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Between East and West: Across the Borderlands of
Europe
Chapter 1:
BOLSHEVIK BEGINNINGS
In the year 1917, two waves of revolution rolled across
Russia, sweeping Imperial Russian society aside as if
it were destroying so many houses of cards. After Czar
Nicholas II abdicated in February, events proved extremely
difficult for anyone to halt or control. Alexander Kerensky,
the leader of the first post-revolutionary Provisional
Government, later wrote that, in the void following
the collapse of the old regime, "all existing political
and tactical programs, however bold and well conceived,
appeared hanging aimlessly and uselessly in space."
But although the Provisional Government was weak, although
popular dissatisfaction was widespread, although anger
at the carnage caused by the First World War ran high,
few expected power to fall into the hands of the Bolsheviks,
one of several radical socialist parties agitating for
even more rapid change. Abroad, the Bolsheviks were
scarcely known. One apocryphal tale illustrates foreign
attitudes very well: in 1917, so the story goes, a bureaucrat
rushed into the office of the Austrian Foreign Minister,
shouting, "Your Excellency, there has been a revolution
in Russia!" The minister snorted. "Who could
make a revolution in Russia? Surely not harmless Herr
Trotsky, down at the Cafe Central?"
If the nature of the Bolsheviks was mysterious, their
leader, Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov--the man the world would
come to know by his revolutionary pseudonym, "Lenin"--was
even more so. During his many years as an emigre revolutionary,
Lenin had been recognized for his brilliance, but also
disliked for his intemperance and his factionalism.
He picked frequent fights with other socialist leaders,
and had a penchant for turning minor disagreements over
seemingly irrelevant matters of dogma into major arguments.
In the first months following the February Revolution,
Lenin was very far from holding a position of unchallenged
authority, even within his own Party. As late as mid-October
1917, a handful of leading Bolsheviks continued to oppose
his plan to carry out a coup d'etat against the Provisional
Government, arguing that the Party was unprepared to
take power, and that it did not yet have popular support.
He won the argument, however, and on October 25 the
coup took place. Under the influence of Lenin's agitation,
a mob sacked the Winter Palace. The Bolsheviks arrested
the ministers of the Provisional Government. Within
hours, Lenin had become the leader of the country he
renamed Soviet Russia.
Yet although Lenin had succeeded in taking power, his
Bolshevik critics had not been entirely wrong. The Bolsheviks
were indeed wildly unprepared. As a result, most of
their early decisions, including the creation of the
one-party state, were taken to suit the needs of the
moment. Their popular support was indeed weak, and almost
immediately they began to wage a bloody civil war, simply
in order to stay in power. From 1918, when the White
Army of the old regime regrouped to fight the new Red
Army--led by Lenin's comrade, "Herr Trotsky"
from the "Cafe Central"--some of the most
brutal fighting ever seen in Europe raged across the
Russian countryside. Nor did all of the violence take
place in battlefields. The Bolsheviks went out of their
way to quash intellectual and political opposition in
any form it took, attacking not only the representatives
of the old regime but also other socialists: Mensheviks,
Anarchists, Social Revolutionaries. The new Soviet state
would not know relative peace until 1921.
Against this background of improvisation and violence,
the first Soviet labor camps were born. Like so many
other Bolshevik institutions, they were created ad hoc,
in a hurry, as an emergency measure in the heat of the
civil war. This is not to say the idea had no prior
appeal. Three weeks before the October Revolution, Lenin
himself was already sketching out an admittedly vague
plan to organize "obligatory work duty" for
wealthy capitalists. By January 1918, angered by the
depth of the anti-Bolshevik resistance, he was even
more vehement, writing that he welcomed "the arrest
of millionaire-saboteurs traveling in first- and second-class
train compartments. I suggest sentencing them to half
a year's forced labor in a mine."
Lenin's vision of labor camps as a special form of
punishment for a particular sort of bourgeois "enemy"
sat well with his other beliefs about crime and criminals.
On the one hand, the first Soviet leader felt ambivalent
about the jailing and punishment of traditional criminals--thieves,
pickpockets, murderers--whom he perceived as potential
allies. In his view, the basic cause of "social
excess" (meaning crime) was "the exploitation
of the masses." The removal of the cause, he believed,
"will lead to the withering away of the excess."
No special punishments were therefore necessary to deter
criminals: in time, the Revolution itself would do away
with them. Some of the language in the Bolsheviks' first
criminal code would have thus warmed the hearts of the
most radical, progressive criminal reformers in the
West. Among other things, the code decreed that there
was "no such thing as individual guilt," and
that punishment "should not be seen as retribution."
