Gulag - A journey into the darkness of Stalin’s Siberian prison camps

“We have to squeeze everything out of a prisoner in the first three months - after that we don’t need him anymore.”     Camp commander Naftaly Frenkel, The Gulag Archipelago 

18 million people were sent to the Gulag from 1930 to 1953, often political prisoners, imprisoned without a trial. Over 1.5 million died. In the winter of 1991, during the end of Gorbachev’s glasnost, I travelled with a writer and translator across the USSR from Moscow to Eastern Siberia, interviewing survivors of Stalin’s prison camps. The story was published in a German magazine. Thirty years later, after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and his rewriting of Soviet history, echoing Stalin, with critics sent to camps or simply murdered, I started to use the new online sources to research into the prison camps and their history. I was helped on the story by the organization ‘Memorial’, a group of survivors dedicated to revealing facts about the Gulag. In 2021, they were outlawed as a ‘terrorist’ organisation.