ANDERS COLLECTION
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP81-00706R000100230029-5
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
C
Document Page Count:
24
Document Creation Date:
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date:
December 11, 2013
Sequence Number:
29
Case Number:
Content Type:
REPORT
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP81-00706R000100230029-5.pdf | 1.34 MB |
Body:
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1.1001. LIBRARY COLLFCTICVS OF PCLISF: 4110fE1TAL
Anders Collection
1. Cataloged material
The cataloged texts of the collection consist of two basis
categories: statements and reports (Exhibit A). Statements are per-
sonal narratives, accounts, and memoranda written according to the
individual judgment of their authors; reports constitute replies to
a number of various questionnaires (Exhibits B, C; Dv and E), the
majority of which aim at the gathering of documentary proof on the
behavior of the Red Palny and the NKVD in Eastern Poland; on depor-
tation of Polish citizens; on conditions of life in prisons, forced
labor carps, POW camps, and places of deportation; on the treatment
in courts of alleged offenders against Scviet laws, attitude of
Soviet authorities toward religion, the behavior of the Soviet pop-
ulation toward the deportees, and a number of other questions. Some
questions were dictated by considerations of Polish security, for
example, those concerning the behavior of Polish citizens while in
Soviet captivity.
Quite naturally, considering the sufferings, wrongs, and
privations inflicted by Soviet authorities upon all authors of the,
texts, considerable space in statements and reports alike 13 de-
voted to the description of personal experiences and complaints.
All the prisoners and deportees were acquainted with the blackest
side of the Soviet life, and the picture presented by them is there-
fore almost invariably a gloomy one.
The intellectual and educational level of the authors is
extremely uneven. Most of them were private soldiers and noncommis-
sioned officers of the Polish Army; lower-bracket employees of the
state, communal, and rural administrations; forest and frontier
guards; small-farm holders; land laborers; small merchants; and
artisans. Some were former owners of landed estates, teachers,
civic leaders, university professors, students, and priests. Dis-
proportionately few were army officers.
The overwhelming majority of all these people were forced
to work. Many were employed in forestry and agriculture; a much
smaller percentage worked attaining, railroad or highway construction;
and a still smaller group was employed in industry.
These two factors--limitations of the observers themselves,
and limitations upon their opportunities for observing things of
strategic importance--combine to restrict the immediate worth of the
statements and reports. nth the exception of probably not more than
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several hundred cases, all information of practical value contained
in the texts has been included unconsciously, and could only be
combed out by careful study.
A typical example in Report No. 653, in which information
of apparent importance is given quite casually, without any elabora-
tion, while the thousandfold reported routine of camp life is described
in detail.
The cataloged collection contains 61,968 pages, of which about
20,000 pages are statements, and about 42,000 pages are reports. Roughly
10 to 12 per cent of the texts are written with pencil, slightly more
than 1 per cent are typewritten; the rest written in longhand, in ink,
on an indescribable variety of paper.
From the necessarily superficial perusal of all the material,
it is estimated that, after careful combing, fragments of useful in-
formation maybe obtained on the following areas; Vorkuta, Ukhta-Chiblyu?
the Kotlas-Ukhta-Vorkuta Railroad line, the Kandalaksha and Parley areas
on the Kola Peninsula, Naryan-Mar (Pechora) Harbor, the Norilsk4Oudinka
area on the lower lenisey, Nakhodka, Magadan, various gold mines in the
Kelyma River valley, Tashkent, and others.
The words "fragments of information" are used intentionally.
