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Gulag Uprisings - Norilsk, Vorkuta, Kengir Rebellions in the USSR

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  • Опубліковано 6 сер 2021
  • Our historical documentary series on the history of the Cold War continues with a video on the Gulag uprisings of 1954-1955 in Norilsk, Vorkuta, and Kengir. The political prisoners, who were expecting their situation to be improved in the aftermath of Stalin's death, didn't get what they hoped for, so they went on a strike and made demands, which led to a bloodbath.
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    #ColdWar #USSR #Gulag

КОМЕНТАРІ • 755

  • @jedetraktor_cz
    @jedetraktor_cz 3 роки тому +532

    anecdote : three inmates meet inside gulag . The first one says : i am here for sabotage - i came to work 5 minutes late . The second one says : i am here for espionage - i came to work 5 minutes too early . The third one : i came to work on time ... and they arrested me for posession of western-made watch .

    • @SharkAlien66
      @SharkAlien66 3 роки тому +8

      Good one

    • @rylandw6130
      @rylandw6130 3 роки тому +67

      @Jebus Hypocristos That's gonna be a yikes from me dog.
      Just calling all the prisoners "fascists" doesn't make it so. The Soviets at this time locked up pretty much anyone they felt like. This included their own captured soldiers, (many of which became inmates of nazi concentration camps) with their only "crime" being actual victims of nazism.

    • @zazante
      @zazante 3 роки тому +9

      Good one, sounds like like a Reagan joke Lol

    • @Aakkosti
      @Aakkosti 3 роки тому +50

      Three inmates meet inside a gulag.
      The first one says: “I’m here for supporting comrade Kuznetsov.”
      The second one replies: “That can’t be right: I’m here for opposing comrade Kuznetsov!”
      The third one exclaims: “I’m comrade Kuznetsov!”

    • @williamminamoto.7535
      @williamminamoto.7535 2 роки тому +1

      Dante passed in 1320.. but he somehow keeps writing his comedy of the Inferno ..keep loving goodness

  • @kgbfiles5713
    @kgbfiles5713 3 роки тому +709

    9 years ago I managed to communicate with a Ukrainian who spent 19 years in the Gulag and was a participant in the Norilsk uprising. He was a very worthy and wise man. He died in 2014

    • @folkishappalachian6827
      @folkishappalachian6827 3 роки тому +32

      He was probably UPA affiliated, I imagine he hated his captors especially after holodomor

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 3 роки тому +22

      If he was into the GULAG from before the war he wasn't from the UPA I assume... A random victim of NKVD "quota" arrests during the Great Terror, I assume?

    • @kgbfiles5713
      @kgbfiles5713 3 роки тому +35

      @@stefanodadamo6809 He was arrested for contact with the UPA and anti-Soviet agitation in 1948 and was imprisoned until 1956. The second arrest took place in 1967.

    • @mikeyorkav4039
      @mikeyorkav4039 3 роки тому +3

      He was probably a nazi sympath.

    • @mikeyorkav4039
      @mikeyorkav4039 3 роки тому +7

      @@folkishappalachian6827 guys holodomer isnt fucking real. It was nazi peddled propaganda agains the soviets. It was documented well as a natural famine while at the same time had kulaks burining, hoarding livestock and grain. Russia was also affected greatly by it so no, it wanst some man-made genocide

  • @bryllastom2880
    @bryllastom2880 3 роки тому +374

    "Step 8 Reznov, Freedom!"
    "For you Mason, not for me"

  • @pnutz_2
    @pnutz_2 3 роки тому +1166

    among those killed was viktor reznov, soviet war hero who lead the attack on the reichstag in 1945

    • @mahmudulislam9535
      @mahmudulislam9535 3 роки тому +48

      Cod🖤🖤

    • @ghostwriterj9421
      @ghostwriterj9421 3 роки тому +117

      Ya beat me to it! 😆 and Reznov didn't die! He was by my side for so many more adventures...👀 wasn't he?

    • @arnoldpuodenas8221
      @arnoldpuodenas8221 3 роки тому +81

      Mason! You are free, I am not.

    • @NobleKorhedron
      @NobleKorhedron 3 роки тому +83

      "DIMITRI! Once again, you cheat death!"

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 3 роки тому +15

      "Gratitude is an illness that affects dogs" (J. Stalin)

  • @Neversa
    @Neversa 3 роки тому +353

    My grand-grandfather was unable to fight the war so he was ordered to serve in local NKVD in northern Kazakhstan. He remembers when he had to go to a former soldier and prisoner of war just to tell him he has to be punished for being captured.

    • @dillonc7955
      @dillonc7955 3 роки тому +62

      Stalin's rule was ultra paranoid to the point where he couldn't trust his own nation's POWs. I'm sure this alone made the Gulag populations massive.

    • @robinhood4911
      @robinhood4911 3 роки тому +5

      I'm sure your grandfather didn't tell you the whole truth.

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому +27

      @@robinhood4911 ??? Another commie troll refusing to hear the truth about their toxic ideology.

    • @destubae3271
      @destubae3271 2 роки тому +12

      @@robinhood4911 Why are you so sure?

    • @keksimusultimus4257
      @keksimusultimus4257 2 роки тому +9

      @@robinhood4911 commie lunatic.

  • @nont18411
    @nont18411 3 роки тому +908

    Step one: Secure the keys!
    Step two: Ascend from darkness!
    Step three: Rain fire!
    Step four: Unleash the horde!
    Step five: Skewer the winged beast!
    Step six: Wield a fist of iron!
    Step seven: Raise Hell!
    Step eight: Freedom!

    • @kawaylao2956
      @kawaylao2956 3 роки тому +126

      FREEDOM FOR YOU MASON, NOT FOR ME
      REZNOOOOOVVVV!!

    • @nont18411
      @nont18411 3 роки тому +68

      Dragovich, Kravchenko, Steiner. All must die.

    • @duyhoang6665
      @duyhoang6665 3 роки тому +16

      oh dear, the classics

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +32

      Of course someone would do that!
      Haha!
      I'll be honest with you guys, Black Ops is one of the reasons that I got into reading about Cold War

    • @rockybalboa9274
      @rockybalboa9274 3 роки тому +10

      Step 8 reznov Freedome
      For you mason for you not for me

  • @Marinealver
    @Marinealver 3 роки тому +277

    How long you are in for?
    15 years.
    What did you do?
    Nothing.
    Don't lie, nothing only gets you 5 years.
    Petri was sentenced to 5 years
    he was extended to 15 on his 10th year
    After 30 years he was released because someone made a mistake and let him out early.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 3 роки тому +14

      There were only 3 possible sentences for the political. Total innocence gave you 10 years, some sort of circumstantial evidence gave you 25 years. If you were actually believed to be anti-Soviet, or with connections abroad, you usually got the 3rd option, capital sentence.

