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Old December 16th, 2011 #1
RickHolland
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Default Other Unknown Holocaust - The Millions of Poles Deported to the USSR


Children being deported from Poland in cattle cars (1940)

February 10th, 2005 marked the 65th anniversary of the beginning of a holocaust that the world has yet to learn about - the one endured by an estimated 1.7 million Poles living in what was at that time the eastern region of Poland. My mother, her parents and her siblings were among this number — of the 10 family members who were deported, only 4 made it out alive.

The world has heard much about the Jewish Holocaust, but very few have heard of the Polish Holocaust. Why? Because this holocaust was perpetrated by an Ally of the United States and Great Britain, and it would have been embarrassing to these two great powers to have the world know that they had allied themselves with such an evil and inhuman regime. So, although the West knew about the hundreds of trains loaded with human cargo that were headed east, they did nothing to stop it. Furthermore, they went to great pains to make sure that this was not publicized, because they needed Stalin’s Russia in order to defeat the Germans.

While Hitler’s Nazis were hell-bent on obliterating Jews, Gypsies, and other non-Arians from the face of the earth, Stalin’s policy was to remove all trace of Poles from that section of Poland that he insisted the Allies give him at the close of the war.

With a spine-chilling banging on doors in the middle of the night of February 9th to 10th , in what was one of the coldest winters on record, entire families were hauled out of their beds, given only minutes to gather belongings, and were taken by sled or on foot to the nearest train station. There, long trainloads of cattle cars equipped with virtually no heat (other than one small iron stove in one corner of each boxcar) and no food or water, awaited the helpless families. People were loaded into these boxcars like cattle — eyewitness accounts put the numbers at 50 to 90 people per boxcar - and thus began their journey of 4 to 6 weeks into the depths of Russia in the dead of winter.

Many did not make it to their destination. They died of hunger or froze to death and their bodies were left in the snow alongside the railroad tracks, without burial or the most basic marks of human dignity. This was particularly the fate of the elderly and the very young.

Descriptions that have come down to us of the railway boxcars used for these transports include:
® there were no windows — only slivers of light coming through the joints of the wooden walls, and through which they could squint to attempt to see where they were;
® the large wooden door was locked from the outside and was only opened when the train would stop at a station and a representative from each wagon would be allowed to disembark to fetch warm water or firewood;
® there was a single hole cut into the floor which served as the toilet;
® there was a row of wooden bunks along two of the walls of the wagon — these were piled 3 or 4 levels high, and each bunk had to accommodate entire families;
® the stench of unwashed bodies, of death and decay, of human waste, became more and more unbearable as the trip progressed;
® the ever-increasing presence of lice and a variety of illnesses were the daily/hourly preoccupations of this wretched humanity.

Trying to imagine the horror, the despair, the agonies endured by these helpless souls is nearly impossible. Shivering in the frigid temperatures, day and night, running out of the meager provisions they had managed to bring with them, hunger and thirst dominating every waking moment, overrun by fleas and bedbugs in living quarters that were not fit for animals, and with it all the fear — the all consuming fear of what was yet to come! One has to wonder how many of the present generation would survive such hell on earth?

The destinations of this human cargo was mainly Northern Kazakhstan and the vast reaches of Siberia — to a variety of camps (Gulags) that had been in existence in these parts since the time of the Czars. Here the deportees, men and women and teens alike, were forced to work at clearing forests, building roads, or mining coal, gold, and other minerals — all for a daily ration of 1 or 2 slices of bread and some watery soup per person. Days off were virtually non-existent, as was medical care or proper nutrition and clothing. It is estimated that almost half of the deportees died in these camps, or in transit to or from them. Anyone who died during winter months could not even be buried until spring, when the earth was sufficiently thawed to allow for digging.

There were three other mass deportations:
® The night of April 12-13, 1940: approximately 300,000 deported
® The night of June 28-29, 1940: approximately 400,000 deported
® The week of June 14-20, 1941: approximately 280,000 deported
® An additional 450,000 were POW’s or were deported as a result of being arrested for a variety of politically-motivated charges

Once the Germans invaded Russia, a Polish-Soviet agreement was negotiated and signed on July 30th, 1941. This agreement provided for the release of all Poles in Soviet exile and the formation of a Polish army on Soviet soil. The objective was that this Polish army would assist the Russians in defeating the Germans. Poles from every corner of the Russian Empire (who were lucky enough to be granted travel documents by their keepers) slowly made their way southwards to where the Polish army, under the direction of General Anders, was being formed. The Polish-Government-in-Exile (in London) provided food and clothing for this rag-tag assortment of half-dead volunteers and their families, orphanages were formed, and temporary-hospitals provided medical assistance.

Eventually, when Stalin changed his mind about having a Polish army on Russian soil, an evacuation plan was quickly put into place, and boatloads of deportees crossed the Caspian Sea into Persia (now Iran). Unfortunately, the borders were closed before everyone could be evacuated and hundreds of thousands were left behind. Some worked on collective farms and in slave industries into the late 40’s and early 50’s, and then eventually made it back to Poland. But some never did manage to leave the Soviet Union and their descendants are there to the present day.

Once in Persia (Iran), the Polish army was trained and eventually distinguished itself in many theatres of war — of particular note is the Battle of Monte Casino. The women and children were also taken care of. After initial delousing and medical treatment, convoys of refugees made their way to India, Pakistan, and many areas of West and South Africa. This journey was made by truck, by ship, and by a variety of means of transportation, and included perils of a different nature — blistering sun, baking temperatures, and tropical diseases. They spent a number of years in these refugee camps, recuperating from their ordeal, before finding permanent homes in far away lands such as Australia, New Zealand, South America, Canada, the United States, and Great Britain. With Poland falling under the Communist regime at the end of the war, few ever returned to their homeland since it would have been ‘hazardous to their health’ to do so, and since their homes / villages / cities were long-destroyed or now located inside Russia.

