Outside the camps proper—that is, in the transit camps and stations—the criminals continued to be almost completely out of control. One of their customs was to gamble with one another for the clothes of some strange political; the loser then had to pull them off the victim and hand them over to the winner. This game was also played for prisoners’ lives. A Hungarian who was in Vorkuta in 1950 to 1951 reports it played by fifteen-year-old juvenile criminals, the loser then knifing the chosen victim. These young delinquents, usually aged from fourteen to sixteen, were seldom seen in the usual camps, being held in special centers. They were far more terrifying than any other element in Soviet society: their egos were completely unsocialized. Killing meant nothing at all to them. They formed the hard core of the “hooligan” youth element which still persists in the Soviet Union and, politically speaking, may be thought to form the potential storm troops, on one side or another, in any future upsets in the country.
Gorbatov mentions a criminal with fingers missing who explained to him that he had “lost” a political’s clothes to another criminal, and before he could steal them to hand them over, the political had been transferred. So he was at once tried for negligence by his mates and sentenced to the loss of his fingers. The criminal “prosecutor” demanded all five, but the “court” settled for three. “We also have our laws,” the victim commented.32 In another case, one who, in a mass rape aboard the convict ship
In fact, the criminals (who had such names as “The Louse,” “Hitler,” and “The Knout”), known at the time of the Purges as
One of its provisions (though the
WOMEN IN CAMPS
Women criminals, who formed a high percentage of all women in the camps, were in the main tough and shameless—though one prisoner mentions a woman of the criminal class who never took her knickers off even in the washroom: it was said that the tattooing on her belly was so indecent that “even she was a little embarrassed by it.”35 The criminal women referred to themselves as “little violets” and sneered at the politicals as “little roses.” But they were somewhat restrained in their attitude towards nuns.36
Women on the whole seem to have survived much better than men. For this reason, we have perhaps a disproportionate number of accounts of the camps from their hands. In fact, they seem to have numbered “less than ten per cent” of the total, and many of these were in the criminal group.37 This was enough, all the same, to account for “the innumerable mixed or women’s concentration camps in the north,” to which Pasternak refers in
In the mixed camps, noncriminal women were frequently mass-raped by
The guards were often brutal to them. A woman prisoner describes an attempt by a girl to evade work by hiding under the floorboards. She was attacked by the guard dogs and dragged out so violently by the guards that she was literally scalped. Serving five years for stealing potatoes, she was one of the sixteen- or seventeen-year-old girls frequently reported in the camps.39