The situation in which the deportees and forced laborers found them-
selves made any systematic observation of their surroundings most dif-
ficult, even for those among them who might have had an understanding
of the advisability of looking around and seeing a little more than
their guards wanted them to. They always traveled in closed freight
and prison cars, were confined to a camp or working areas and had to
concentrate on how to survive under the most difficult living condi-
tions. They had no maps and could not make any notes. The only period
of freedom of movement was the time of their journey to join the Polish
Army in the fall and minter of 1941-42. They could hardly get the
proper spelling of the names of places whore they were confined. In
some of the reports and statements, even quite well known geographic
names are distorted or misspelled, and geographic directions and names
of oblaati are often wrongly indicated (for example, Northeastern
European Russia is, in a few statements, described as Siberia). Al-
lowance has to be made for this involuntary inexactitude, atich in
almost every case may be corrected by comparing a given text with
others describing the same area, camp, or enterprise.
The subject catalog (Exhibit F), although it organizes the
material quite well, is not complete; it does not have separate cate-
gories, for instance, for airfields and mines. The description of the
construction of the Pancyairfield on the Kola peninsula--reportedly
referred to in statements and reports throughout the whole collection,
because of the thousands of Poles employed on this project--is not
even indirectly mentioned in the subject catalog, nor in category 95a:
"Transport a-id Communication". The same is true of two airfields in
C ONFIDENTIAL
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40 GLINYIU6PITIAL 411
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the Magadan area, and of the naval air station in Dudinka (Yenisey
Estuary). Thus, to be quite sure that no information of any impor-
tance is overlooked, one should not rely on the catalog. Each of
the 61,968 pages of the statements and reports should be scanned to
find those containing interesting material.
After a few days of practice, the reading of sometimes
quite unintelligible texts does not present any major difficulty,
since a great number of them are repetitious. It is estimated that,
on the average, one minute per page would suffice to find out whether
a given text contained any practical information. This would mean
1,036 hours of actual work if one person were called upon to do the
job, and probably no more than one-third of this time if a team of
two workers, both knowing Polish, were assigned to do it. In other
words, two workers would need about 45 actual working days to screen
the collection.
In my judgment, after the screening was completed, not less
than 5 per cent but probably not more than 10 per cent of reports and
statements mould be found to contain useful information. Should this
assumption be correct, from 3,100 to 6,200 microfilm frames would have
to be made (or half of that with two pages to a frame) if it is decided
to microfilm the material for processing by the Air Information Section.
From my awn experience, I know that the Stanford University photo-re-
production unit is equipped to handle 250 single-sheet frames per hour.
The collection as a whole is an unrivaled primary source of
information on the life in the Soviet Union in the crucial time of
Russia's cooperation with Nazi Germany and during the initial years of
the Russian-German war. Never since the early twenties has such a large
body of men left the Soviet Union. Personally, at least, I do not know
of any other collection of material on Soviet Russia written by tens of
thousands of men, women, and even children, of all walks of life, on the
basis of personal experience.
For a histerian, a sociologist, or a student of the Soviet
economic and political system daring the war, this material is of inesti-
mable value, since it gives a realistic behind-the-scenes picture of the
epoch probably most misrepresented by the Soviet ,and pro-Soviet wartime
propaganda everywhere. However, I wish to AVoid any overestimation of
the practical usefulness of the whole collection for the Air Information
Section's Abstracting Unit, and I would like to stress that about 50,000
pages may be found to contain no information whatever.
2. Uncataloged material
Besides the cataloged material, the collection also includes
10 boxes of various typewritten texts, with the following content:
No. of box Number of items Pages
109 40 2,544
110 138 2,332
111 63 2,564
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(contld.) No. of box
Number of items Pages
112 854 2,603
113 738 2,443
114 361
14-;63-9
Missing and dead persons cards:
No. of box
Number of items
Pages
115
4,000
- 4,400
116
2,800
3,200
117
2,800
3,100
118
3,100
3,600
119
1,055
1,055
Apart from the card index of missing and dead persons, this
part of the collection is thus composed of 14,639 typewritten pages,
mostly of large (commercial) size.
This material was perused by me in an even more superficial
manner than the cataloged part. The texts are: copies of and excerpts
from some of the reports and statements from the cataloged original
texts; copies of correspondence of the Bureau of Documents of the
Second Polish Army Corps, most of them of confidential netre; and
copies of correspondence of the Historical Bureau of the Corps.