    • @AK-74K
      @AK-74K 3 роки тому +10

      @@u.v.s.5583 That's not correct at all. It wasn't as uniform across the board. Sometimes sentences were given out at random, either 5 or 10 years depending on what letter your surname began with

    • @bonzo1402
      @bonzo1402 3 роки тому +1

      @@AK-74K any proofs?

    • @hia5235
      @hia5235 3 роки тому +5

      How long you are in for?
      15 years.
      What did you do?
      Didnt take Vaccine.
      We Live in Hell.

    • @ps92809
      @ps92809 2 роки тому +1

      @@hia5235 more like
      How long do you have to wait to enter the mcdonalds?
      3 years.
      What did you do?
      Didn't take Vaccine
      We Live in one of the most Fortunate Centuries of All Time.

  • @HistoryOfRevolutions
    @HistoryOfRevolutions 3 роки тому +206

    Mikhail Bakunin once wrote:
    "If you took the most ardent revolutionary, vested him in absolute power, within a year he would be worse than the Tsar himself"

    • @Wanes3110
      @Wanes3110 3 роки тому +2

      ua-cam.com/video/IDoqQNWtni0/v-deo.html

    • @mariano98ify
      @mariano98ify 3 роки тому +11

      @@Wanes3110 Police? yes sir, I have discovered a dirty red here, over me.

    • @Wanes3110
      @Wanes3110 3 роки тому +2

      @@mariano98ify Police from the word policemen, then there was no police, but there was a militia and these are different things

    • @nikhtose
      @nikhtose 3 роки тому +5

      Ah yes, the anarchist Bakunin. All revolutionaries who dare take power out of the hands of the bourgeoisie are doomed. History has ended, everyone! Give up! Very useful.

    • @BaltimoresBerzerker
      @BaltimoresBerzerker 3 роки тому +24

      Every anarchist should brush up on the history of the betrayals and massacres committed by the Communists upon the Anarchists. It's amazing how many foolish people cling to the delusion of an anarcho-red alliance.

  • @imjustaquestion9922
    @imjustaquestion9922 3 роки тому +134

    Comments:
    10% Stories
    90% Cod references

  • @fullmetalmex0172
    @fullmetalmex0172 3 роки тому +80

    Not just during the Stalin regime but the during the USSR regime. Although he kept his distance from the gulags, Lenin was aware and encouraged the birth of the gulags.

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +10

      "Brave Comrades of Vorkuta. The time has come to rise against our oppressors!
      Today we show them the hearts of true Russians!
      We have given all our blood for the motherland, we have answered her calls without question.
      We gave her our youth, our hearts, our very souls for her protection...
      As brothers, we fought side by side against the German fascist
      We crawled through dirt and blood and sand to achieve our glorious victory!
      Not for medals or glory, but for what was right.
      We fought for Revenge...and when Berlin fell, how did our leaders repay us?!
      We returned not to the rapturous welcome.. but to suspicion and persecution!
      In the eyes of our leaders we were already tainted by the capitalist West.
      Torn from the arms of our loved ones, we found ourselves here...this place..this, this terrible place.
      We have been languished, with no hope for release, no hope for justice.
      We have toiled in the mines until the flesh peeled from our bones...
      We have been starved, we have been beaten, but we will not be broken!
      Today! We will send a message to our corrupt and arrogant leaders.
      Today my Comrades! Vorkuta burns!

    • @luke.4317
      @luke.4317 2 роки тому +3

      the gulags existed already during the tsar

    • @user-qw6zj5ix9k
      @user-qw6zj5ix9k Рік тому

      The soviet union wasnt a regime unlike the capitalist countries. Gulags were useful and necessary for traitors and fascists

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Рік тому

      @@luke.4317 True

  • @BaltimoresBerzerker
    @BaltimoresBerzerker 3 роки тому +109

    A family friend, a Hungarian, fought against the USSR in WW2, and had to escape from a gulag to survive. He told me many stories, but I would love to learn more about non Russian foreigners who were incarcerated in the gulags. How did they get there, etc.? Thank you! It's an important but severely underreported part of history.

    • @hughmungus1767
      @hughmungus1767 3 роки тому +16

      Solzhenitsyn mentions some foreigners in the camps in The Gulag Archipelago. I believe Robert Conquest also mentions some of their stories in various of his books.

    • @BaltimoresBerzerker
      @BaltimoresBerzerker 3 роки тому +3

      @@hughmungus1767 thank you! I'm halfway through TGA, haven't read it since I was 11 so I'm brushing up on it. Looking forward to getting to that part!

    • @brettshea8623
      @brettshea8623 3 роки тому +2

      There were many Americans in vorkuta...from the Korean war , spyflight shootdowns and some say Vietnam pow also...

    • @brettshea8623
      @brettshea8623 3 роки тому

      UA-cam "pow betrayed" " missing presumed killed" " we can keep you forever" and "amongst the missing" great docos on the topic

    • @carlh9120
      @carlh9120 3 роки тому +24

      @@joek600 Democratic countries such as Finland also fought the USSR along with the Germans.

  • @jcwoon78able
    @jcwoon78able 3 роки тому +77

    6:06 the prisoner was beaten for the halt of production was Alex Mason, being beaten up by Renzov.

    • @kwc0435
      @kwc0435 Рік тому +2

      "You hit like a child!"

  • @TSmith-yy3cc
    @TSmith-yy3cc 3 роки тому +77

    A lot of COD comments but not enough acknowledging the bravery and humanity in the face of cowardice and inhumanity. The story of the inmates ensuring the basic amenities of the camp kept running while they were besieged, even the vast majority (or honestly all) of their demands being about collective wellbeing and improvement of circumstances to the point of asking for the release of political prisoners, women, the old and sick; there's something I really admire about that.

    • @hughmungus1767
      @hughmungus1767 3 роки тому +16

      Indeed! The references to a game trivialize the real human drama of nearly powerless people to improve their conditions in the face of ruthless officials with almost unlimited power. Real people *died* in the course of those efforts. They didn't get to restart their game with their lives restored at some later time.