In the years since the war, most of the deportees never spoke of their experiences. Many remained silent because they were too traumatized by these events and many more because they feared for their loved ones who were still behind the Iron Curtain. Only the fall of Communism in 1989 finally allowed the story of these wretched souls to be told. However, Russia has been slow in allowing access to the archives surrounding these inhuman acts, and most publications have thus far been in Polish. The story remains unknown in much of the rest of the world.

It is time that the conspiracy of silence ends and the world acknowledges this Unknown Holocaust, and gives these victims of Stalin’s ruthless and merciless policies the acknowledgement that they have long deserved.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar/s...a6751145.shtml


Lethal Politics: Soviet Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1917

http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE4.HTM



The Siberic Gehenna

http://info-poland.buffalo.edu/web/h...nna/link.shtml


The Millions of Poles Deported to the USSR in 1939-41
by Peter K. Gessner

On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland. Soviet troops crossed Poland's eastern border on September 17, and, by prearrangement with the Germans, occupied half of Poland. That fall and in the following year they set about deporting all those whom they judged as potentially able to oppose their plans for Poland. That was to include those who had held any position of authority, mayors, policemen, schoolteacher, station-masters, and all members of the intelligentsia. Exactly how many were deported may never be known, but it has been estimated that together with their families they probably numbered between 1 and 1.8 million people.

Deportation to the far regions of the Russia, and later of the Soviet Union, continued to be a constant in the history of Poles during the last couple of centuries. Visitors to Siberia tell of Polish villages there, peopled by the descendants of 19-century deportees. During the period when Poland was partitioned, Poles who rose in armed rebellion against the Russian yoke in the Uprisings of April 1794, November 1831 and January 1863, if captured, were usually sent to Siberia. So were those whom the Tzar’s secret police agents deemed too patriotic. Nor did the deportations end with the reestablishment in 1918 of a sovereign and independent Polish Republic. Poland's eastern border, as stipulated by the treaty of Riga which brough closure to the Polish-Bolshevik war of 1920, left substantial Polish minorities on the Soviet side of the border. In 1934-35, by order of Stalin, all Poles that lived near the Polish border were deported to Kazakhstan.

Following the June 22, 1941, invasion the Soviet Union by Hitler's armies, Stalin concluded, upon the urging of the British government, an agreement with the Polish Government-in-Exile. The Poles in the Soviet gulags were to be freed so that a Polish Army could be formed that would fight the Germans at the Soviet's side. A general "Amnesty" was declared and the Army began to assemble.

Short of armaments, supplies and food, the military capabilities of this Army, as it stood, were limited, At the same time, the existence of an independent foreign organization within the Soviet Union was troubling to Stalin. Hence an agreement was reached with the Soviets that the Army would leave the USSR. transhipped across the Caspian Sea to Persia, then in the British sphere of influence. There it would be trained, equipped, and deployed to protect the oil fields of the Middle East, then threatened by the German advances into the Caucasus. Together with the Polish Army of some 77,000 men, some 39 thousand civilians were allowed to leave the Soviet Union by this route.

Later, beginning in November 1943, a second Polish Army began to be formed on Soviet territory. Commanded by Colonel and later General Zygmunt Berling, it was to be called colloquially "Berling’s Army." It was partly made up of deportees who had not managed to join in time the one formed earlier. However, as the Russians advanced into what had been Poland’s eastern territories, many of its soldiers were recruited there. By August 1944, its strength had grown to 113,500 soldiers.

Of the remaining 1939-1940 and earlier deportees, many thousands perished. Thousands more remained trapped in the Soviet Union, where, until its dissolution, they were not free to admit their nationality. Since the dissolution of the Soviet Empire, many seek to be repatriation of themselves and their families. This has sparked a great debate in Poland: how to provide for these usually unskilled, impoverished people with marginal fluency in the Polish language in a country which has a substantial unemployment rate and is itself seeking to recover from decades of Soviet domination.

http://www.info-poland.buffalo.edu/c...r/gehenna.html
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Old March 19th, 2012 #2
Celtic_Patriot
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Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RickHolland View Post

Children being deported from Poland in cattle cars (1940)

February 10th, 2005 marked the 65th anniversary of the beginning of a holocaust that the world has yet to learn about - the one endured by an estimated 1.7 million Poles living in what was at that time the eastern region of Poland. My mother, her parents and her siblings were among this number — of the 10 family members who were deported, only 4 made it out alive.

The world has heard much about the Jewish Holocaust, but very few have heard of the Polish Holocaust. Why? Because this holocaust was perpetrated by an Ally of the United States and Great Britain, and it would have been embarrassing to these two great powers to have the world know that they had allied themselves with such an evil and inhuman regime. So, although the West knew about the hundreds of trains loaded with human cargo that were headed east, they did nothing to stop it. Furthermore, they went to great pains to make sure that this was not publicized, because they needed Stalin’s Russia in order to defeat the Germans.

While Hitler’s Nazis were hell-bent on obliterating Jews, Gypsies, and other non-Arians from the face of the earth, Stalin’s policy was to remove all trace of Poles from that section of Poland that he insisted the Allies give him at the close of the war.

