Berzin is described as comparatively reasonable about prisoners’ complaints.119 He, his wife, and his chief assistant, Filipov (who is said to have committed suicide in Magadan prison), were arrested, together with scores of others, in 1937, in Yezhov’s purge of the NKVD. There seems to have been some apprehension of resistance, and Berzin was promised awards and promotion, feted by the NKVD “delegation,” and only arrested on the airfield.120
He was succeeded by K. A. Pavlov, who, through his deputy, Garanin, launched on a campaign of, even by NKVD standards, maniac terror, torture, and execution, with the shooting in 1938 of an estimated 26,000 men in a special camp, Serpantinka, set up for the purpose. Garanin was soon shot, and his successor, Vyshnevetsky, also lasted a very short time, receiving fifteen years for a disastrous expedition intended to open up new areas.
Pavlov himself was promoted to head Gulag, and was succeeded in Kolyma by Ivan Nikishov, described as “icily, mercilessly cruel.” He married an NKVD woman, Gridassova, who was put in charge of the women’s camp at Magadan. They lived in a comfortable country house forty-five miles northwest of Magadan, in their own hunting preserve.121
The slave route to Kolyma had its own Middle Passage, the trip to Magadan from Vladivostok by boat, with thousands of prisoners battened down under hatches. The trip took a week or more, and was much feared. An alternative route was tried to Ambarchik on the Arctic Ocean, at the mouth of the Kolyma—a 4,000-mile voyage through difficult seas, taking some two months. The first ship sent that way, the
More usually, the shorter passage to Magadan, on the
On another occasion, several hundred young girls, sentenced for unauthorized absence from arms factories and so on, were in a compartment of the hold on their own. Again the
On arrival at Nagayevo, first “the sick were carried ashore on stretchers and left on the beach in tidy rows. The dead were also neatly stacked so that they could be counted and the number of death certificates would tally.”127
The survivors found themselves in a strange land.
The Kolyma Basin alone is almost as big as the Ukraine. It is intensely cold: the temperature may go down to – 70°C.128 Outside work for prisoners was compulsory until it reached – 50°C.129 In spite of this, in 1938, fur was banned in the Dalstroy camps, and only wadding permitted; felt shoes were replaced by canvas. The rivers of the region are ice-bound for eight to nine months of the year. A camp rhyme ran:
Kolyma, wonderful planet,
Twelve months winter, the rest summer.