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +14

      "Brave Comrades of Vorkuta. The time has come to rise against our oppressors!
      Today we show them the hearts of true Russians!
      We have given all our blood for the motherland, we have answered her calls without question.
      We gave her our youth, our hearts, our very souls for her protection...
      As brothers, we fought side by side against the German fascist
      We crawled through dirt and blood and sand to achieve our glorious victory!
      Not for medals or glory, but for what was right.
      We fought for Revenge...and when Berlin fell, how did our leaders repay us?!
      We returned not to the rapturous welcome.. but to suspicion and persecution!
      In the eyes of our leaders we were already tainted by the capitalist West.
      Torn from the arms of our loved ones, we found ourselves here...this place..this, this terrible place.
      We have been languished, with no hope for release, no hope for justice.
      We have toiled in the mines until the flesh peeled from our bones...
      We have been starved, we have been beaten, but we will not be broken!
      Today! We will send a message to our corrupt and arrogant leaders.
      Today my Comrades! Vorkuta burns!"
      I mean c'mon guys, even Simple History made a COD reference and they talked a lot about the Gulags

    • @scottdodge6979
      @scottdodge6979 2 роки тому +1

      These guys were some tough bastards. I remember reading a story where one escaped and crossed the Himalayas with no gear. The only thing that explains it being a fierce will to live and prosper.

    • @scottdodge6979
      @scottdodge6979 2 роки тому +1

      @@accent1666 touche, that sums it up well.

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 2 роки тому +2

      @@scottdodge6979 indeed, i appreciate the thought
      have you ever played/watched COD BO1 campaign?

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 3 роки тому +124

    How many times do we have to tell you Mason… Reznov died in Vorkuta!

    • @Menaceblue3
      @Menaceblue3 Рік тому +6

      "No! He was with me the whole time!"

    • @InteloPL
      @InteloPL Рік тому

      @@Menaceblue3 No, Mason

  • @et76039
    @et76039 3 роки тому +19

    The Vorkuta uprising was mentioned in the book "I was a Prisoner in Soviet Russia", written by an American being held there, John Nobel.

    • @priest0701
      @priest0701 2 роки тому +1

      Was that the boxer?

    • @et76039
      @et76039 2 роки тому +4

      @@priest0701, no. His family owned a camera factory in Dresden, and were under house arrest during WWII. This camera factory may have been the reason he and his father were arrested by Soviet authorities. He was held at Buchenwald; his access to records there has been speculated as the reason he was sent to the Gulag, where the Soviets denied his existence. He was released after another inmate wrote a letter to one of Noble's relatives, speaking of his "noble nephew". This forced the Soviets to acknowledge his existence, and he was released with two other Americans.

    • @priest0701
      @priest0701 2 роки тому +1

      @@et76039 hmm wow thanks for the info

    • @CrossOfBayonne
      @CrossOfBayonne Рік тому

      Perhaps the inspiration for Alex Mason being locked up there

    • @queueuof
      @queueuof 10 місяців тому +1

      did he describe how every plan begins with a single step?

  • @nileshkumaraswamy2711
    @nileshkumaraswamy2711 3 роки тому +73

    Hope to hear about Alex Mason's uprising at vorkuta

    • @SRW_
      @SRW_ 3 роки тому +1

      You realise that never happend right?? That was a video game and wasnt real

    • @nileshkumaraswamy2711
      @nileshkumaraswamy2711 3 роки тому +10

      @@SRW_ i know it was a joke.

    • @SRW_
      @SRW_ 3 роки тому +2

      @@nileshkumaraswamy2711
      Oh jokes! I get jokes

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому +1

      @@SRW_ 😆😆😆

    • @InteloPL
      @InteloPL Рік тому

      @@SRW_ *we

  • @jurtra9090
    @jurtra9090 3 роки тому +184

    REZNOV!
    MASON!
    EVERY JOURNEY BEGINS WITH A SINGLE STEP. THIS, IS STEP ONE!
    SECURE THE KEYS!
    NOW, WE TAKE VORKUTA!!!
    URAAAA!!!!!!

  • @marsillinkow
    @marsillinkow 3 роки тому +71

    Step 1: Secure the keys!!

  • @Time_X_1234
    @Time_X_1234 3 роки тому +34

    *"In Vorkuta we are all brothers"*

    • @kekistanimememan170
      @kekistanimememan170 3 роки тому +7

      @Jebus Hypocristos tankie spotted.

    • @kekistanimememan170
      @kekistanimememan170 3 роки тому +1

      @Jebus Hypocristos or maybe an SVR troll. Gitmo isn’t even on the same level it ain’t the same ball park hell its not even the same sport.

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +6

      "Reznov your men must this is suicide!"
      "Victory cannot be achieved without sacrafice Mason!"
      "We Russians known this better than anyone"
      "Brave Comrades of Vorkuta. The time has come to rise against our oppressors!
      Today we show them the hearts of true Russians!
      We have given all our blood for the motherland, we have answered her calls without question.
      We gave her our youth, our hearts, our very souls for her protection...
      As brothers, we fought side by side against the German fascist
      We crawled through dirt and blood and sand to achieve our glorious victory!
      Not for medals or glory, but for what was right.
      We fought for Revenge...and when Berlin fell, how did our leaders repay us?!
      We returned not to the rapturous welcome.. but to suspicion and persecution!
      In the eyes of our leaders we were already tainted by the capitalist West.
      Torn from the arms of our loved ones, we found ourselves here...this place..this, this terrible place.
      We have been languished, with no hope for release, no hope for justice.
      We have toiled in the mines until the flesh peeled from our bones...
      We have been starved, we have been beaten, but we will not be broken!
      Today! We will send a message to our corrupt and arrogant leaders.
      Today my Comrades! Vorkuta burns!"

  • @rockybalboa9274
    @rockybalboa9274 3 роки тому +81

    Brave comrades of Vorkuta, the time has come to rise against our oppressors! Today we show the hearts of true Russians! We have all given our blood for the motherland. We have answered her calls without question. We gave our youth, our hearts, our very souls for her protection ... as brothers, we fought side by side against the German fascists. We crawled trough dirt and blood and sand to achieve our glorious victory ... Not for medals, or glory, but for what was right. We fought for revenge ... And when Berlin fell, how did our leaders repay us? We returned not to rapturous welcome ... but to suspicion and persecution. In the eyes of our leaders we were already tainted by the capitalist West. Torn from the arms of our loved ones, we found ourselves here... this place... this, this terrible place. Here we have languished, with no hope for release... No hope for justice. We have toiled in Dragovich's mines until the flesh peeled from our bones... We have watched our comrades succumb to sickness and disease... We have been starved. We have been beaten. But we will not be broken! Today, we will send a message to our corrupt and arrogant leaders. Today, my comrades... Vorkuta... BURNS!!!

  • @theparadigm8149
    @theparadigm8149 3 роки тому +51

    5:33
    Workers before Stalin’s regime: “We have nothing to lose but our chains!”
    Workers after Stalin’s regime: “We have nothing to lose but our chains!”