Al]. the texts, although of diversified character and content,
are kept in good order. On top of the papers in each box:there is a
detailed list of documents with their numbers, dates, and a short de-
scription of content, all neatly typewritten, so that there should be
no difficulty in going through this material and earmarking anything
of interest.
Some of the typewritten excerpts are from original manuscripts
in the cataloged part, but the originals of other excerpts are not cata-
loged and apparently not available. As one example I wish to mention a
typewritten statement of 86 typed pages, found in box No. 114: besides
an interesting personal narrative, it gives quite a detailed description
of the Ukhta (Komi ASSR) crude oil mines and a fairly exact description
of a few towns in this slave republic visited by the author while in
captivity and during his journey to the Polish army. In the same box I
also found a copy of a secret circular of the Second Corps Command with
a very detailed questionnaire on goldmining in the USSR, obviously
written by a specialist or a group of specialists in this field. As
with subjects of similar or greater importance, a follow-up correspond-
ence with the former command of the Second Corps might be advisable,
since no replies to this questionnaire seem to be included in the col-
lection deposited at the Hoover Library.
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Some of the papers in this part of the collection are of a
confidential character, reflecting as they do personal antagonisms or
misunderstandings within the offices of the Second Polish Army Corps,
in charge of assembling and classifying documentary materials.
Embassy Collection
This collection is uncataloged; because of the haste with which
it was sent to the Hoover Library in 1945, not even a general inventory
was made. The only restriction on its use by United States Government
agencies is the reservation as to the secrecy of names of people concerned.
With Mr. W. Smorakowski, Curator of the Polish collection at the
Hoover Library, I grouped the material of this collection and arranged it
in five filing cabinets as follows:
1. Administrative matters 3 drawers
(financial, passport and visa cases, Personal documents,
lists and card indexes of deceased Polish citizens)
2. Social welfare 2 drawers
(organization of relief for Polish deportees, circulars
and regulations, correspondence with Embassy's delegates,
relief institutions, orphan service)
Political matters 2 drawers
(Notes exchanged with the Nerkomindiel, memoranda from
oral negotiations)
4.
Radio and Press
1 drawer
5.
Various
1 drawer
6.
Deportees
2 drawers
(general matters, interventions in their behalf, complainte,
situation of Pclish citizens in various parts of the USSR)
7. Delegates of the Embassy for Relief and
Legal Protection 3 drawers
(Out of 19 offices of delegates only part of the documents
from the following are available, the rest having been
seized by the NKVD:
Krasnoyarsk
Vladivestok
Vologda
Arkhangelsk-Murmansk
Dzhambul
Samarkand '
'Alma?Ata (Passport applications only)
Ashkhabad (lists of group passports issued)
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8. Lielidation of Polish relief offices
and arrests of their staff 1 drawer
9. Memoranda and reports 3 drawers
The size of the collection may be very approximately estimated
at 60,000 to 80,000 pages, of which only 3,000 to 5,000 are handwritten,
the rest typed.
The archives of some of the Delegates, offices, especially
those of Kraanoyarsk and Vladivostok, are fairly complete, and they
almost invariably contain the same kind of documentaticn: innumerable
complaints from Polish citizens pertaining to failure to grant atm-testy,
forcible issuance of Soviet passports, failure to provide the deportees
with barest necessities of life, arrests, unjust treatment in courts,
exploitation at the place of work, etc.
The papers listed under points 6, 7, 8, and particularly 9
eta= definitely may contain some information within the scope of work
of the Abstracting Unit.
The
1. Conditions of life of Polish
Kazakhstan (70 pages)
memoranda worth mentioning are the following:
2. Conditions of life of Polish
(29 pages)
3. Conditions of life of Polish
European Russia (50 pages)
4. Poles in Russia (about 400 pages)
5.