With a spine-chilling banging on doors in the middle of the night of February 9th to 10th , in what was one of the coldest winters on record, entire families were hauled out of their beds, given only minutes to gather belongings, and were taken by sled or on foot to the nearest train station. There, long trainloads of cattle cars equipped with virtually no heat (other than one small iron stove in one corner of each boxcar) and no food or water, awaited the helpless families. People were loaded into these boxcars like cattle — eyewitness accounts put the numbers at 50 to 90 people per boxcar - and thus began their journey of 4 to 6 weeks into the depths of Russia in the dead of winter.

Many did not make it to their destination. They died of hunger or froze to death and their bodies were left in the snow alongside the railroad tracks, without burial or the most basic marks of human dignity. This was particularly the fate of the elderly and the very young.

Descriptions that have come down to us of the railway boxcars used for these transports include:
® there were no windows — only slivers of light coming through the joints of the wooden walls, and through which they could squint to attempt to see where they were;
® the large wooden door was locked from the outside and was only opened when the train would stop at a station and a representative from each wagon would be allowed to disembark to fetch warm water or firewood;
® there was a single hole cut into the floor which served as the toilet;
® there was a row of wooden bunks along two of the walls of the wagon — these were piled 3 or 4 levels high, and each bunk had to accommodate entire families;
® the stench of unwashed bodies, of death and decay, of human waste, became more and more unbearable as the trip progressed;
® the ever-increasing presence of lice and a variety of illnesses were the daily/hourly preoccupations of this wretched humanity.

Trying to imagine the horror, the despair, the agonies endured by these helpless souls is nearly impossible. Shivering in the frigid temperatures, day and night, running out of the meager provisions they had managed to bring with them, hunger and thirst dominating every waking moment, overrun by fleas and bedbugs in living quarters that were not fit for animals, and with it all the fear — the all consuming fear of what was yet to come! One has to wonder how many of the present generation would survive such hell on earth?

The destinations of this human cargo was mainly Northern Kazakhstan and the vast reaches of Siberia — to a variety of camps (Gulags) that had been in existence in these parts since the time of the Czars. Here the deportees, men and women and teens alike, were forced to work at clearing forests, building roads, or mining coal, gold, and other minerals — all for a daily ration of 1 or 2 slices of bread and some watery soup per person. Days off were virtually non-existent, as was medical care or proper nutrition and clothing. It is estimated that almost half of the deportees died in these camps, or in transit to or from them. Anyone who died during winter months could not even be buried until spring, when the earth was sufficiently thawed to allow for digging.

There were three other mass deportations:
® The night of April 12-13, 1940: approximately 300,000 deported
® The night of June 28-29, 1940: approximately 400,000 deported
® The week of June 14-20, 1941: approximately 280,000 deported
® An additional 450,000 were POW’s or were deported as a result of being arrested for a variety of politically-motivated charges

Once the Germans invaded Russia, a Polish-Soviet agreement was negotiated and signed on July 30th, 1941. This agreement provided for the release of all Poles in Soviet exile and the formation of a Polish army on Soviet soil. The objective was that this Polish army would assist the Russians in defeating the Germans. Poles from every corner of the Russian Empire (who were lucky enough to be granted travel documents by their keepers) slowly made their way southwards to where the Polish army, under the direction of General Anders, was being formed. The Polish-Government-in-Exile (in London) provided food and clothing for this rag-tag assortment of half-dead volunteers and their families, orphanages were formed, and temporary-hospitals provided medical assistance.

Eventually, when Stalin changed his mind about having a Polish army on Russian soil, an evacuation plan was quickly put into place, and boatloads of deportees crossed the Caspian Sea into Persia (now Iran). Unfortunately, the borders were closed before everyone could be evacuated and hundreds of thousands were left behind. Some worked on collective farms and in slave industries into the late 40’s and early 50’s, and then eventually made it back to Poland. But some never did manage to leave the Soviet Union and their descendants are there to the present day.

Once in Persia (Iran), the Polish army was trained and eventually distinguished itself in many theatres of war — of particular note is the Battle of Monte Casino. The women and children were also taken care of. After initial delousing and medical treatment, convoys of refugees made their way to India, Pakistan, and many areas of West and South Africa. This journey was made by truck, by ship, and by a variety of means of transportation, and included perils of a different nature — blistering sun, baking temperatures, and tropical diseases. They spent a number of years in these refugee camps, recuperating from their ordeal, before finding permanent homes in far away lands such as Australia, New Zealand, South America, Canada, the United States, and Great Britain. With Poland falling under the Communist regime at the end of the war, few ever returned to their homeland since it would have been ‘hazardous to their health’ to do so, and since their homes / villages / cities were long-destroyed or now located inside Russia.

In the years since the war, most of the deportees never spoke of their experiences. Many remained silent because they were too traumatized by these events and many more because they feared for their loved ones who were still behind the Iron Curtain. Only the fall of Communism in 1989 finally allowed the story of these wretched souls to be told. However, Russia has been slow in allowing access to the archives surrounding these inhuman acts, and most publications have thus far been in Polish. The story remains unknown in much of the rest of the world.

It is time that the conspiracy of silence ends and the world acknowledges this Unknown Holocaust, and gives these victims of Stalin’s ruthless and merciless policies the acknowledgement that they have long deserved.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar/s...a6751145.shtml


Lethal Politics: Soviet Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1917

http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE4.HTM



The Siberic Gehenna

http://info-poland.buffalo.edu/web/h...nna/link.shtml


The Millions of Poles Deported to the USSR in 1939-41
by Peter K. Gessner

On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland. Soviet troops crossed Poland's eastern border on September 17, and, by prearrangement with the Germans, occupied half of Poland. That fall and in the following year they set about deporting all those whom they judged as potentially able to oppose their plans for Poland. That was to include those who had held any position of authority, mayors, policemen, schoolteacher, station-masters, and all members of the intelligentsia. Exactly how many were deported may never be known, but it has been estimated that together with their families they probably numbered between 1 and 1.8 million people.

