Film "Soviet Camp 0331" - Instytut Pileckiego
As part of the program accompanying the opening of the Pilecki Institute headquarters at 82 Sienna Street, we invite you to a screening of a film about the tragic experiences of the inhabitants of the Vilnius region.
The film shows the tragic fate of the inhabitants of the Wilno region „liberated” by the Red Army – the future prisoners of the NKVD control and filtration Camp No. 0331 in Kutaisi.
SOVIET CAMP NO. 0331
dir. Grzegorz Czerniak, 60', Jerzy Rohoziński, Wojciech Saramonowicz; produced by the Pilecki Institute, 2022
Kutaisi, the former residence of Georgian kings, hides a grim secret. Unburied remains of the prisoners of the NKVD Camp No. 0331 lie here, far off the beaten track. The inmates were forced to perform slave labor at the local “Kolkhida” car factory. “During the first months, about 10 people died every day,” recalls one of the survivors. Most of the prisoners were Home Army soldiers and female combatants from the Vilnius region, the elites of the local intelligentsia.
The film attempts to restore the memory of the tragedy and heroism of those who worked, starved and died there, without knowing how much longer the misery would go on. During Easter 1947 a strike broke out: ‘Poles won’t go to work!’ The strikers were dispersed to other camps, perfidiously deluded into thinking that they would now be able to return home. The survivors finally arrived in their homeland in the winter of 1948/49 – exhausted, abject and forced to keep silent about their fate. Only after long years of silence and lies would it be possible to ask “why?” and “what for?”
See also
- Oppositional Engagement of Women in Authoritarian and Totalitarian Systems of the 20th Century: Poland in a Comparative European Perspective (1919–1989)
conference
Oppositional Engagement of Women in Authoritarian and Totalitarian Systems of the 20th Century: Poland in a Comparative European Perspective (1919–1989)
We invite scholars to participate in an international academic conference devoted to various forms of activity undertaken by women who engaged in opposition and dissent under authoritarian and totalitarian rule in the 20th century.
- Call for Papers | Embracing the New, Preserving the Old: Studying Fascism, Communism, and Totalitarianism in the 2020s (October 14-15)
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Call for Papers | Embracing the New, Preserving the Old: Studying Fascism, Communism, and Totalitarianism in the 2020s (October 14-15)
We invite historians, political scientists, sociologists, scholars of culture and media, and others interested to reflect on methods, cases, and knowledge production related to the study of fascism, communism, and totalitarianism in the 2020s.
- CALL FOR PAPERS: Oppositional Engagement of Women in Authoritarian and Totalitarian Systems of the 20th Century: Poland in a Comparative European Perspective (1919–1989)
conference
CALL FOR PAPERS: Oppositional Engagement of Women in Authoritarian and Totalitarian Systems of the 20th Century: Poland in a Comparative European Perspective (1919–1989)
We invite scholars to participate in an international academic conference devoted to various forms of activity undertaken by women who engaged in opposition and dissent under authoritarian and totalitarian rule in the 20th century.