On the other hand, Lenin--like the Bolshevik legal
theorists who followed in his wake--also reckoned that
the creation of the Soviet state would create a new
kind of criminal: the "class enemy." A class
enemy opposed the Revolution, and worked openly, or
more often secretly, to destroy it. The class enemy
was harder to identify than an ordinary criminal, and
much harder to reform. Unlike an ordinary criminal,
a class enemy could never be trusted to cooperate with
the Soviet regime, and required harsher punishment than
would an ordinary murderer or thief. Thus in May 1918,
the first Bolshevik "decree on bribery" declared
that: "If the person guilty of taking or offering
bribes belongs to the propertied classes and is using
the bribe to preserve or acquire privileges, linked
to property rights, then he should be sentenced to the
harshest and most unpleasant forced labor and all of
his property should be confiscated."
From the very earliest days of the new Soviet state,
in other words, people were to be sentenced not for
what they had done, but for who they were.
Unfortunately, nobody ever provided a clear description
of what, exactly, a "class enemy" was supposed
to look like. As a result, arrests of all sorts increased
dramatically in the wake of the Bolshevik coup. From
November 1917, revolutionary tribunals, composed of
random "supporters" of the Revolution, began
convicting random "enemies" of the Revolution.
Prison sentences, forced-labor terms, and even capital
punishment were arbitrarily meted out to bankers, to
merchants' wives, to "speculators"--meaning
anyone engaged in independent economic activity--to
former Czarist-era prison warders and to anyone else
who seemed suspicious.
The definition of who was and who was not an "enemy"
also varied from place to place, sometimes overlapping
with the definition of "prisoner of war."
Upon occupying a new city, Trotsky's Red Army frequently
took bourgeois hostages, who could be shot in case the
White Army returned, as it often did along the fluctuating
lines of the front. In the interim they could be made
to do forced labor, often digging trenches and building
barricades. The distinction between political prisoners
and common criminals was equally arbitrary. The uneducated
members of the temporary commissions and revolutionary
tribunals might, for example, suddenly decide that a
man caught riding a tram without a ticket had offended
society, and sentence him for political crimes. In the
end, many such decisions were left up to the policeman
or soldiers doing the arresting. Feliks Dzerzhinsky,
founder of the Cheka--Lenin's secret police, the forerunner
of the KGB--personally kept a little black notebook
in which he scribbled down the names and addresses of
random "enemies" he came across while doing
his job.
These distinctions would remain vague right up until
the collapse of the Soviet Union itself, eighty years
later. Nevertheless, the existence of two categories
of prisoner--"political" and "criminal"--had
a profound effect on the formation of the Soviet penal
system. During the first decade of Bolshevik rule, Soviet
penitentiaries even split into two categories, one for
each type of prisoner. The split arose spontaneously,
as a reaction to the chaos of the existing prison system.
In the very early days of the Revolution, all prisoners
were incarcerated under the jurisdiction of the "traditional"
judicial ministries, first the Commissariat of Justice,
later the Commissariat of the Interior, and placed in
the "ordinary" prison system. That is, they
were thrown into the remnants of the Czarist system,
usually into the dirty, gloomy stone prisons which occupied
a central position in every major town. During the revolutionary
years of 1917 to 1920, these institutions were in total
disarray. Mobs had stormed the jails, self-appointed
commissars had sacked the guards, prisoners had received
wide-ranging amnesties or had simply walked away.
By the time the Bolsheviks took charge, the few prisons
that remained in operation were overcrowded and inadequate.
Only weeks after the Revolution, Lenin himself demanded
"extreme measures for the immediate improvement
of food supplies to the Petrograd prisons." A few
months later, a member of the Moscow Cheka visited the
city's Taganskaya prison and reported "terrible
cold and filth," as well as typhus and hunger.
Most of the prisoners could not carry out their forced-labor
sentences because they had no clothes. A newspaper report
claimed that Butyrka prison in Moscow, designed to hold
1,000 prisoners, already contained 2,500. Another newspaper
complained that the Red Guards "unsystematically
arrest hundreds of people every day, and then don't
know what to do with them."
Overcrowding led to "creative" solutions.
Lacking anything better, the new authorities incarcerated
prisoners in basements, attics, empty palaces, and old
churches. One survivor later remembered being placed
in the cellar of a deserted house, in a single room
with fifty people, no furniture, and little food: those
who did not get packages from their families simply
starved. In December 1917, a Cheka commission discussed
the fate of fifty-six assorted prisoners--"thieves,
drunks and various 'politicals' "--who were being
kept in the basement of the Smolny Institute, Lenin's
headquarters in Petrograd.
