquest does not slash wildly about. He is a careful scholar who

sought the facts about the exact nature of the housing at Kolyma, the

work people did, their efforts to cope (and, very occasionally, to

escape), and the ways they died. He attempts to learn the names of the

ships used in the Kolyma area, where they were made, their capacity, and

how many trips they probably made each year.The image of thousands of

ordinary people cast into a dehumanizing environment becomes numbing to

the reader after awhile, but Conquest does his best to have his facts

accurate. He names his sources and weighs his conclusions carefully. He

helps us learn the parameters of this period in the life of our people.

 

Note: Edna is the author of All Things Decently and inOrder: And Other Writing on a Germans from Russia Heritage, available

for $11.95 from all of the German-Russian organizations.