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Siberian Prison System
PRISON SYSTEM IN SIBERIA
My project is dedicated to description of the history of Siberia as a
place to where send prisoners--from the days of Ivan the Terrible until
today. I will tell about the reasons for choosing Siberia as place of
exile, the system of prisons and conditions in Siberian prisons.
Choosing Siberia as a Place of Exile
As with other Western powers that gained colonies overseas, the
acquisition of Siberia led to making it a place of exile. Criminal and
political prisoners had been sent to Siberia for more than three
centuries; millions of people, in total, were deported there. Due to its
remoteness and severe weather conditions Russian Australia was one
huge prison, escape from where was almost impossible and very dangerous
not only because of the chase, but because of the Siberian killing
frosts, unimaginably long distances, bounty-hunting natives, deep
forests and wild animals. Another reason for establishing punishment by
exile was the desire of society to banish still cruel and barbarous
criminal code of XVII century according to which criminals had been
punished by amputation of their limbs, being bastionadoed, and being
branded with hot iron. Exile was quick and easy method of getting them
out of the way. The punishments, however, didn t become more humane.
They just began to happen far away from where most of the people could
see them. Before making Siberia place of exile criminals died from being
tortured in Moscow; after they died from the hard, exhausting work, cold
winters, and diseases in Siberia.
Although originally applied as a corporal punishment, exile can be
viewed as a means of population and developing the colony. Government
needed people to work in Siberian mines and to build roads, and penal
servitude began to replace long prison terms, while list of offences
meriting exile steadily lengthened to include even vagrancy,
fortune-telling, wife-beating, debts, accidentally starting a fire or
drunkenness. In 1754 death penalty was abolished for some years and
replaced with exile at hard labour.
Convoy to Siberia
Until the middle of the XIX century, most of the convicts had to walk to
the place of their exile from their homes. Often the journey took
years--the distances walked measured thousands of kilometres. They
walked from etape (transit prison) to etape. Until the beginning of
XVIII century there was almost no long-range planning and even
supervision of exiles was extremely negligent. Convicts had to beg their
way because there was almost no food provided for them. Doctors
accompanied the exile parties very seldom and there were very few prison
hospitals. The lack of record keeping was such that officials often
didn t know where the exiles had come from, what crime they had
committed, and what their proper destination should have been.
To bring order in this chaos, since 1811 all exiles received identifying
documents, and after 1817 etapes were erected at interval along the
principle roads. In 1823 a Bureau of Exile Administration was found in
Tobolsk.
From Tobolsk the convicts were sent to various towns or villages of
Siberia or continued by barge to Tomsk. At Tomsk prisoners began a march
to Eastern Siberia in guarded convoys. Marching parties, that often
included women and children, were expected to walk over five hundred
kilometres per month, stopping every third day for twenty-four-hour
rest. Due to terrible conditions ten to fifteen percent of exiles died
en route.
Types of Exiles
Exiles were divided into four classes: hard-labour convicts
(katorzhniks), penal colonists, the merely deported, and volunteer
followers such as wife and children. The first two were banished for
life, deprived of all civil rights, branded or tattooed. Originally hot
iron was used to brand exiles with letters to indicate their crime and
status. Later the branding was replaced by deep tattoos. The prisoners
were used as a forced labour, mostly in Siberian mines. Those who tried
to escape were severely tortured.
On the other hand, about third of exiles were allowed to settle free, a
number of others were assigned to a particular towns or farms, but not
imprisoned. Many exiles were followed by their families as in case with
Decembrists--group of nobles who rebelled in 1825 demanding abolishing
of serfdom and Constitution with civil rights and freedoms guaranteed.
The Conditions in Penal Colonies
The conditions in the colonies were not much better than those during
the marching. Many convicts lived outside the prisons in barracks or in
their families in little cabins that weren t very different from dog
kennels. More serious offenders lived in the prison, often with iron
shackles that they could have been forced to wear for years. Most of the
hard-labour convicts worked in mines. Often they couldn t see daylight
for months. The only things they did were working and sleeping. The
daily ration consisted of about a kilogram of brown bread, half a pound
of boiled meat, and some tea with rare appearances of cabbage soup.
Almost nothing was done to protect prisoners health--those with
infectious diseases often were not separated from others. Some prison
hospitals didn t even have beds--people had to lie on the cold, filthy
floor receiving no medical help due to frequent lack of doctors, nurses,
and medicines.
Siberia Under The Communists
Even though Siberia remained a place to where prisoners were sent after
the Revolution of 1917, some significant changes had occurred. The first
thing to change was the crimes of people who served sentences in
Siberia. During the tsarist regime people who were exiled were guilty in
committing serious or minor criminal and civil offences--murder or
fortune-telling, rape or cutting down trees where prohibited, robbery or
drunkenness. The punishment very often didn t match the seriousness of
the offence, but most (even though not all) of the people sent to
Siberia at that time were guilty of some--even very minor--offence. When
Communists came to power, most of Siberian prisoners were political
prisoners who were accused in treason, espionage, sabotage, or
anti-Soviet propaganda. Ninety nine percent of them were innocent.
Millions of people went through Stalin s GULAG. They served their ten-
and twenty-five-year sentences in Siberian camps for nothing. The
purpose of arresting innocent people was to destroy not only the
opposition, but the idea of the rebellion itself. Not only those who
tried to resist and people neutral to the regime were arrested--many
prisoners were dedicated Communists who helped to expose enemies of the
Soviet people truly believing that they were doing right thing until
they were arrested themselves and realized that large proportion of the
fellow prisoners was not guilty of any crime.
Another thing to change since the time of tsarist Russia was the prison
system itself. Under Communists, there were no prisons or etapes in
Siberia, but the labour camps. As before, prisoners labour was used for
building canals, bridges, and cities, cutting the trees and other
physically demanding work. Gulag prisoners constructed the White
Sea-Baltic Canal, the Moscow-Volga canal, the Baikal-Amur main railroad
line, numerous hydroelectric stations, and strategic roads in remote
regions. Three types of camps were developed: factory and agricultural
colonies, camps for work like lumbering and mining, and "punitive"
compounds for special punishment of prisoners from other camps. The
Soviet system of forced labour camps was first established in 1919, but
it was not until the early 1930s that the camps population reached
significant numbers. By 1934 Gulag had several millions of inmates.
Conditions in the camps were extremely harsh. Descriptions of the camps
by former Gulag prisoners often remind the descriptions of Nazi s
concentration camps. The daily ration reduced drastically as compared to
the ration received by exiles during the tsarist rule (that weren t huge
either). Inmates were often physically abused by the guards or by fellow
prisoners. There were cases when people froze to death as they were
transported to the camps or died from hunger, severe beating or various
diseases. Guards didn t view them as human beings and didn t think
prisoners had any rights, including right to life.
After Stalin s death in 1953 many of the prisoners were granted amnesty.
Most of those, however, were not political prisoners, but ordinary
criminals. As a result, there was a significant increase of criminal
activity in the middle 1950 s in Soviet Union, while many innocent
people remained imprisoned. Even though the conditions in the camps
somewhat improved, nobody would find them satisfactory in Canada today.
The forced labour camps continued to exist for decades. There still were
some camps during the Gorbachev period, but some of them were even
opened to journalists and human rights activists. With the advance of
democratization political prisoners disappeared from camps. Today
Siberian prisons are not different from any other Russian prison (that
aren t that great either, but it s a different topic.)
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