  • @petergray7576
    @petergray7576 3 роки тому +31

    Alexander Solzhenitsyn recounted a tragic story in Gulag Archipelago: at the height of the Great Purge a semi-literate Russian man was caught writing his name on newspaper he'd collected. He had developed this habit as a means of boosting his self esteem. But because he couldn't read the newspapers very well, he didn't realize he had written his name over articles about Joseph Stalin. The NKVD discovered this "defacing" by rummaging through his trash, and he was arrested, convicted and executed for his crimes against the Leader of the USSR.

    • @PurpleMusicProductions
      @PurpleMusicProductions 2 роки тому +2

      I remember reading that in that book. I absolutely love his writing style. He puts you right there in the events mentally.

    • @ShiningSta18486
      @ShiningSta18486 11 місяців тому

      Solzhi is a literal nazi

  • @gtbest5417
    @gtbest5417 3 роки тому +90

    I be expecting some Black ops 1 reference when I saw vorkuta. Let's wait and see. Remember 8 step to freedom. URA

  • @ekmalsukarno2302
    @ekmalsukarno2302 3 роки тому +37

    The Cold War, can you please make a video on Thailand during the Cold War, especially the numerous military coups and governments that have taken place in Thailand throughout the Cold War. Thank you very much.

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому

      You know which other country also got numerous coups and military governments?
      Bolivia

  • @istandwithisrael5110
    @istandwithisrael5110 2 роки тому +18

    Wow imagine fighting for the ussr getting captured and when you think you’re getting liberated they send you to a gulag lol

    • @michaelsalmon9832
      @michaelsalmon9832 2 роки тому +1

      Stalin was extremely paranoid and believed they surrendered in order to defect and fight against him

    • @ShiningSta18486
      @ShiningSta18486 11 місяців тому

      They only imprisoned fascists

  • @BiharyGabor
    @BiharyGabor 3 роки тому +19

    11:42 "Горлаг" (gorlag) doesn't mean 'montain camp" but 'mining camp'. While a literal translation of "горная промышленность" (gornaya promyshlennost) could be 'mountain industry', it actually means 'mining industry'.

    • @emilturangi7145
      @emilturangi7145 2 роки тому

      "Горлаг"- Горный Лагерь

    • @BiharyGabor
      @BiharyGabor 2 роки тому

      @@emilturangi7145 Yes. And it means "mining camp", not "mountain camp" as at 11:42.
      Это не "лагерь в горах" а "горнопромышленный лагерь".

  • @stayniftyGuyFaceMannPersonDude
    @stayniftyGuyFaceMannPersonDude 2 роки тому +7

    Never let these people be forgotten. People confused and desperate for freedom are imprisoned, killed, beaten, abused, and enslaved. Never let these people be forgotten.

  • @vladimir.zlokazov
    @vladimir.zlokazov 3 роки тому +14

    I'm am Russian but I barely heard of any of that. Thank you for sharing!

    • @AK-74K
      @AK-74K 3 роки тому +1

      @A Velsen It's not quite as simple as that. Books about Gulags are widely sold in the book shops in Russia. All the true information is available, just not on state controlled TV channels and the press

    • @AK-74K
      @AK-74K 3 роки тому +4

      @A Velsen You have no idea what you are talking about. There is plenty of historical literature you can buy in the bookshop about the Gulags, the crimes of the Soviet regime etc. Where do you live to even debate this?

    • @AK-74K
      @AK-74K 3 роки тому +1

      @A Velsen And this has what to do with my statement on historically accurate information still available to Russians? That's right - nothing. I hate the Putin regime, but I am Russian and I understand the country and the nuances and don't make sweeping all encompassing statements based on a few articles that I read.

    • @zsg87
      @zsg87 3 роки тому +1

      @A Velsen Under Putin, the books of Solzhenitsin and and the books of Shalamov are mandatory for reading at school

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому

      @@zsg87 Shamalov? Never hear of this name. What's the full name and titles of books you would recommend. I can't read Russian so they must have English translation.

  • @tacitus6384
    @tacitus6384 3 роки тому +23

    "People found themselves still targeted however, particularly the intelligencia."
    Never ceases to amaze me how in the modern day West we have so many academics that are socialist/marxist/communist, despite knowing the history of the Soviet Union and how those systems always turn out. It's like the turkey's advocating for thanksgiving.

    • @captainpinky8307
      @captainpinky8307 3 роки тому +5

      kind of like left-wing jews who defend muslims in America.

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому +2

      The academia live in a bubble of delusions. Their world is gated communities, theories, conjectures and the soft life that comes with never dealing with repercussions of their follies. People who have real world experience know the commies in academia are fools and a fountain of toxicity flowing through our nations veins.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Рік тому +1

      @@olliefoxx7165
      And ivory towers.

  • @Pats0c
    @Pats0c 2 роки тому +19

    STEP ONE - SECURE THE KEYS
    STEP TWO - ASCEND FROM DARKNESS
    STEP THREE - RAIN FIRE
    STEP FOUR - RELEASE THE HORDE
    STEP FIVE - SKEWER THE WINGED BEAST
    STEP SIX - WIELD A FIST OF IRON
    STEP SEVEN - RAISE HELL
    STEP EIGHT - FREEDOM

  • @jwenting
    @jwenting 3 роки тому +56

    given the number of people involved, I'm surprised that the death toll was so low.
    Maybe the security services saw the writing on the wall, Kruschov's upcoming reforms, and decided to not kill everyone indiscriminately as they would have done under Stalin or Lenin.

    • @zsg87
      @zsg87 3 роки тому +2

      there is no need for unnecessary violence to restore order

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 3 роки тому +8

      One simply cannot deny that things were very much more civilized under Khruschev than they had been under Stalin and Beriya.

    • @Blazo_Djurovic
      @Blazo_Djurovic 3 роки тому +4

      Well, the objective of the guards and the government wasn't to kill the inmates (they were there to be slave labor and be punished by it), but scare them back into compliance and show them that gunning down the disenters was very much on the table. This would cow most inmates. So likely most deaths occurred during the initial strike suppression plus individual cases of cruelty of guards on their own will or targeted displays of cruelty, from administration, to show what will happen to those that dissent.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 3 роки тому +1

      @@Blazo_Djurovic Read Victor Herman (Coming out of ice). That will set Your facts on how much the working force of the slaves was cared for straight.

