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ISLES OF THE LOST

CONVICT SETTLEMENTS. SOVIET ENTERPRISE. The reported formation by the Soviet Government of an autonomous “Republic of the Condemned” in the Solovetsky Islands, in the White Sea, was first proposed several years ago, but was vehemently opposed at the time by the Chief Procurator (Public Prosecutor), Krylenko (says the Daily Mail.) The islands, turned into a penal concentration camp, have been populated since 1920 with political prisoners composed chiefly of Social Democrats and Anarchists. Only the strongest and healthiest are still alive. Nearly every well-known Socialist and Radical politician of pre-war Russia was deported there, and they were soon joined by large numbers of friends and adherents.

In many cases, whole families, including babies in arms, were deported, and for at least four years were entirely neglected by the Soviet authorities. Food was supplied only for the guards, the majority of whom were the most brutalised Soviet adherents that could be recruited for the work by the then Chief of the Cheka, the famous Felix Djerj inski.

THE ANARCHISTS. The Anarchists male and female —were &t first interned in one of the smaller islands, where they were permitted to lead an “anarchistic” life, and, with the exception of

a certain amount of “public and social” work, were at liberty to do as they liked.

As the death rate in the islands is the highest in the world, the Soviet found them exceedingly useful as a place of deportation for heretic Communists, a considerable number of whom were sent there every year with the usual consequences.

The history of the islands since 1920 is full of horrible tragedies and revolting atrocities. Men and women have been flogged to death at the. whim of brutal commanders, and hundreds are known to have been stripped and allowed to freeze to death.

Thousands of Russia’s pre-war intelligentsia have been driven to suicide. Among the “lost” are scientists, artists, and members of every learned profession whose powers of endurance gave out under the barbaric conditions.

With grim humour the Bolsheviks named these islands “Solvetsky,” or the islands of the nightingales. In fact they are islands with practicaly no bird life and certainly without song.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KCC19301211.2.50

Bibliographic details

King Country Chronicle, Volume XXIV, Issue 3241, 11 December 1930, Page 6

Word Count
362

ISLES OF THE LOST King Country Chronicle, Volume XXIV, Issue 3241, 11 December 1930, Page 6

ISLES OF THE LOST King Country Chronicle, Volume XXIV, Issue 3241, 11 December 1930, Page 6