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One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. Russian History and Background Presentation. Russian History a la Ms. Minor. 1917--Czar Nicholas II is ousted and later killed 1918—Civil War between Bolsheviks (communists) led by Lenin and Mensheviks (land owners)
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One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich Russian History and Background Presentation
Russian History a la Ms. Minor • 1917--Czar Nicholas II is ousted and later killed • 1918—Civil War between Bolsheviks (communists) led by Lenin and Mensheviks (land owners) • Nikolai Lenin emerges as the leader of Russia, with Trotsky and Stalin as possible successors.
Photos of the Revolution • Lenin speaking to revolutionaries
Tenets of Marxist Communism • From each according to his ability, to each according to his need. • An egalitarian, classless society, in which the people rule themselves. • Religion is the opiate of the people • A bloody revolution is the only means to spread communism. • Communism cannot survive in isolation
Lenin’s Rule Lenin with Stalin. Lenin warned that Stalin was becoming too powerful and called for him to be removed.
Lenin Dies and Stalin Emerges • 1924 Lenin dies, leaving Trotsky and Stalin to vie for power. • Stalin wins; Trotsky leaves the country and is killed. • Stalin rules with an iron fist (alleged to have killed 20 million people or more): Reign of Terror, Five-Year Plan, Kulak Uprising, Gulags.
Stalin’s Reign of Terror • Rewrote Soviet histories rewritten to reflect well on him • Allowed no one to oppose his decisions; jailed (sent to Gulags) or executed most of those who helped him rise to power. • Used fear as motivator to industrialize. • Russia went from third world to a military and industrial power in twenty years.
Stalin’s Five-Year Plan • 1928—Forced Collectivization of Industry and Farming • Results • Production levels rose dramatically Appalling human cost: • discipline (sacked if late) • secret police • slave labor • labor camps (for those who made mistakes) • accidents & deaths (100,000 workers died building the Belomor Canal) • few consumer goods • poor housing • wages FELL • no human rights
Kulak Uprising • Kulaks, peasant families, were forced to surrender grain to government. • In protest, kulaks burned their crops. • Stalin ordered the military to burn or seize the crops and sent millions of kulaks to labor camps. • This caused a massive famine that killed 7 million.
The Gulag System • The Gulag was the government agency that administered the penal labor camps of the Soviet Union. • "Gulag,” through metonymy, began to stand for the entire penal labor system in the USSR. • People could be imprisoned in a Gulag camp for crimes such as unexcused absences from work, petty theft, or anti-government jokes. • About half of the political prisoners were sent to Gulag prison camps without trial.
More Gulag Please? • There were at least 476 separate camps, some of them comprising hundreds, even thousands of camp units. • The most infamous complexes were those in Siberia. regions. • More than 14 million (with some authors like Solzhenitsyn estimating the total at more than 40 million) people passed through the Gulag from 1929 to 1953, with a further 6 to 7 million being deported to remote areas of the USSR. • According to Soviet data, a total of 1,053,829 people died in the GULAG from 1934 to 1953, not counting those who died in labor colonies. • The total population of the camps varied from 510,307 (in 1934) to 1,727,970 (in 1953).
Life in the Gulag Gulag dormitory
Solzhenitsyn • Born in Southern Russia in 1918. • Fought in WWII as a commissioned artillery officer behind German lines; twice decorated for his bravery • 1945 arrested and sentenced without trial for having criticized Stalin in some letters to a friend • Spent next 8 years in prisons and gulags.