Vorkuta
forced-labor camp · Vorkuta, Komi Republic, Russia
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Dead Horse

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In 1939 the young man from Ruthenia, Nikolai Kubarič, was sentenced to three years of forced labor for the illegal crossing of the border into the USSR. He got into a forced-labor camp that was located near the Siberian town of Vorkuta. The conditions there were extremely harsh. According to the memories of Nikolai Kubariče, it was dark and - 50 degrees °C for six months of the year. The other half of the year, the inmates of the camp were plagued by clouds of mosquitoes. He worked in the woods, in the mines and as an assistant in the blacksmith's workshop. He tells the story of how they once found a dead horse in the stables. Although they were immensely hungry, they didn't dare to cut away the flesh, but only cut off the hooves and cooked them in the workshop. "Of course it smelled for miles." Rather unsurprisingly, they were soon discovered by the patrolling guard and subjected to interrogation. "We were very lucky in the end. At first they thought that we had poisoned that horse. They would have locked us up for five years for that. But then the horse was dissected by a vet and it turned out that it had swallowed a nail or something like that. This saved us." At Vorkuta, many prisoners died of exhaustion, hunger or cold. "Peoples' lives didn't matter at all there. We had to meet the assigned workload, because if you failed to, you simply got no bread. We would pull the dead from the bunk beds, load them on the sleds and drag them for about a pit twenty meters long, two meters deep, which was about a mile away. We dumped them in the pit, assorted them in line and covered them with lime." Towards the end of 1942, Nikolai Kubarič was released from the camp due to an agreement with the Soviet Union and he went to Buzuluk, where he became a soldier in the Czechoslovak units.

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Nikolai Kubarič, a retired Colonel

Nikolai Kubarič, a retired Colonel

Nikolai Kubarič was born on October 2, 1919, in the village of Podpleša in the Tjachevo region in Ruthenia. In 1939, he was drafted into the Hungarian army but he fled to the Soviet Union, where he was arrested and sentenced to three years in a forced-labor camp in Vorkuta. In January 1943, he joined the Czechoslovak unit in Buzuluk. He participated in the battles of Kiev and Sokolov. After the battle for the White Cerkev in January 1944, he was deployed with the group Borkaňuk in Slovakia in the enemy's rear. After he crossed the front line back to his unit, he fought at Dukla and Liptovský Mikuláš, where he was seriously injured. Nikolai Kubarič completed high school after the war and graduated from the military academy. Since 1971, he's retired and lives in Ústí nad Labem. He's still an active member of the Czechoslovak Community of Legionaries, which he co-founded.

Vorkuta

Available in: English | Česky

The system of labor camps near the present town of Vorkuta in the Komi Republic of Russia emerged gradually since 1932. With winter temperatures falling below -50 °C, Vorkuta became one of the most dreaded Russian labor camps. Prisoners were employed predominantly for coal mining and work in the woods. Tens of thousands of prisoners died during the construction of the camp and railroad tracks. Today, Vorkuta is an industrial city with a population of 100.000 inhabitants. It is a site of extensive coal, oil and natural-gas mining. The remnants of the former labor camp have completely blended in with the new urban buildings and are beyond identification (note: only an indicative location is given, the exact position of the particular camp is unknown).

Vorkuta

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Nikolai Kubarič, a retired …
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