Deportation to the far regions of the Russia, and later of the Soviet Union, continued to be a constant in the history of Poles during the last couple of centuries. Visitors to Siberia tell of Polish villages there, peopled by the descendants of 19-century deportees. During the period when Poland was partitioned, Poles who rose in armed rebellion against the Russian yoke in the Uprisings of April 1794, November 1831 and January 1863, if captured, were usually sent to Siberia. So were those whom the Tzar’s secret police agents deemed too patriotic. Nor did the deportations end with the reestablishment in 1918 of a sovereign and independent Polish Republic. Poland's eastern border, as stipulated by the treaty of Riga which brough closure to the Polish-Bolshevik war of 1920, left substantial Polish minorities on the Soviet side of the border. In 1934-35, by order of Stalin, all Poles that lived near the Polish border were deported to Kazakhstan.

Following the June 22, 1941, invasion the Soviet Union by Hitler's armies, Stalin concluded, upon the urging of the British government, an agreement with the Polish Government-in-Exile. The Poles in the Soviet gulags were to be freed so that a Polish Army could be formed that would fight the Germans at the Soviet's side. A general "Amnesty" was declared and the Army began to assemble.

Short of armaments, supplies and food, the military capabilities of this Army, as it stood, were limited, At the same time, the existence of an independent foreign organization within the Soviet Union was troubling to Stalin. Hence an agreement was reached with the Soviets that the Army would leave the USSR. transhipped across the Caspian Sea to Persia, then in the British sphere of influence. There it would be trained, equipped, and deployed to protect the oil fields of the Middle East, then threatened by the German advances into the Caucasus. Together with the Polish Army of some 77,000 men, some 39 thousand civilians were allowed to leave the Soviet Union by this route.

Later, beginning in November 1943, a second Polish Army began to be formed on Soviet territory. Commanded by Colonel and later General Zygmunt Berling, it was to be called colloquially "Berling’s Army." It was partly made up of deportees who had not managed to join in time the one formed earlier. However, as the Russians advanced into what had been Poland’s eastern territories, many of its soldiers were recruited there. By August 1944, its strength had grown to 113,500 soldiers.

Of the remaining 1939-1940 and earlier deportees, many thousands perished. Thousands more remained trapped in the Soviet Union, where, until its dissolution, they were not free to admit their nationality. Since the dissolution of the Soviet Empire, many seek to be repatriation of themselves and their families. This has sparked a great debate in Poland: how to provide for these usually unskilled, impoverished people with marginal fluency in the Polish language in a country which has a substantial unemployment rate and is itself seeking to recover from decades of Soviet domination.

http://www.info-poland.buffalo.edu/c...r/gehenna.html

Great post Rick Holland. Even after 1956 the Whites were killed in the greatest genocide know to history, the Jew Marxist Genocide.


6,872,000 Victims: Post-Stalin Period 1954-1987

Figure 9.1. Range in Post War Democide Estimates
Table 9.1. Post-Stalin Period
Figure 9.2. Democide Components for All Periods
Appendix 9.1
Table 9.A. 6,872,000 Victims During the Post-Stalin Period: Sources, Calculations, and Estimates [1]


.
____________________________________________

References

[1] Lethal Politics: Soviet
Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1917
, R.J. Rummel
New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1990
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE4.HTM



.
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.
 
Old March 20th, 2012 #3
Celtic_Patriot
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Default Polish Gulag camp List

There is a massive list of specifically Polish Gulag camps here:

ITL stands for the GULAG extermination camps which Jew Marxists termed "labor camps".


§ 3.Obozami określonymi w art. 3 pkt 2 i art. 4 ust. 1 pkt 3 lit. a) ustawy są poprawcze obozy pracy i poprawcze kolonie pracy podległe Głównemu Zarządowi Obozów i Kolonii Poprawczych NKWD, a od marca 1946 r. MWD ZSRR:

1) Achtubiński ITŁ,
2) Achunłag,
3) Aktiubiński ITŁ,
4) Aldański ITŁ Dalstroju,
5) Ałdański ITŁ,
6) Ałtajski ITŁ,
7) Amguński ITŁ,
8) Amurski ITŁ,
9) Amurski Kolejowy ITŁ,
10) Angarski ITŁ,
11) Angnieński ITŁ,
12) Araliczewski ITŁ,
13) Archangielski ITŁ,
14) Archpierpunkt,
15) Astrachański ITŁ,
16) Atbasarski ITŁ,
17) Azowski ITŁ,
18) Azowskie ŁO,
19) Bajdarski ITŁ,
20) Bakalski ITŁ,
21) Bakowski ITŁ,
22) Balejski ITŁ,
23) Bałachłag,
24) Bałagańskie ŁO,
25) Bamłag,
26) Baraszewski ITŁ i Kombinat Przemysłowy GUŁAG-u,
27) Bażenowski ITŁ,
28) Białomorsko-Bałtycki ITŁ,
29) Biełogorski ITŁ,
30) Biełokorowicki Łagier OITK NKWD BSRR,
31) Biełorieczeński ITŁ,
32) Biełozierskie ŁO,
33) Bierieznikowski ITŁ,
34) Bieriozowski ITŁ,
35) Bieriozowski ITŁ Północnego Zarządu GUŁŻDS,
36) Bieskudnikowskie Specjalne ŁO,
37) Biezymiański ITŁ,
38) Birski ITŁ,
39) Bobrowskie ŁO,
40) Bodajbiński ITŁ,
41) Bogosłowski ITŁ,
42) Borski ITŁ,
43) Bracki ITŁ i Budowa Tajszecka,
44) Brzegowy Łagier,
45) Budowa 105 i ITŁ,
46) Budowa 106 i ITŁ,
47) Budowa 108 i ITŁ,
48) Budowa 211 i ITŁ,
49) Budowa 213 i ITŁ,
50) Budowa 304 i ITŁ,
51) Budowa 505 i ITŁ GUŁŻDS,
52) Budowa 506 i ITŁ,
53) Budowa 509 i ITŁ,
54) Budowa 510 i ITŁ,
55) Budowa 511 i ITŁ,
56) Budowa 513 i ITŁ,
57) Budowa 514 i ITŁ,
58) Budowa 514 i ITŁ GUŁŻDS,
59) Budowa 585 i ITŁ,
60) Budowa 6 i ITŁ,
61) Budowa 600 i ITŁ,
62) Budowa 770 i ITŁ,
63) Budowa 790 i ITŁ,
64) Budowa 791 i ITŁ,
65) Budowa 855 i ITŁ,
66) Budowa 880 i ITŁ,
67) Budowa 90 i ITŁ,
68) Budowa 915 i ITŁ,
69) Budowa 994 i ITŁ,
70) Budowa Ałluwajska i ITŁ,
71) Budowa GUSZOSDOK-u NKWD nr 2 i ITŁ,
72) Budowa GUSZOSDOP-u NKWD nr 1 i ITŁ,
73) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWD nr 2 i ITŁ,
74) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWD nr 3 i ITŁ,
75) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWD nr 4 i ITŁ,
76) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWD nr 6 i ITŁ,
77) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWD nr 8 i ITŁ,
78) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWD nr I i ITŁ,
79) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWIW nr 19 i ITŁ,
80) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u MWU nr 7 i ITŁ,
81) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u NKWD nr 3 i ITŁ,
82) Budowa GUSZOSDOR-u NKWD nr 4 i ITŁ,
83) Budowa Jeńska i ITŁ,
84) Budowa Krasnojarska i ITŁ Jenisejstroju,
85) Budowa Matkożeńska i ITŁ,
86) Bukaczaczyński ITŁ,
87) Burejski ITŁ,
88) Buriepołomski ITŁ,
89) Chabarowski ITŁ,
90) Chakaski ITŁ,
91) Chakaski ITŁ UITŁK UMWD Kraju Krasnojarskiego,
92) Chakaskie ŁO,
93) Chimkowski ITŁ,
94) Chimkowski Odcinek Obozowy,
95) Cymlański ITŁ,
96) Czapajewski ITŁ,
97) Czauński ITŁ Dalstroju,
98) Czauńsko-Czukocki ITŁ Dalstroju,
99) Czeboksarski ITŁ,
100) Czelabiński ITŁ,
101) Czerepowiecki ITŁ,
102) Czernogorski ITŁ,
103) Czernogorski Specjalny ITŁ,
104) Czernoistoczeński ITŁ,
105) Czukocki ITŁ Dalstroju,
106) Czystiuński Inwalidzki ITŁ,
107) Daleki Łagier,
108) Dolnoamurski ITŁ,
109) Dolnodoński ITŁ,
110) Dolnowołżański ITŁ,
111) Donłag,
112) Drogowy ITŁ Dalstroju,
113) Dubogorski ITŁ,
114) Dubrawny ITŁ,
115) Dżezkazgański ITŁ,
116) Dżugdżurski ITŁ,
117) Dżydyński ITŁ,
118) Gagariński ITŁ,
119) Gdowski ITŁ,
120) Głazowski ITŁ,
121) Głazowskie ŁO,
122) Górniczy Łagier,
123) Górnoiżemski ITŁ,
124) Górnosałdyński ITŁ,
125) Górnoszorski ITŁ,
126) Granitowy ITŁ i Zarząd Specjalny Budowy 505,
127) Gurjewski ITŁ,
128) Gusinoozierski ITŁ,
129) Ilimski Specjalny ITŁ,
130) Indygirski ITŁ Dalstroju,
131) Intyjski ITŁ,
132) Inza-Syzrański ITŁ,
133) ITŁ i Budowa nr 4 Baszspiecnieftiestroju,
134) ITŁ i Budowa Zakładu nr 8 NKW,
135) ITŁ i Ekspedycja Poszukująca Ropy Naftowej,
136) ITŁ "DS" Jenisejstroju,
137) ITŁ Biełomorstroju,
138) ITŁ Bierieloskiego Rejonowego Zarządu Poszukiwań Geologicznych Dalstroju,
139) ITŁ Budownictwa Przemysłowego i Mieszkaniowego,
140) ITŁ Budowy 1001,
141) ITŁ Budowy 1418,
142) ITŁ Budowy 159,
143) ITŁ Budowy 16,
144) ITŁ Budowy 18,
145) ITŁ Budowy 247,
146) ITŁ Budowy 263,
147) ITŁ Budowy 442,
148) ITŁ Budowy 447,
149) ITŁ Budowy 496,
150) ITŁ Budowy 505,
151) ITŁ Budowy 620,
152) ITŁ Budowy 896,
153) ITŁ Budowy 907,
154) ITŁ Budowy 940,
155) ITŁ Budowy Kombinatu nr 11,
156) ITŁ Budowy Kopalń Rudy Żelaza,
