Yertsevo was the location of the notorious Soviet concentration camp of the Gulag system before, during, and after World War II.[7] The Yertsevo Camp Complex, one of over a dozen such complexes shared between Arkhangelsk and Vologda Oblasts,[8] was established by the Soviet State Political Directorate secret service already in the 1930s. Since 1940, the camp was managed by the Kargopolsky ITL (Ispravitelno-Trudovoy Lager) directorate.[9] It was located about 3 miles (4.8 km) from the forest where the prisoners cut lumber all day, year-round, usually up to their waist in snow, emaciated, and always hungry.[10]
Witness accounts confirm that the prisoners could survive in the forest-brigade for no more than two years. The dead were buried in mass graves with wooden tags attached to their legs with a string.[11] Only the fresh young arrivals in the Yertsevo camp were put through the forest ordeal. The work productivity norm set by the prison administration was impossible to reach for many of the victims.[10]
The Yertsevo labor camp was described in a book entitled A World Apart, written by the eminent Polish writer and philosopher Gustaw Herling-Grudziński, camp survivor and, later, political dissident under the communist system. Captured by the NKVD in early 1940 as a Polish army soldier soon after the Soviet invasion of Poland, Herling-Grudziński spent a year and a half in the Yertsevo camp. Sentenced to five years, but eventually amnestied, he was also imprisoned at the Kargopol labor camp facility.[10]
Prisoners were sent to the bath-house once every month. Some of them self-mutilated themselves at work by cutting off their fingers and rubbing dirt into the wounds in order to be sent to the camp infirmary, the only escape from death by exhaustion.[10] Herling-Grudziński's account of camp life in the Soviet Gulag preceded Solzhenitsyn's revelations by more than a decade.[12][13][14]
Since September 2009 there is a monument to the writer.
^"Yertsevo (Ерцево)". GPS Places and POI in Russia (in Russian and English). Geo Deg beta. 2011. Retrieved August 29, 2012.
^ abcdGeorge Mason University (2008–2012). "Labor". Days and Lives :: Prisoners. Rosenzweig Center for History. Archived from the original on May 6, 2012. Retrieved August 29, 2012.
^Robert Conquest. "The Red Holocaust". The Great Terror. Genocides Museum. Retrieved August 29, 2012.
^Anne Applebaum (2012), "Anne Applebaum on Memoirs of Communism", FiveBooks Interviews, The Browser - Writing Worth Reading, A World Apart by Herling-Grudziński is... one of the two or three best Gulag memoirs. And one of the first too – it came out 10 years before Solzhenitsyn's A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. — Source link: thebrowser.com/interviews/anne-applebaum-on-memoirs-communism?page=2
^Leszek Strzelecki (February 2, 2005). "A masterpiece yet to be discovered". Review: A World Apart: Imprisonment in a Soviet Labor Camp During World War II by Gustaw Herling-Grudziński. Retrieved August 30, 2012.
Архангельское областное Собрание депутатов. Постановление №864 от 10 сентября 2004 г. «О преобразовании рабочего посёлка Ерцево Коношского района Архангельской области». Вступил в силу 1 января 2005 г. Опубликован: "Волна", №36, 24 сентября 2004 г. (Arkhangelsk Oblast Assembly of Deputies. Resolution #864 of September 10, 2004 On the Transformation of the Work Settlement of Yertsevo in Konoshsky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast. Effective as of January 1, 2005.).