    • @Blazo_Djurovic
      @Blazo_Djurovic 3 роки тому +4

      @@u.v.s.5583 Oh, they didn't really care much if workers died from the punishment. It's not far from truth that they'd basically decide that they needed some mine in some arse end of nowhere, just piled couple thousand inmates into box cars and offloaded them there and had them build the mine from start. Of help from the government they might get tools, but much more plentiful was beatings.
      But still, the main purpose of GULAG system apart from being a boogeyman, was to extract resources with free labour from shithole places. Which in theory should have been cheaper than getting proper workers there. A theory that in the end was not true.

  • @kylepracz
    @kylepracz 3 роки тому +7

    I've been waiting for this kind if video for years! I can't wait to finish watching it. Lol

  • @luisfelipegoncalves4977
    @luisfelipegoncalves4977 3 роки тому +43

    Now you must do an episode about the Bitch Wars. I really want to understand the birth of the Russian Mafia.

    • @ermining1
      @ermining1 3 роки тому +1

      Initially they were the old ruling class who were sent to gulags and eventually became kapos... If you speak French check out the channel Gouvhd it's by far one of the best history channels on UA-cam and only deals on Russia (he's Russian and french )

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому

      I've never heard of this "Bitch Wars". Russian Mafia war?

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому

      @@ermining1 So the old upper class sent to the gulags became kapos? They became the "nobility" in prison?

  • @noobster4779
    @noobster4779 3 роки тому +58

    "There are no Soviet prisoners of war, only traitors."

    • @nataliekennedy4646
      @nataliekennedy4646 3 роки тому +11

      they weren’t traitors they were innocently convicted but clearly your a crazy communist so you know or just a troll

    • @maarten1115
      @maarten1115 3 роки тому +8

      @@nataliekennedy4646 I think he's quoting someone else.

    • @zsg87
      @zsg87 3 роки тому

      @@maarten1115 Order No. 270 " Приказываю:
      1. Командиров и политработников, во время боя срывающих с себя знаки различия и дезертирующих в тыл или сдающихся в плен врагу, считать злостными дезертирами, семьи которых подлежат аресту как семьи нарушивших присягу и предавших свою Родину дезертиров.
      Обязать всех вышестоящих командиров и комиссаров расстреливать на месте подобных дезертиров из начсостава.
      2. Попавшим в окружение врага частям и подразделениям самоотверженно сражаться до последней возможности, беречь материальную часть, как зеницу ока, пробиваться к своим по тылам вражеских войск, нанося поражение фашистским собакам.
      Обязать каждого военнослужащего, независимо от его служебного положения, потребовать от вышестоящего начальника, если часть его находится в окружении, драться до последней возможности, чтобы пробиться к своим, и если такой начальник или часть красноармейцев вместо организации отпора врагу предпочтут сдаться в плен, - уничтожать их всеми средствами, как наземными, так и воздушными, а семьи сдавшихся в плен красноармейцев лишать государственного пособия и помощи.
      3. Обязать командиров и комиссаров дивизий немедля смещать с постов командиров батальонов и полков, прячущихся в щелях во время боя и боящихся руководить ходом боя на поле сражения, снижать их по должности как самозванцев, переводить в рядовые, а при необходимости расстреливать их на месте, выдвигая на их место смелых и мужественных людей из младшего начсостава или из рядов отличившихся красноармейцев.
      Приказ прочесть во всех ротах, эскадронах, батареях, эскадрильях, командах и штабах. "

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +1

      "Brave Comrades of Vorkuta. The time has come to rise against our oppressors!
      Today we show them the hearts of true Russians!
      We have given all our blood for the motherland, we have answered her calls without question.
      We gave her our youth, our hearts, our very souls for her protection...
      As brothers, we fought side by side against the German fascist
      We crawled through dirt and blood and sand to achieve our glorious victory!
      Not for medals or glory, but for what was right.
      We fought for Revenge...and when Berlin fell, how did our leaders repay us?!
      We returned not to the rapturous welcome.. but to suspicion and persecution!
      In the eyes of our leaders we were already tainted by the capitalist West.
      Torn from the arms of our loved ones, we found ourselves here...this place..this, this terrible place.
      We have been languished, with no hope for release, no hope for justice.
      We have toiled in the mines until the flesh peeled from our bones...
      We have been starved, we have been beaten, but we will not be broken!
      Today! We will send a message to our corrupt and arrogant leaders.
      Today my Comrades! Vorkuta burns!"

    • @konstantinkelekhsaev302
      @konstantinkelekhsaev302 3 роки тому

      Fake quote

  • @StalinTheMan0fSteel
    @StalinTheMan0fSteel 3 роки тому +21

    Very informative video, I was hoping this would include the infamous "b_tch wars" within the camp system, but maybe a future video. Wasn't the camps structured to pit different ethnic groups and class groups against each other? I can think of an example in the U.S. when terrible conditions and prison officials created a climate of hatred and revenge at the New Mexico State prison uprising the inmates killed those inmates deemed "traitors" or "snitches". Great video, David.

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 Рік тому +5

    These are some harrowing stories. I just recently watched Andor, and these stories make me think of the prison escape episodes. Thank you for this video on the real life stories of such things.
    God be with you out there friends. ✝️

  • @steved7961
    @steved7961 2 роки тому +8

    Solzhenitsyn said that it was common for someone sentenced to 25 years to say wryly that they were in the camp 'because I am a spy' and would then go on to explain what they actually did e.g. 'I was friendly with someone married to a foreigner' etc. Anyway, one day he asked a guy who had been sentenced to a mere 10 years why he was there and he said 'for spying' when he enquired about the real reason, to his astonishment, the guy said that he was actually a spy - and he only got ten years!

  • @warrioroflight6872
    @warrioroflight6872 2 роки тому +6

    The Soviet Union: A workers paradise for everyone except for-well, the workers.

  • @Time_X_1234
    @Time_X_1234 3 роки тому +23

    Remember Reznov! You will have your revenge!

  • @chaughten
    @chaughten 3 роки тому +1

    Love your videos - wish you showed the footage without the old tv though. keep it up!thx!

  • @NlHlLlEN
    @NlHlLlEN 2 роки тому +5

    25:38 "Please, make sure to you are subscribed to our channel and have severely repressed the bell button." He's already like: "This gonna get demonetized anyway, so I might just spice things up". Love it. =D

  • @empirednw6624
    @empirednw6624 2 роки тому +5

    But Soviet apologists swear that these weren’t real, especially tankies…

    • @emmettm.975
      @emmettm.975 Рік тому

      Are these "tankies" in the room with us right now?

  • @torgeirbrandsnes1916
    @torgeirbrandsnes1916 3 роки тому +5

    Great vlog as always! Can you do an episode of when the Soviet union deployed 2000 tanks along the border to Norway in 1968.