157) ITŁ Budowy Przedsiębiorstw Górniczo-Metalurgicznych,
158) ITŁ Budowy Przystani Południowej,
159) ITŁ Budowy Specjalnej,
160) ITŁ Budowy Specjalnej Obiektów Celulozowo-Papierniczych Karelsko-Fińskiej SRR,
161) ITŁ Budowy Usolskich Zakładów Sprzętu Górniczego,
162) ITŁ Dmitrowskich Zakładów Mechanicznych,
163) ITŁ Ekspedycji Geologiczno-Poszukiwawczej,
164) ITŁ i 10 Budowa Polowa NKWD,
165) ITŁ i Budowa "W-1",
166) ITŁ i Budowa 258,
167) ITŁ i Budowa 313,
168) ITŁ i Budowa 462,
169) ITŁ i Budowa 507,
170) ITŁ i Budowa 508,
171) ITŁ i Budowa 560,
172) ITŁ i Budowa 565,
173) ITŁ i Budowa 601,
174) ITŁ i Budowa 665,
175) ITŁ i Budowa 833,
176) ITŁ i Budowa 859,
177) ITŁ i Budowa 865,
178) ITŁ i Budowa 882,
179) ITŁ i Budowa 883,
180) ITŁ i Budowa 885,
181) ITŁ i Budowa Archangielskiego CBK,
182) ITŁ i Budowa Borownickiej GES,
183) ITŁ i Budowa Bujskich GES,
184) ITŁ i Budowa Górnosamgorskiego Systemu Irygacyjnego,
185) ITŁ i Budowa Hydrowęzła Górnoockiego,
186) ITŁ i Budowa Kanału Żeglownego Wołga-Don,
187) ITŁ i Budowa Kazańskiej Rafinerii Ropy Naftowej,
188) ITŁ i Budowa Kombinatu Aktowrackiego,
189) ITŁ i Budowa Kombinatu nr 7,
190) ITŁ i Budowa Kopalni Rudy,
191) ITŁ i Budowa Kopalni Węgla,
192) ITŁ i Budowa Linii Kolejowej Krasnojarsk-Jenisejsk,
193) ITŁ i Budowa Magistrali Drogowej Moskwa-Kijów,
194) ITŁ i Budowa Mstyjskich GES,
195) ITŁ i Budowa nr 1 Baszspiecnieftiestroju,
196) ITŁ i Budowa nr 1 Tatspiecnieftiestroju,
197) ITŁ i Budowa nr 2 Baszspiecnieftiestroju,
198) ITŁ i Budowa nr 2 Tatspiecnieftiestroju,
199) ITŁ i Budowa nr 3 Baszspiecnieftiestroju,
200) ITŁ i Budowa Odkrywkowej Kopalni Węgla nr 4 w Obwodzie Karagandzkim,
201) ITŁ i Budowa Rejonu Specjalnego,
202) ITŁ i Budowa Władimirskiej GES,
203) ITŁ i Budowa Wołżańsko-Dońskiej Drogi Wodnej,
204) ITŁ i Budowa Zakaukaskich Zakładów Metalurgicznych,
205) ITŁ i Odbudowa Śluzy i Zapory "Znamienitaja",
206) ITŁ i SMU 41,
207) ITŁ Janstroju Dalstroju,
208) ITŁ Jańskiego Zarządu Górniczo-Przemysłowego,
209) ITŁ Kołymsko-Indygirskiej Żeglugi Rzecznej Dalstroju,
210) ITŁ Kombinatu nr 6,
211) ITŁ Kombinatu nr 9,
212) ITŁ Krasnojarskiego Zakładu Afinacji,
213) ITŁ nr 17 GUSZOSDOR-u,
214) ITŁ przy Budowie Karagandażyłstroju,
215) ITŁ przy Budowie Specjalnej 881,
216) ITŁ przy Oboronstroju,
217) ITŁ przy Uglickich Zakładach Konstrukcji Mostowych nr 4 GUSZOSDOR-u,
218) ITŁ przy Zarządzie Budowy Dyrekcji Kopalń Rudy nr 10,
219) ITŁ Rudbakalstroju,
220) ITŁ SMLJ 45,
221) ITŁ SMLJ 46,
222) ITŁ SMLJ 49,
223) ITŁ SMLT 53,
224) ITŁ SMU 42,
225) ITŁ SMU 43,
226) ITŁ SMU 44,
227) ITŁ SMU 47,
228) ITŁ SMU 48,
229) ITŁ SMU 50,
230) ITŁ SMU 51,
231) ITŁ SMU 52,
232) ITŁ Transportu Samochodowego Dalstroju,
233) ITŁ Usolgidroles,
234) ITŁ Zarządu Dróg Bitych Dalstroju,
235) ITŁ Zarządu Gospodarstw Pomocniczych Dalstroju,
236) Iwdielski ITŁ,
237) Jagriński ITŁ i Budowa 203,
238) Jański Zarząd Górniczo-Przemysłowy i ITŁ Dalstroju,
239) Jenisejski ITŁ,
240) Jenisejski ITŁ i Budowa 503,
241) Jermakowskie ŁO,
242) Jeziorny Łagier,
243) Jugorski ITŁ i Budowa 300,
244) Kamieński ITŁ,
245) Kamyszowy Łagier,
246) Kandałakszyński ITŁ,
247) Karagandzki ITŁ,
248) Karakumski ITŁ,
249) Kargopolski ITŁ,
250) Kaspijski ITŁ,
251) Kazłag,
252) Kemerowożyłstroj i ITŁ,
253) Kimpiersajski ITŁ,
254) Kitojski ITŁ,
255) Kiziełowski ITŁ,
256) Kluczewski ITŁ,
257) Koczkarskie ŁO,
258) Kokszyński ITŁ,
259) Kolski ITŁ i Budowa Specjalna 33,
260) Kosłański ITŁ,
261) Koświński ITŁ,
262) Kotłaski Punkt Przesyłowo-Przeładunkowy GUŁAG-u,
263) Kotłaski Rolniczy ITŁ,
264) Kotłaskie Rolnicze ŁO,
265) Kowrowski ITŁ,
266) Krasnogorski ITŁ,
267) Krasnojarski ITŁ,
268) Krasnojarski Zarząd Budowy Specjalnej i ITŁ p/ja 138,
269) Kułojski ITŁ,
270) Kuniejewski ITŁ,
271) Kurjanowski ITŁ,
272) Kusjiński ITŁ,
273) Kuzbaski ITŁ,
274) Kuzniecki ITŁ,
275) Likowski ITŁ i Budowa 204,
276) Łąkowy Łagier,
277) ŁO Dolnoindygirskiego Rejonowego Zarządu Poszukiwań Geologicznych Dalstroju,
278) ŁO przy Sowchozie "Sacca i Vanzettiego",
279) ŁO Szpitala Centralnego Dalstroju,
280) ŁO Zakładów Woroszyłowskich,
281) Łobwiński ITŁ,
282) Łokczimski ITŁ,
283) Łużański ITŁ i Budowa 200,
284) Łysogorskie ŁO,
285) Magadański ITŁ Dalstroju,
286) Majkaińskie ŁO,
287) Makarowskie ŁO,
288) Markowski ITŁ,
289) Martynowski ITŁ,
290) Maryjski ITŁ,
291) Miechrieński ITŁ,