6. Reports on the activities of relief transports
department of the Embassy (3 volumes)
7. Numerous reports on Social Welfare Activities
8. Religion in the USSR
9. Deportations from Poland according to administrative
districts
citizens deported to
citizens in the Urals
citizens in Northern
Help for Polish Jews in the USSR
10. Materials concerning the formation of Berling's
(pro-Soviet) Polish army in the USSR, and many others.
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III
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The 3,000 to 5,000 handwritten texts previously mentioned
are similar to the Niteteraents" cataloged by the Second Army Corps.
I spent only two days on arranging the collection Et and' so was not
able to peruse separate texts, but I feel they might well be eoreened
for potentially interesting information.
In closing, I wish to express a special gratitude to Mr.
Sworakowski for the great help he extended to me in every phase of
my work, not only during his working days but also on Saturdays and
during several evenings.
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? ?CONFIDENTIAL
Statements and Reports Containing Valuable Information
Statements
No.
3677 Vorkuta, Coal Mine No. 8 produced coal in Jar-September
1941.
3678 Kolyma region, gold mine Duskania; also production of
Iceland Moss blocks for building purposes.
4703 Chiblyu-Krutaya, Komi ASSR, clearing of woods for a gas
pipe-line.
4391 Building of a road 7 kilometers from Nakhodkal Primorksiy
Kray, RSFSR.
9186 Boltshaya ruts, Vorkuta region coal mine in operation in
summer of 1941.
9474 Kola Peninsula, Murmansk o., mentioned building of the
Fancy Airfield in summer of 1941.
14463 A text of 26 typewritten pages; contains abuit 2 pages
of description of the Norilsk heavy industry center.
15581 Memoirs, 537 typewritten pages long; seem to contain only
one concrete bit of information concerning the building
of a highway from Makhodka presumably4-,o Vladivostok.
Report No.
66
Construction of the Fancy Axfield,
114 Construction of the Fancy Pirfield,
530 In October 1940, the writer passed through Kotlas to a
camp of the "1-go modnego prsemyslu" (First water industry),
rhere he worked on the constriction of a brick factory of
this industry; large, clean, warm barracks in a mountainous
wooded area; one day off each month; fairly good medical
care; fcod inadequate but mortality exceptionally law;
until the writer left the camp on August 28, 1941, out of
650 Pcles kept in the camp only 20 died.
648 Elatoust, Estonian FLC (10000 Estonians, only 2 Poles).
650 Constriction of the Panay Airfield.
C ONFIDENTIAL
EXHIBIT A
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Renorts No.;
651 Unloading of ocean vessels at Naryan-Mar (Pechora).
652 Bollshaya !uta, VOrkuta region, rend building.
653 Ukhta, Komi ASSR; Cardiola? K011 ASSR; PLC of the "Rad-
Promysl? Point 10".
1743 Pancy Airfield and roads at the Pancy River mouth.
1745 Pancy Airfield arid roads at the Pancy River mouth.
3532 Construction of an airfield in the Vorkuta region in
July-September, 1941 (careful study of the context
should yield approximate location).
? 3743 Gold mine "Stakhanovets" in the Kolyma region employed
3,000 forced laborers in winter of 1941-42.
, 5898 Fancy Airfield.
5900 Gold mine "Mayukayu Zolota" in the Barnaul district,
Pavlodar 0.2 Kazakhskaya SSR, employed over 1,000
laborers in 1940 and 1941.
6553 Pancy Airfield; names of merchant ships used for the
transportation of prisoners employed there.
7486 A railroad line across the Northern Urals, Siberia to
Chukotka? presumably under ccnstruction in 1941.
8921 Building of a section of the asphalt highway from Lvov
to Kiev (the Oshkidovo-Olesko-Podghoshe sector), summer
1941.
10961 Pancy Airfield; S/SKLara Taetkin brings in prisoners;
construction of the road from Fancy to Kandalaksha.
