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   » » Wiki: Dubravlag
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The Dubravny Camp, Special Camp No.3 (Дубравный лагерь, Особый лагерь № 3), commonly known as the Dubravlag (), was a of the located in , from 1948 to 2005.

The Dubravlag was founded as one of several Gulag special camps in the for political prisoners with a large population of Soviet dissidents. ДУБРАВНЫЙ ЛАГЕРЬ, from the reference book Система исправительно-трудовых лагерей в СССР The Dubravlag became a corrective labor camp (ITL) in 1954 and part of the regular Soviet system after the Gulag system was dissolved in 1960. Приказ МВД СССР № 00219 «Об организации особых лагерей МВД» The Dubravlag was operated by after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 until it was converted into a of the Federal Penitentiary Service in 2005.


History
The Dubravlag was established on 28 February 1948 as Gulag special camp No. 3 for political prisoners by merging the camp and Temnikovsky children's colony, a camp complex of the Soviet system of camps. was founded in 1931 as the headquarters of the Temlag, which was named after the pre-existing nearby town of . The Temlag's camp section in Yavas was separated from its industrial operations and incorporated into the new special camp named Dubravny, meaning " grove" in . The Soviets established a number of camps in the to hold individuals convicted of "particularly dangerous " specifically. The Dubravlag became a common destination for arrested for activity at a time of extreme censorship in the Soviet Union during the late .

In 1954, after the death of , the Dubravlag and many other camps of the Gulag system were converted into regular corrective labor camp (ITL). In 1960, the Soviet government dissolved the Gulag agency and Dubravlag was incorporated into the Soviet system. By 1961, the Mordovia camps including the Dubravlag became the sole destination of those convicted of political crimes in the Soviet Union, and continued to function as a penal labor camp during the . However, the rise of in 1964 led to an increase in political repression in the Soviet Union and a resurgence in the number of political prisoners. Brezhnev's rule began with the Sinyavsky–Daniel trial, where the writers and were convicted of "Anti-Soviet agitation" in a for their writings. In 1966, Sinyavsky and Daniel were both imprisoned at the Dubravlag until their early release in 1971 by , the Chairman of the at the time.

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991, the Dubravlag was inherited by , which maintained many of the penal labor camps in Zubovo-Polyansky District. In 2005, the Dubravlag camp was dissolved and the site has been converted into a operated by the Republic of Mordovia branch of the Federal Penitentiary Service.


Notable inmates

English language articles
  • Viacheslav Chornovil, Ukrainian politician and dissident
  • Metropolitan Cornelius (Jakobs), the Metropolitan bishop of and All , head of the Estonian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate
  • , Russian writer and dissident, defendant at the Sinyavsky–Daniel trial
  • , Russian poet, historian, human rights activist, and dissident, defendant at the Trial of the Four
  • , Russian poet, writer, historian and
  • , Ukrainian politician and dissident
  • Alexander Ginzburg, Russian writer and dissident, defendant at the Trial of the Four
  • , friend and lover of
  • , Ukrainian teacher and anarchist revolutionary, wife of
  • , Russian dissident and writer of
  • , Estonian stateswoman
  • Irina Ratushinskaya, Russian dissident, writer, and poet, described her years in Dubravlag in her book Grey Is the Color of Hope (1989, Vintage. )
  • , Ukrainian of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
  • , Russian writer and dissident, defendant at the Sinyavsky–Daniel trial
  • Leonid Solovyov, writer and playwright, wrote The Enchanted Prince, the second of his two novels about , at Dubravlag
  • Tatyana Velikanova, Soviet mathematician and dissident
  • Stanislovas Žvirgždas, imprisoned while being a student; later became a Lithuanian photographer and historian of photography


Russian language articles


See also

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