The term "GULAG" is an abbreviation for the Soviet bureaucracy, which operates the Soviet forced labor camp system during the Stalin era and is Glavnoe Upravlenie ispravitel 'no - trudovykh LAGerei (to modify the main administration department of the labor camp) . Since the publication of The Gulag Archipelago of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in 1973, this term has been the representative of the entire Soviet forced labor penalty system. Immediately after the revolution in 1917, the Soviet Union established a concentration camp, but in the early 1930s the system developed greatly with Stalin's movement to transform the Soviet Union into modern industrial power and collective agriculture.
The Gulag camp exists throughout the Soviet Union, but the largest camp is in the country's most extreme geographical and climatic region, from North Pole to East Siberia and South Central Asia. Prisoners are engaged in various economic activities, but their work is often unskilled, manual and economically inefficient. The combination of local violence, extreme weather, diligence, poor food and unsanitary conditions combines extremely high mortality rates at refugee camps
After the death of Stalin in 1953, the size of Gurug sharply shrunk and the Soviet Union continued to force forced labor camps and political prisoners during the Gorbachev era.
Grang is a system of forced labor camps established during the long-term ruling of the Soviet dictatorship by Joseph Stalin. The word "Gulag" is an acronym for Glavnoe Upravlenie Lagerei or Main Camp Administration. Notorious prisons are being detained for about 18 million people throughout history and are operated since Stalin died in 1953. At peak time, the Gulag network has hundreds of labor camps, each ranging from 2,000 to 10,000 people. The situation of Gulag is cruel: a prisoner may need to work in the extreme weather, usually 14 hours a day, usually. Many people die from hunger, illness, or exhaustion - other people are being executed. Atrocities in the Gulag system have a long-term impact, but they are still penetrating the Russian society.
The term "GULAG" is an abbreviation for the Soviet bureaucracy, which operates the Soviet forced labor camp system during the Stalin era and is Glavnoe Upravlenie ispravitel 'no - trudovykh LAGerei (to modify the main administration department of the labor camp) . Since the publication of The Gulag Archipelago of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in 1973, this term has been the representative of the entire Soviet forced labor penalty system. Immediately after the revolution in 1917, the Soviet Union established a concentration camp, but in the early 1930s the system developed greatly with Stalin's movement to transform the Soviet Union into modern industrial power and collective agriculture.
Eight years after the forced labor camp (or "Gulagos"), Alexander Solzhenitsyn entered the labor camp in the form of revenge in his letter to his friend as punishment for Stalin's malice. In the Gulag archipelago, Solzhenitsyn explained the labor camp demonstrations and barbaric situations in detail, accurate and detailed, and the Russian government was unable to challenge the novel. The Gulag archipelago was not made public in Russia until the collapse of the Soviet Union, which was publicly disseminated throughout the west through the Soviet secret samizdat channel.
The Gloglass Institute was developed in the Soviet Union, imprisoned the vulnerable groups of the country, and forced them to do their work. The main purpose of starting this system is to force labor and the cruel behavior of these people, they are called rich farmers. These were farmers who were brought to the Soviet Union and were expelled to harsh environments with extreme weather and Soviet conditions. After enduring the indignation at the camp, these people were forced to work. Graug is known as one of the main features of the repression of the Soviet government. In this article I will explain the activities of the Graz Camp in the Joseph Stalin period from 1932 to 1942.