292) Miedwieżjegorski Inwalidzki ITŁ,
293) Miejskie ŁO,
294) Mineralny ITŁ,
295) Miniejewskie ŁO ChOZU MWD,
296) Minusińskie ŁO SGU,
297) Mołotowski ITŁ,
298) Monczegorski ITŁ i Budowa Kombinatu "Siewieronikiel",
299) Moskiewski ITŁ Eksploatacji Lasów,
300) Moskiewski Węglowy ITŁ,
301) Mostowski ITŁ,
302) Nadkaspijski ITŁ i Budowa 107,
303) Nadmorski ITŁ,
304) Nadmorski ITŁ Dalstroju,
305) Nadmorski Kolejowy ITŁ i Budowa 206,
306) Nadmorski Rejon Dalstroju,
307) Nadwołżański ITŁ,
308) Niebitdaski ITŁ,
309) Nieftiestrojłag,
310) Niemnyrski ITŁ,
311) Nierczyński ITŁ,
312) Nierczyńskie Rolnicze ŁO,
313) Nikołajewski ITŁ,
314) Nogiński ITŁ,
315) Norylski ITŁ,
316) Nowokamieński ITŁ,
317) Nowotambowski ITŁ,
318) Nyrobski ITŁ,
319) Obóz Specjalny nr 11,
320) Obski ITŁ,
321) Obski ITŁ i Budowa 501,
322) Olchowski Inwalidzki ITŁ,
323) OŁP Budowy nr 1 GUŁAG-u NKWD,
324) Omski ITŁ,
325) Omski ITŁ i Budowa 166,
326) Omsukczański ITŁ Dalstroju,
327) Oneski ITŁ,
328) Opocki ITŁ,
329) Orłowski ITŁ,
330) Ostrowski ITŁ,
331) Panińskie ŁO,
332) Pawłodarski ITŁ,
333) Peczorski ITŁ,
334) Piaskowy ITŁ,
335) Podgorny ITŁ,
336) Podleśne ŁO,
337) Polański ITŁ,
338) Polarny ITŁ,
339) Południowokuzbaski ITŁ,
340) Południowo-Wschodni ITŁ,
341) Południowo-Zachodni ITŁ Dalstroju,
342) Południowo-Zachodni Zarząd Górniczo-Przemysłowy i ITŁ Jenisejstroju,
343) Południowy ITŁ,
344) Południowy ITŁ przy Budowie 505 GUŁZDS,
345) Ponyski ITŁ,
346) Północnodwiński ITŁ,
347) Północnokuzbaski ITŁ,
348) Północnopeczorski ITŁ,
349) Północnouralski ITŁ,
350) Północno-Wschodni ITŁ,
351) Północny ITŁ Dalstroju,
352) Północny Kolejowy ITŁ,
353) Północny Zarząd ITŁ i Budowy 503,
354) Prorwiński ITŁ,
355) Przełęczowy ITŁ,
356) Pudoskie ŁO,
357) Pudożgorski ITŁ,
358) Rajczyski ITŁ,
359) Rybiński ITŁ,
360) Rzeczny Łagier,
361) Sachaliński ITŁ,
362) Samarski ITŁ,
363) Sarański ITŁ,
364) Saratowski ITŁ,
365) Selengijski ITŁ,
366) Siegieski ITŁ,
367) Solikamski Inwalidzki ITŁ,
368) Solikamski ITŁ,
369) Sorocki ITŁ,
370) Sosnowski ITŁ,
371) Sriedniebielski ITŁ,
372) Stalingradzki ITŁ,
373) Starosielskie ŁO,
374) Stepowy ITŁ,
375) Stiepniackie ŁO,
376) Suchodolski ITŁ,
377) Swijaskie ŁO,
378) Swobodzieński ITŁ,
379) Syberyjski ITŁ,
380) Szachtyński ITŁ,
381) Szczugorski ITŁ,
382) Szeksniński ITŁ GUŁGTS,
383) Szeksniński ITŁ MWD,
384) SZOSDORŁAG,
385) Szyrokowski ITŁ,
386) Środkowoazjatycki ITŁ,
387) Tachtamygdyńskie ŁO,
388) Tagilski ITŁ,
389) Tajgowy ITŁ,
390) Tajgowy Zarząd Górniczo-Przemysłowy i ITŁ Jenisejstroju,
391) Tajszecki ITŁ GUŁAG-u,
392) Tajszecki ITŁ GUŁŻDS,
393) Tajszecki ITŁ UITŁK UNKWD Obwodu Irkuckiego,
394) Tasicjewski ITŁ,
395) Tawdyjski ITŁ,
396) Tichwiński ITŁ,
397) Tiemnikowski ITŁ,
398) Tieńkiński ITŁ Dalstroju,
399) Tomski ITŁ,
400) Tomsko-Asiński ITŁ,
401) Tom-Usyjski ITŁ,
402) Tranzytowe ŁO Dalstroju,
403) Tugaczyński ITŁ,
404) Tuimski Zarząd Górniczo-Przemysłowy i ITŁ Jenisejstroju,
405) Tujmazyński ITŁ,
406) Tyrnyauski Kombinat i ITŁ,
407) Uchto-Iżemski ITŁ,
408) Uleński Zarząd Górniczo-Przemysłowy i ITŁ,
409) Ulmiński ITŁ,
410) Umaltyński ITŁ,
411) Unżeński ITŁ,
412) Urgalski ITŁ i Budowa GUŁŻDS,
413) Usolski ITŁ,
414) Usolski ITŁ SGU,
415) Ust-Kucki ITŁ i Baza Przeładunkowa Dalstroju,
416) Ust-Kuckie ŁO
417) Ustwymski ITŁ,
418) Waniński ITŁ Dalstroju,
419) Waniński Obóz Tranzytowo-Przesyłowy,
420) Warnawiński ITŁ,
421) Wiacki ITŁ,
422) Wiartsilski ITŁ,
423) Wiaziemski ITŁ,
424) Wierszyno-Darasuńskie ŁO,
425) Wiszerski ITŁ,
426) Władywostocki ITŁ,
427) Władywostocki Punkt Przesyłowy Dalstroju,
428) Wododziałowy Łagier,
429) Wołżański ITŁ,
430) Wołżański ITŁ i Budowa Węzłów Hydrotechnicznych,
431) Wołżański ITŁ MWD,
432) Wołżański Kolejowy ITŁ,
433) Wołżańsko-Bałtycki ITŁ,
434) Workucki ITŁ,
435) Woroninowski ITŁ,
436) Wschodni ITŁ w składzie Budowy 500,
437) Wschodni Kolejowy ITŁ,
438) Wschodni Zarząd Kopalń Ołowiu i ITŁ Jenisejstroju,
439) Wschodniouralski ITŁ,
440) Wytiegorski ITŁ,
441) Wytiegorski ITŁ NKWD,
442) Zachodni ITŁ Dalstroju,
443) Zaimandrowski ITŁ,
444) Zapolarny ITŁ i Budowa 503,
445) Zarząd Budowlano-Eksploatacyjny 11 i ITŁ,
446) Zarząd Główny Obozów Budowy Rafinerii Ropy Naftowej i Zakładów Syntetycznych Paliw Ciekłych MWD Zarząd Poprawczych Obozów Pracy i Kombinatu "Apatii",
447) Zarząd Uralski ITŁ,
448) Żygałowskie ŁO


