- Source: Intalag
The Inta Corrective Labor Camp or Intalag (Russian: Инти́нский исправи́тельно-трудово́й ла́герь, Инталаг, romanized: Intínskiy ispravítel'no-trudovóy láger', also abbreviated Intinlag, Intlag, and Intastroy) was a forced labor camp of the Gulag, which existed between 1941 and 1948 near the town of Inta in the Komi Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Prisoners at the camp were mainly engaged in the mining of local coal deposits.
History
Intalag was established on 17 November 1941 by being separated from Vorkutlag. Despite its name, the camp was not actually located at Inta until 1942, being initially located at Vorkuta. The first camp commander was Captain Mikhail Savich Zdunis, who led it until 17 July 1942, and it was subordinated to the General Directorate of Railway Construction Camps (GULZHDS). The camp's prisoners were tasked with mining the Inta coal deposit and building and operating (from 11 September 1942) the Inta Central Electric System. On 27 July, Senior Lieutenant V.P. Sokolov took command of the camp, replacing Zdunis. Major G.B. Orlovsky became the camp commander on 26 March 1943. The camp was transferred to the General Directorate of Mining and Metallurgy Camps (GULGMP) on 5 October. Colonel M.I. Khaleyev became camp commander on 16 September 1944, and would command the camp for the rest of its existence. The Shchugorugol camp was split off from Intalag on 15 September 1945, but reabsorbed at the end of 1946. At the beginning of 1947, the number of inmates in the camp reached 20,585, its highest size. On 30 October 1948, the camp was closed down and reorganized into Minlag, an MVD special camp for political prisoners.
Notable inmates
Dmitry Dudko, Orthodox priest and former dissident
Yuli Dunsky, Soviet screenwriter
Valeri Frid, Soviet screenwriter
Aleksei Kapler, film director and lover of Svetlana Alliluyeva, Stalin's daughter
Jaan Kross, Estonian writer, served a sentence in Intalag from 1947-1951, was later sent to Krasnoyarsk krai.
Nikolay Pechkovsky, opera singer, People's Artist of the RSFSR
Lina Prokofiev, Spanish singer and the first wife of Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev
Adolfas Sruoga (1887–9141), one of the first heads of the Lithuanian Post Office
Maxim Stepanov, Red Army officer (died at Intalag in 1945)
References
= Citations
== Bibliography
=Bullough, Oliver (2013). The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 9780465074983.
Cherushev, Nikolai Semyonovich (2003). Удар по своим. Красная Армия: 1938—1941 [Under attack: The Red Army, 1938–1941] (in Russian). Moscow: Veche. ISBN 5-94538-366-X.
Filippov, S.; Sigachev, S. (1998). "Интинский ИТЛ" [Intinsky ITL]. Система исправительно-трудовых лагерей в СССР: 1923– 1960. Справочник [The System of Forced Labor Camps in the Soviet Union, 1923–1960: A Guide] (in Russian). Compiled by M.S. Smirnov. Moscow: Zveno.
External links
Intalag at Russian NGO Memorial's Virtual Museum of the Gulag (archived; the website was seized by Russian police in 2008)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Intalag
- Inta
- List of Gulag camps
- Lina Prokofiev
- Ukhtpechlag
- Gennady Kupriyanov
- Adolfas Sruoga
- Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Political Repressions
- Jonas Vabalas
- Maxim Stepanov