  • @TheNorthie
    @TheNorthie Рік тому +5

    After watching Andor and the Narkina 5 arc, I’m wondering if Gilroy based a lot of the prisons off the gulag and the uprisings.

    • @pnutz_2
      @pnutz_2 11 місяців тому +1

      one way out!

  • @markbenjamin1703
    @markbenjamin1703 3 роки тому +10

    Step One...

  • @AlexanderBogdanow
    @AlexanderBogdanow 2 роки тому +4

    Norilsk doesn't contains prisoners anymore... However, they say it's one of the most depressing towns in the world. Environmental issues are striking and the employer of the city is, in fact, the company who happens to own the nickel plant. Ppl who went therre told me it looks & functions just like one of the companys towns from the beginning of the 20th century.

  • @60079regulatorylaw
    @60079regulatorylaw 3 роки тому +3

    Love this Chanel thank you for your Work and understanding of the subject.
    I worked as an electrical Engineer at Norilsk operations in Australia.
    Nickel in Russia And Uranium was bringt used for First atomic weapons.
    Interesting story.
    Thanks for Sharing.

  • @hybridarmyofthegdl2193
    @hybridarmyofthegdl2193 3 роки тому +4

    edit: unknown in the West Gulag slave Uprisings - Norilsk, Vorkuta, Kengir Rebellions in the USSR

  • @alanhunter2019
    @alanhunter2019 3 роки тому +11

    I wish these episodes would stop using unrelated footage purporting to be related to the topic. Clearly German soldiers are seen herding soviet pows on a number of occasions in this episode. Why not just show pictures of a football game its about as relevant.

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +4

      I mean, it's similar because it's a little bit relatable
      Yes it's not exactly about what the video is talking about
      But still, it's better than using another even more irrelevant footage that doesn't make sense, like a sports game that you said

    • @AshleyBlackwater
      @AshleyBlackwater 3 роки тому +2

      They're soviet prisoners either way. Anyone paying attention realizes that the footage isn't exact.

  • @Kannot2023
    @Kannot2023 2 роки тому +2

    In Vorkuta uprising Romanian prisoners of war had an important role, there were some officers who organized a strike

  • @micman96
    @micman96 3 роки тому +16

    Step 2: ASCEND FROM DARKNESS!!!

  • @ainesheehan
    @ainesheehan 3 роки тому +3

    Could you do an episode on the life of women in the Soviet Union versus the US during the Cold War? Love the channel, keep up the good work 😀❤️

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому

      That would be an interesting comparison.

  • @DrJ-hx7wv
    @DrJ-hx7wv 2 роки тому +4

    The GULag existed far beyond Stalin. It was never closed. They just changed the name

  • @gunterxvoices4101
    @gunterxvoices4101 3 роки тому +9

    You should cover the battle is Blaire Mountain in it's entirety.

    • @maarten1115
      @maarten1115 3 роки тому +4

      I think you're on the wrong channel. Blair Mountain was 25 years before the start of the cold war, which is the time period covered by this channel.

  • @uzairahmed8309
    @uzairahmed8309 3 роки тому +1

    Fantastic video

  • @NotTsarNick
    @NotTsarNick 3 роки тому +2

    What a wonderful channel

  • @go2it660
    @go2it660 2 роки тому +5

    One important fact to bear in mind as a reason for the above-mentioned appraisals: Ukrainian (OUN-UPA) and Baltic (Forest brothers) nationalists were quite numerous (50-300k of soldiers) and continued fighting against the Soviet army and NKVD after the fall of Germany until 1953-56 (!). As they were soldiers and were ready to die in combat, they had no illusions about amnesty and understood there was nothing to lose. That's why they were able to raise, as opposed to millions of other political prisoners captured and annihilated earlier.
    A. Solzhenitsyn explains it clearly in his Nobel-winning GULAG Archipelago book: well-educated people, as well as peasants, still had hope to be released. Thus, had something to lose.

    • @ShiningSta18486
      @ShiningSta18486 11 місяців тому

      Those were nazi collaborators. And so was Solzhi

  • @twalk263
    @twalk263 Місяць тому

    My daughter had a friend who was from Poland and her Grandma was a POW during WWll. She was arrested two yrs before the end of the war , put on a transport cart and was taken to a gulag somewhere in Siberia. It took something like a month to get there and many people died during transport from freezing to death. The gulag was completely isolated and when she was finally freed she found out that the war had been over for 3yrs!😳 When she was released she had to figure out a way to get back home to Poland on her own . It took her over 2mos to make it back due to her weakened condition and once she got back she discovered other people living in her home and most of her family had died. Cant even imagine the levels of trauma she had to survive from but she did!

  • @willrogers3793
    @willrogers3793 2 роки тому +6

    My job gives me the opportunity to listen to whatever I want while I work, so I recently decided to give a listen to Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s “The Gulag Archipelago”. Almost everything recounted in the book ranged from ‘awful’ to ‘horrifying’, especially to someone born in Kansas in 1992. But there were a few accounts that gave me firsthand experience of what it feels like to be ‘sick with rage’. The account of the Vorkuta revolt, and the subsequent crackdown, was one of them. Easily one of the most harrowing stories I’ve read.
    I grew up thinking in the simplistic left wing=good/right wing=bad frame of mind. It’s only been over the past decade or so that I’ve started to realize that neither of them are inherently “good”. I’m certain there are plenty of good people on both sides. But there are also closet tyrants lurking in both wings of modern politics, and forgetting this fact risks letting another monster get into power.

    • @IIISWILIII
      @IIISWILIII 2 роки тому +1

      Both parties are one in the same, it's an illusion. You only thought the Left was "good" because they are master manipulators and they target the youth

    • @michaelsalmon9832
      @michaelsalmon9832 2 роки тому

      @@IIISWILIII not even a question of parties, the parties in the US are not that ideologically distinct, only their rhetoric is
      The left are not master manipulators any more than the right is, because most people are not ideologically bound to either the hard right or left. They are both a significant minority. Most people are bound to either of those two parties in the US, which are both liberal centrist parties, one more center left and one more center right. That’s the real dirty secret partisans of both sides won’t tell you.
      To say that the “left are master manipulators” reminds me of another totalitarian states propaganda and who they blamed for all of their society’s problems

  • @jaredgup6537
    @jaredgup6537 3 роки тому +4

    I clicked on this video and expected Reznov jokes, I was not disappointed.

  • @lapensulo4684
    @lapensulo4684 3 роки тому +4

    Solzhenitsyn wrote that once the inmates found out who the snitches were they would slit their throats at night. He went on to say that the result of this was in theses camps there was greater freedom then those who lived in the USSR.

