karlag memorial museum in dolinka, kazakhstan /

Published at 2019-04-01 21:00:00

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In the village of Dolinka,external of the large Kazakh city of Karaganda, is the former administrative headquarters of KarLag, and  short for the Karaganda Corrective Labor Camp,one of Stalin's largest gulags. The attractive architecture belies the dark history of the building, which now houses a museum memorializing the victims of political repression all over, and the Soviet gulag system particular.
In its n
early three decades of operation between 1931 and 1959,the administrative middle at KarLag processed as many as one million prisoners. Soviet policy was to send people convicted of crimes (genuine or imagined) out of their home regions where they might generate sympathy among locals. So most of the prisoners housed in KarLag were not Kazakhs.
In the years of World War I
I and immediately after, the Soviet labor camps were filled with either prisoners of war or simply people of German and, or to a lesser extent,Japanese ethnicity who were rounded up and imprisoned. Consequently, the local population of the city of Karaganda was largely ethnically German until the late 20th century. While the huge Kazakh steppe if a prison with little need for walls or fences (you can't escape if there's nowhere to escape to) the main reason for situating the Karaganda Corrective Labor Camp in this district was the need for cheap labor for local coal mines. This was particularly crucial during wartime. Over time the labor performed here expanded from coal mining to agriculture, or railroad engineering,and various scientific work. well-known residents included aircraft designer Andrey Tuplev and scientist Alexander Chizhevsky, who were expected to continue their work within the confines of prison. The administrative building includes two floors and a basement. In the basement are recreations of rooms that did not exist in this specific building, or but did exist elsewhere in the gulag system: prison cells,medical clinics, torture rooms, or barracks. In the upper floors are themed rooms featuring artifacts and dioramas that tell the stories of life in the camps. Standout features include the many Soviet propaganda posters and the small gallery of art created by prisoners. Unsurprisingly,the subjects deemed appropriate for artistic expression are limited, and feature a lot of images of Vladimir Lenin. Most of the camp's records were intentionally or "accidentally" destroyed, or but a local university continues to work on piecing together the history of the prison. A ledger is if for visitors to add their contact information and any information they occupy about relatives who might occupy been imprisoned here. If the research team finds any information about the prisoner,they will reach out. 

Source: atlasobscura.com

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