10775 Clearing the mods for the brickworks near Ukhta (Camp
No. 15).
11080 Pancy Airfield, anti-aircraft gun emplacements under
construction, summer 1941.
12707 Description of the Norilsk-Dudinka mining and industrial
area; construction of the "Borishoy Metallurgiche.skir
Zavod"; Valok Airfield, 15 kilometers north of Norilsk.
12711 Aircraft engine and airplane factory, Beztmyanka,
Kuybyshev o.
CONFIDENTIAL EXHIBIT A
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40 ut.,Brlyzpillal,
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Reports No.
12712 Building of an airfield at Abez, near the Vorkuta-Koshva
Railroad line.
12715 Gold, platinum, and silver mine at Dzhetygara, Kustansy 0.,
Kazakhskaya SSR.
12718 Valls and derricks for the pumping of radioactive meter,
Ukhtal Komi ASSR, (fairly exact location).
12720 Natural gas fields, Krutaya, Ukhta rayon, Komi ASSR.
12723 Crude oil mine; Chiblyu rayon, Komi ASSR.
12724 Kotlas-Ukhta-Vorkuta Railroad line, buildim and exploitation.
12727 Construction of the Arkhangelsk-Koida Railroad line.
12739 Construction of the Kotlas-Koshva-Vorkuta Railroad line;
technical description of the line, roadbed, rails, ties,
bridges.
/2742 Construction of the Vologda-Kargopol-Arkhangalsk railroad
line.
12743 Abez-Vbrkuta Railroad line.
12744 Bureysk (?) railroad junction, Asur oblast, Khabarovskiy Kray.
12745 Kozhve-Abez railroad line.
12747 Kotlas-Vorkuta Railroad line (Ukhta-Ust Ukhta sector).
12749 Leveling of the ground for an airfield near the Sosnovets
Railroad Station on the Leningrad-Murmansk Railroad line;
information on food shortages and working conditions at
the Wiebni4y Tagil 'Aorks.
12750 Monchegorak, Murmansk o.; nickel, cobalt, and load mines.
12754 Galitovo, Orak rayon, Bashkirskaya ASSR, cobalt mine,
127% Building of the Tashkent-Chirchik Railroad.
12575 Taishet, Irkutskaya o., electrification of railroads.
12777 Description of the Norilsk-Dudinka reiion (obvious mistakes).
12780 Vorkuta coal fields in 1941 and 1942.
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1
CONFID.ENTIAL
Questionnaire
1. Personal data
2. Data and description of the arrest
3. Place of deportation
Ls. CompcsiVon of prisoners
S. Life in prison
6. Attitude of Soviet authorities toward Poland
7. Medical care
8. Health and sanitary conditions
9. Contact with Poland and foreign countries
10. Release
11. Elections in 1940
EXHIBIT B
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Questionnaire
1. Name of the camp
2. Composition of the POW (Soldiers, 110,081. Officers)
3. Number of POW
4. The time of the existence of the camp
S. Description of the camp
6. Life in the camp
a) its organization
b) work at the camp
c) forced labor outside the camp area
7. Attitude of the NKVD toward the POW
8. POW who distinguished themselves by their good Or bad behavior
96 Deceased at the camp
10. Remarks
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Exhibit C
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Personal Card Index: Entries
1. Second and first name
2. Date of birth .
3. Nationality
I. Religion
5. Profession
6. Place of permanent residence in Poland
7. Place of last residence in Poland
a) before deprivation of liberty
b) after
8. Reasons for leaving Poland
9. Date of deprivation of liberty
ID. Date of departare from Poland
11. Places of residence in the USSR prior to the amnesty
a) POW camps
b) prisoners
c) FL camps
d) oposyolkicr
e) other places
12. Date of liberation
13. Residence in the USSR after amnesty
14. Work in the USSR
a) in POW camps
b) FL camps
c) oposyolkio
d) other places
15. Members of your family dopcted with you:
parents, children:, brothers, sisters, Other relatives
16. Members of your family in the USSR
a) living
b) dead
Exhibit D
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? CONFIDENTIAL 411
Questionnaire
1. Name, age, and education.
2. Last employment in POland? prior to September 1, 1939.
3. Etployment in the USSR (or in Eastern Poland under the Soviet occupation).
4. Earnings in Poland and in the USSR: their purchasing power.
5. Supported members of your family or relatives cared for by you and their
standard of living in Poland aid in the USSR.