    • @user-bx7vu5cs8p
      @user-bx7vu5cs8p 2 роки тому

      Solzhenitsyn is a liar and an idiot anyways. He spreads false information without any proof.

    • @lapensulo4684
      @lapensulo4684 2 роки тому +1

      @@user-bx7vu5cs8p His life, the lives of all the others destroyed by the Gulags is his proof. It would be an idiotic position to say that Solzhenitsyn was an idiot.

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 3 роки тому +1

    Nicely informative video. My compliments to all those who made this video a reality.

  • @RigbyWilde
    @RigbyWilde 3 роки тому +4

    An uprising in Vorkuta? I saw that before

  • @airo8517
    @airo8517 3 роки тому +4

    People out here giving Reznov quotes while i'm remembering my great grandfather's stories while being in Vorkuta. A good combination to think about him like that lol.

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +1

      Maybe this speech will resonate to you the the most?
      "Brave Comrades of Vorkuta. The time has come to rise against our oppressors!
      Today we show them the hearts of true Russians!
      We have given all our blood for the motherland, we have answered her calls without question.
      We gave her our youth, our hearts, our very souls for her protection...
      As brothers, we fought side by side against the German fascist
      We crawled through dirt and blood and sand to achieve our glorious victory!
      Not for medals or glory, but for what was right.
      We fought for Revenge...and when Berlin fell, how did our leaders repay us?!
      We returned not to the rapturous welcome.. but to suspicion and persecution!
      In the eyes of our leaders we were already tainted by the capitalist West.
      Torn from the arms of our loved ones, we found ourselves here...this place..this, this terrible place.
      We have been languished, with no hope for release, no hope for justice.
      We have toiled in the mines until the flesh peeled from our bones...
      We have been starved, we have been beaten, but we will not be broken!
      Today! We will send a message to our corrupt and arrogant leaders.
      Today my Comrades! Vorkuta burns!

    • @airo8517
      @airo8517 3 роки тому +4

      @@accent1666 I wouldn’t say so… my great grandfather was a baltic (lithuanian) German collaborator. So I wouldn’t say he was all for the motherland…

    • @accent1666
      @accent1666 3 роки тому +1

      @@airo8517 still, maybe not for your case particularly
      But probably for a lot of Russians they felt that way, since paranoid Stalin really didn't trust the returning Red Army after the war (specially the POWs)

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому

      @@airo8517 Do you have recordings of his talks about his experiences? Did anyone write them down? History must be preserved for the youth and the future.

    • @airo8517
      @airo8517 2 роки тому

      @@olliefoxx7165 recording? No. But I did write down absolutely everything my grandfather talked about. He also talked about other relatives and how they got taken to siberia. Seems a lot of people in my family had it rough. But I have all of their stories written down like when they were taken, for what, what timeline and such.

  • @twistedyogert
    @twistedyogert Рік тому +2

    I didn't think that those in gulags we actually paid. I always assumed that inmates were slaves.

  • @sabflash
    @sabflash 3 роки тому

    Thanks for the great work!!

  • @LukeVilent
    @LukeVilent 2 роки тому +1

    My great-gramps was an engineer in GULag, supervising the work in the Igarka forests. He was working at NarKomLes - People's Commissariat for Forstry, which just so happened to be situated at the Lubyanka/Dzerzhinsky square, next door to the NKVD. So, a goodwill once told him: "Petya, you're going to Siberia anyway, but you can still decide in what status." So my great-gramps "volunteered" to go to Igarka, while my great-grandma was already pregnant with my granddad. He then went all the way from Siberia when the gramps was born, and then back.
    His brother-in-law, grand-grannny's sister's husband, wasn't that lucky. He managed to survive the camps, but came back with an open from of tuberculosis. In the nineties, as the archives became accessible, his grandson looked up for the reason for him to be sent there. The guilt consisted of the single line: "A Pole pretending to be a Belorussian". Nuff said.

  • @brettshea8623
    @brettshea8623 3 роки тому +10

    A relative of mine escaped Lithuania or else he would've ended up at one of these....

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero 3 роки тому

      And why is that? Legit, I'm curious to know why. Was he an intellectual? A prisonner of war? A Lithuanian nationalist?

    • @brettshea8623
      @brettshea8623 3 роки тому

      @@Game_Hero Lithuanian soldier in the wechmart

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero 3 роки тому

      @@brettshea8623 He was forcibly enrolled?

    • @brettshea8623
      @brettshea8623 3 роки тому

      @@Game_Hero I believe so mate ....It was him and his dad...they weren't in Stalingrad, bit tried to break in with manstein Xmas 42...

  • @URProductions
    @URProductions 3 роки тому +41

    Well, so much for Marx's idea that communism would end class conflict...

    • @scottdodge6979
      @scottdodge6979 2 роки тому +7

      Marx has to be the dumbest idol ever. The only communist I ever had a smidgen of respect for was Lenin since he seemed to not really grasp what his ideas and efforts would spawn. After Lenin and Stalin there is zero excuse to support anyone who espouses this dreadful ideology. The proof is in the pudding, destroying thousands of years of social structure will never result in any form of utopia and the notion that it will is daft at best.

    • @user-bx7vu5cs8p
      @user-bx7vu5cs8p 2 роки тому +1

      It's Stalin's and Stalin's supporters and helper's fault, not the fault of anyone/anything else

    • @URProductions
      @URProductions 2 роки тому +12

      @@user-bx7vu5cs8p Even if that were true, it doesn't change my initial point. Marxism has never ended class conflict, it only produces a government class and a subject class.

    • @ronmka8931
      @ronmka8931 2 роки тому +2

      @@user-bx7vu5cs8p just to let you know stalin doesnt fall far from the communist tree, had trotski or any other communist taken power instead it would have all ended the same

    • @ronmka8931
      @ronmka8931 2 роки тому +1

      @@URProductions yeah communism is just a worse version of capitalism with the government class acting as an elite class ruling over everyone

  • @brianrajala7671
    @brianrajala7671 3 роки тому +5

    US citizens must insist our governments uphold our Constitution and Bill of Rights as it was written.

  • @kingjamessaludares8669
    @kingjamessaludares8669 3 роки тому +7

    Comment threads summary
    10% - Historical References
    90% - COD References

    • @tszirmay
      @tszirmay 2 роки тому

      COD is cash on delivery ? LOL

  • @KenM_1987
    @KenM_1987 3 роки тому +6

    Would have been so lovely to live in the USSR

  • @ascendedbro1828
    @ascendedbro1828 3 роки тому +2

    Can you give sources in the description please?