That is close to 500 GULAG camps for Poles in the USSR.

See reference [1]

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______________________________________________________________


References




[1] Polish Ministry: ROZPORZĄDZENIE
PREZESA RADY MINISTRÓW, 2001

Dz.U.2001.106.1154
ROZPORZĄDZENIE
PREZESA RADY MINISTRÓW
z dnia 20 września 2001 r.
w sprawie określenia miejsc odosobnienia, w których były osadzone osoby narodowości polskiej lub obywatele polscy innych narodowości.
(Dz. U. z dnia 29 września 2001 r.)

http://www.abc.com.pl/du-akt/-/akt/dz-u-01-106-1154






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Last edited by Celtic_Patriot; March 20th, 2012 at 05:58 PM.
 
Old March 20th, 2012 #4
Yevgeny Morozov
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At least they didn't have to speak German, of the Germans who they so dearly despise.
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The "the White Nationalist movement" and its "leaders" are a joke ... on Whites. | Donating to deadbeats is the equivalent of nigger handouts. | What's the difference between the Shoah business and the White Nationalism? Reach and shekel flow.
 
Old March 22nd, 2012 #5
Celtic_Patriot
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Speaking of Poland and the USSR Marxist Gulags.

One of the important criteria for the Marxists is that race does not exist. They especially don't want the White race to exist, thus all the Polish being sent to the Gulag extermination camps.

"What on earth is a 'White'? It has no meaning in either anthropology or racial science."

Karl Radl
http://www.vnnforum.com/showthread.p...10#post1088610
The Soviet Marxists did not think the White race existed only the Jewish race. They actively denied Whites were a race at all. They worked to genocide the White race, 62 million Whites, to eliminate the race.


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