Not everyone suffered from the chaotic conditions.
Robert Bruce Lockhart, a British diplomat accused of
spying (accurately, as it happened), was imprisoned
in 1918 in a room in the Kremlin. He occupied himself
playing Patience, and reading Thucydides and Carlyle.
From time to time, a former imperial servant brought
him hot tea and newspapers.
But even in the remaining traditional jails, prison
regimes were erratic, and prison wardens were inexperienced.
A prisoner in the northern Russian city of Vyborg discovered
that, in the topsy-turvy post-revolutionary world, his
former chauffeur had become a prison guard. The man
was delighted to help his former master move to a better,
drier cell, and eventually to escape. One White Army
colonel also recalled that in the Petrograd prison in
December 1917 prisoners came and left at will, while
homeless people slept in the cells at night. Looking
back on this era, one Soviet official remembered that
"the only people who didn't escape were those who
were too lazy."
The disarray forced the Cheka to come up with new solutions:
the Bolsheviks could hardly allow their "real"
enemies to enter the ordinary prison system. Chaotic
jails and lazy guards might be suitable for pickpockets
and juvenile delinquents, but for the saboteurs, parasites,
speculators, White Army officers, priests, bourgeois
capitalists, and others who loomed so large in the Bolshevik
imagination, more creative solutions were needed.
A solution was found as early as June 4, 1918, Trotsky
called for a group of unruly Czech war prisoners to
be pacified, disarmed, and placed in a kontslager: a
concentration camp. Twelve days later, in a memorandum
addressed to the Soviet government Trotsky again spoke
of concentration camps, outdoor prisons in which "the
city and village bourgeoisie . . . shall be mobilized
and organized into rear-service battalions to do menial
work (cleaning barracks, camps, streets, digging trenches,
etc.). Those refusing will be fined, and held under
arrest until the fine is paid."
In August, Lenin made use of the term as well. In a
telegram to the commissars of Penza, site of an anti-Bolshevik
uprising, he called for "mass terror against the
kulaks [rich peasants], priests and White Guards"
and for the "unreliable" to be "locked
up in a concentration camp outside town." The facilities
were already in place. During the summer of 1918--in
the wake of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty which ended Russia's
participation in the First World War--the regime freed
two million war prisoners. The empty camps were immediately
turned over to the Cheka.
At the time, the Cheka must have seemed the ideal body
to take over the task of incarcerating "enemies"
in "special" camps. A completely new organization,
the Cheka was designed to be the "sword and shield"
of the Communist Party, and had no allegiance to the
official Soviet government or any of its departments.
It had no traditions of legality, no obligation to obey
the rule of law, no need to consult with the police
or the courts or the Commissar of Justice. Its very
name spoke of its special status: the All-Russian Extraordinary
Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage--or,
using the Russian abbreviation for "Extraordinary
Commission"--the Ch-K, or Cheka. It was "extraordinary"
precisely because it existed outside of "ordinary"
legality.
Almost as soon as it was created, the Cheka was given
an extraordinary task to carry out. On September 5,
1918, Dzerzhinsky was directed to implement Lenin's
policy of Red Terror. Launched in the wake of an assassination
attempt on Lenin's life, this wave of terror--arrests,
imprisonments, murders--more organized than the random
terror of the previous months, was in fact an important
component of the civil war, directed against those suspected
of working to destroy the Revolution on the "home
front." It was bloody, it was merciless, and it
was cruel--as its perpetrators wanted it to be. Krasnaya
Gazeta, the organ of the Red Army, described it: "Without
mercy, without sparing, we will kill our enemies in
scores of hundreds. Let them be thousands, let them
drown themselves in their own blood. For the blood of
Lenin . . . let there be floods of blood of the bourgeoisie--more
blood, as much as possible . . ."
The Red Terror was crucial to Lenin's struggle for
power. Concentration camps, the so-called "special
camps," were crucial to the Red Terror. They were
mentioned in the very first decree on Red Terror, which
called not only for the arrest and incarceration of
"important representatives of the bourgeoisie,
landowners, industrialists, merchants, counter-revolutionary
priests, anti-Soviet officers" but also for their
"isolation in concentration camps." Although
there are no reliable figures for numbers of prisoners,
by the end of 1919 there were twenty-one registered
camps in Russia. At the end of 1920 there were 107,
five times as many.
Excerpted from Gulag by
Anne Applebaum Copyright© 2003 by Anne Applebaum.
Excerpted by permission of Doubleday, a division of
Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this
excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission
in writing from the publisher.