  • @cryohellinc
    @cryohellinc 3 роки тому +1

    Getting arrested in a camp for people that got arrested.... That's a whole new level

  • @Mrgunsngear
    @Mrgunsngear 3 роки тому

    Thanks

  • @albertgreene313
    @albertgreene313 3 роки тому +22

    As an American I personally wouldn’t mind if ya took an episode or two to look at both the internal and external BS that we were perpetrating at the same time. Not much of a war it it’s one sided.

  • @slotenmakerdenhaag
    @slotenmakerdenhaag Рік тому

    Really interesting, thanks!

  • @matthewtheriaque4413
    @matthewtheriaque4413 6 місяців тому +1

    Also murdered there during the uprising of 1953 and who cause for sainthood is ongoing, Fr. Janus Mendriks

  • @KSvader
    @KSvader 3 роки тому +1

    Interesting video! It may have been addressed in the video and I missed it, but did news travel from one gulag to the other regarding the uprisings in the other, considering their close proximity in time, despite their geographic distance? Did one inspire the other?

    • @kalle911
      @kalle911 3 роки тому +2

      News traveled through prisoner transfers.

    • @KSvader
      @KSvader 3 роки тому

      @@kalle911 Makes sense...thanks!

    • @kalle911
      @kalle911 3 роки тому

      @@KSvader Actually so did rebellious prisoners. I think Solzhenitsyn wrote about it. I recommend reading The Gulag Archipelago.

  • @jamesforreal
    @jamesforreal 2 роки тому

    I need to rewatch to absorb the whole thing. Woah.

  • @hello81642
    @hello81642 3 роки тому +1

    Ukrainian living in the U.S. with family who went through this. It is tragic to see socialism in the U.S.

  • @2006gtobob
    @2006gtobob 2 роки тому +3

    Honestly, Gulag life and the path to that life doesn't sound very different than the path this country seems to be starting to walk in 2021/2022.

  • @konstantinaslanidi601
    @konstantinaslanidi601 2 роки тому

    Kola peninsula incorrectly identified on the map. Footage of WWII shown instead of footage of actual uprising.

  • @purplestuffful
    @purplestuffful 3 роки тому +2

    this is a nice story, but this just scratches the surface.
    you will need to read The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn to even grasp it.

  • @mikaelbohman6694
    @mikaelbohman6694 2 роки тому +6

    "firearms was used against inmates" - very clinical language, "inmates were shot" would have been more appropriate.

  • @aaron_craig
    @aaron_craig 2 роки тому +3

    It did not start with Stalin... It was a necessary part of the revolution, to concentrate the "non believers of the soviet system"...it started right after the revolution. Cheka.

  • @raymondboyd1200
    @raymondboyd1200 3 роки тому

    Great video. One critique, too much facetime in the beginning. This is not a shot at your appearance, because you're not a ugly dude, but less is definitely more. ✌ Keep up the great work.

  • @kenmcnearny2727
    @kenmcnearny2727 3 роки тому +2

    Very interesting but difficult to watch because of the loud music. Who decided that what is basically an informative lecture needs a musical background? I'm just guessing that it was some idiot from marketing.

  • @cjthegood
    @cjthegood 3 роки тому +10

    VORKUTA!!!
    COD: Black Ops vibes in this video. 😁

  • @AlexandraBryngelsson
    @AlexandraBryngelsson 3 роки тому

    Maria Joffe the widow of Adolph Joffe wrote a book about her time in the gulags well worth a read its called "One Long Night: A Tale of Truth"

  • @loutrepoutre49.3
    @loutrepoutre49.3 2 роки тому

    This video provides details on events that are not necessarily well informed.
    Thank you for your time, work and share 👍
    Can I put it in a link in a voluntary work on the history of the revolutions in France and in the world since 1789?
    Cette vidéo apporte des détails sur des événements pas forcément bien renseignés.
    Merci pour votre temps, votre travail et le partage👍
    Puis-je la mettre en lien dans un travail bénévole sur l'histoire des révolutions en France et dans le monde depuis 1789? Merci

  • @gideonhorwitz9434
    @gideonhorwitz9434 Рік тому +1

    Every journey begins with a single step THIS IS STEP ONE!!!??

  • @HouseOfNishizumi
    @HouseOfNishizumi 3 роки тому +2

    In Vorkuta We Are All Brothers!
    ~Sgt Victor Reznov~

  • @crimson4810
    @crimson4810 3 роки тому +2

    Where is the monster of Magadan?

  • @zsg87
    @zsg87 3 роки тому +7

    after the amnesty of innocent GULAG prisoners, a wave of robberies and murders took place across the country. One of them hacked my great-grandmother with an axe in front of a young uncle who was hiding

    • @AK-74K
      @AK-74K 3 роки тому

      You don't know history. Amnesty was in 1953 and only the criminals were released, hence the massive crime wave. Political prisoners were released in 1956. All Gulags had both criminals and political prisoners there, it's a well known fact

    • @zsg87
      @zsg87 3 роки тому

      @@AK-74K this was after the 1956 amnesty

    • @AK-74K
      @AK-74K 3 роки тому

      @@zsg87 It's well publicised that a massive crime wave swept USSR in 1953 following an amnesty. There is even a famous movie made about it. I don't know of any other historical record of a another crime way following another amnesty, which makes me sceptical on your whole story.

    • @zsg87
      @zsg87 3 роки тому

      @@AK-74K After any amnesty, there is an increase in crime. After the 1953 amnesty, the growth was more significant than after the 1956 amnesty. But the murder of the great-grandmother happened in 1956

    • @kalle911
      @kalle911 3 роки тому +1

      Amnesties after Stalin's death were given to 'vor v zakone' and politicals who got less than 5 years (most got 25).

  • @andrerrie
    @andrerrie 3 роки тому

    What music do you use in the background if I may ask?

  • @seihai-kun6726
    @seihai-kun6726 3 роки тому +4

    "The number of participating zeks had surged OVER 9000!!!"

  • @darylcheshire1618
    @darylcheshire1618 3 роки тому +1

    Do the gulags still exist in any form in 2021?
    I think one of the former republics still has a KGB does it have a gulag system?

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 роки тому

      Australia is building "quarantine" camps for those who don't want vaccines forced into their bodies. That's how gulags started, as "quarantine camps" for the politically infected that refused the vaccine of communism.

  • @AB-ov1zm
    @AB-ov1zm 3 роки тому +1

    Have u done similar videos about the red scare?

  • @sisyphusvasilias3943
    @sisyphusvasilias3943 3 роки тому +2

    Where can I find a list of sources used for this video please?