The Vorkuta Uprising was a major uprising of forced labor camp inmates at the Rechlag Gulag special labor camp in Vorkuta, Russian SFSR, USSR from 19 July (or 22 July) to 1 August 1953, shortly after the arrest of Lavrentiy Beria on 26 June 1953. The uprising was violently stopped by the camp administration after two weeks of bloodless standoff.[1]

Vorkuta uprising

Vorkuta Gulag in 1940s
Date19 July 1953 – 1 August 1953
Location67°30′51″N 64°05′02″E / 67.51417°N 64.08389°E / 67.51417; 64.08389
Result Uprising suppressed
Belligerents
Soviet Army
Prison Guards
Vorkuta inmates
Casualties and losses
57 killed
Vorkuta uprising is located in European Russia
Vorkuta uprising
Location within European Russia

Background

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Vorkuta Rechlag (River Camp) or Special Camp No. 6 consisted of 17 separate "departments" engaged in construction of coal mines, coal mining and forestry. In 1946 it housed 62,700 inmates, 56,000 in July 1953. A substantial portion of the camp guards were former convicts. According to Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the uprising was provoked by two unconnected events of June 1953: the arrest of Lavrentiy Beria in Moscow and the arrival of Ukrainian prisoners who, unlike long-term Russian inmates, were still missing their freedom (similar dissent existed between Baltic, the second largest group, and Polish inmates).[2][3] Another major factor was the application of the March 1953 general amnesty, issued after the death of Joseph Stalin, to only convicts with criminal sentences and small prison terms, of which there were few in Vorkuta, as a large part of the inmates were political prisoners.

Uprising

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The uprising, initially in the form of a passive walkout, began on or before July 19, 1953, at a single "department" and quickly spread to five others. The initial demands were to give inmates access to a state attorney and due justice, and they quickly changed to political demands. According to the inmate Leonid Markizov, Voice of America and the BBC broadcast regular news about the events in the Rechlag, with correct names, ranks and numbers. Even without foreign assistance, strikes at nearby sites were clearly visible as the wheels of the mine headframes stopped rotating, and the word was spread by trains, which had slogans painted by prisoners on the sides, and whose crews spread news. The total number of inmates on strike reached 18,000. The inmates remained static within the barbed wire perimeters.

For a week following the initial strike the camp administration apparently did nothing; they increased perimeter guards but took no forceful action against inmates. The mines were visited by State Attorney of the USSR, Roman Rudenko, Internal Troops Commander, Ivan Maslennikov, and other top brass from Moscow. The generals spoke to the inmates who sat idle in camp courtyards, so far peacefully. However, on July 26 the mob stormed the maximum security punitive compound, releasing 77 of its inmates. The commissars from Moscow remained in Vorkuta, planning their response.

On July 31 camp chief Derevyanko started mass arrests of "saboteurs"; inmates responded with barricades. The next day, August 1, after further bloodless clashes between inmates and guards, Derevyanko ordered direct fire at the mob. According to Leonid Markizov, 42 were killed on the spot, 135 wounded (many of them, deprived of medical help, died later). According to Solzhenitsyn, there were 66 killed. Among those shot was the Latvian Catholic priest Jānis Mendriks.[4]

After submission of the mob, many "saboteurs" were arrested and placed in maximum security cells, but without further punitive executions. Conditions were marginally improved (especially for "political" inmates).

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A similar fictional uprising at Vorkuta, however in 1963 when the camp had already been shut down, was depicted in the story mode of the 2010 video game Call of Duty: Black Ops.

Literature

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bondaruk, Lesia (29 October 2015). "Finnish journalist's book on Vorkuta prison camp uprising". The Day (Den'). Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  2. ^ Latkovskis, Leonards. "I. Baltic Prisoners of the Gulag Revolts of 1953 - L. Latkovskis". Lituanus - Lithuanian quarterly journal of arts and sciences. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  3. ^ Latkovskis, Leonards. "II. Baltic Prisoners of the Gulag Revolts of 1953 - L. Latkovskis". Lituanus - Lithuanian quarterly journal of arts and sciences. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  4. ^ Servant of God Fr. Janis Mendriks MIC 1907–1953

Sources

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