6. Were your wages (salaries) paid regularly and computed honestly in Poland
and in the USSR?
7. What was the required norm (output) of your work in Poland and in the USSR?
8. Were you a Stakhanovite or an fludarnik8?
) 9. How many hours did you work in Poland and in the USSR and how much leisure
did you possess?
) 10. What were hygienic conditions aid safety regulations at your place of work in
Poland and in the USSR?
11. Were you insured:
a) against accidents
b) sickness
c) unemployment in Poland and in the USSR?
12. Were you ever dismissed from your work? Did you receive severance pay and the paid
vacation due you prior to the date of your dismissal, in Poland and -in the USSR?
?
)13. What was the labor code and what penalties were payable by workers at the place
of your employment in Poland and in the USSR?
514. Were you exploited by your employer in Polantin the USSR?
15. Were you a member of a labor union or of a professional organization, and what
kind of help or assistance were you entitled to on the basis of such membership,
in Poland and in the USSR?
16. Were you free to Choose the kind of work you felt best suited for and were you
permitted to change your place and kind of employment in Poland and in the USSR?
17. What were the reciprocal employer-employee relations at your place of work in
Poland and in the USSR?
18. Was your work well and purposefully organized in Poland and in the USSR?
19. What modern tools and installations did you see in the USSR, intended to:
a) facilitate worker's effort
b) improve the quality of manufacturers or to lower their cost?
20. Your awn remarks not covered by the above mentioned questions.
fl ny T llt T A T EXHIBIT E
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? CONFIDENTIAL ?
SUBJECT CATALOGUE
'Section 1
OCCUPATION OF EASTERN POLAND BY THE HU) ARMY
U. INVASION OF THE TERRITORY OF POLAND BY THE RED ARMY
a) fighting between the Poliih and the Soviet amy units.
b) liquidation of the Polish army units and of military hospitals.
c) reports on advance of the Soviet troops and on their outward appearance0
d) acts of violence and murders committed by Soviet troops.
e) acts of violence and murders supported by Soviet troops.
f) Soviet propaganda appeals to the local population and political pro-
paganda conducted by Soviet soldiers.
g) various incidents with, and attitude of, Soviet troops (not covered
by the above-mentioned categories).
12. LIQUIDATION OF THE POLISH STATE ORGANS AND OF THE STATE AND PUBLIC
PROPERTY
a) organs of state administration
b) courts of law
c) local self-government bodies (municipal, communal, rural)
d) local economic and professional self-governing bodies.
at ORGANIZATION OF SOVIET OCCJPATION AUTHORITIES
IT-Soviet organs in the villages
b) Soviet organs in towns
c) Militia and the EKVD
d) co-workers of the NKVD
14. REOR(ANIZATION OF THE SCHOOL SYSTEM
a) schools of higher education
tO secondary schools
c) primary schools
d) school and education authorities
15. REORGANIZATION OF POLISH STATE ENTERPRISES
a) railroads
b, postal service
c) forestry administration
d) state monopolies (tobacco, liquor, matches)
e) various enterprises (not covered by the above-mentioned categories)
16. LIQUIDATION AND LOOTING OF PRIVATE PRDPTRTY
a) banks and credit institutions
b) commercial, industrial and transportation enterprises
c) landed estates
d) peasant farms
e) apartment houses sad private holies
F
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11, CONFIDENTIAL 111
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3.7, ADMINISTRATIVE Acrs OF SOVIET AUTHORITIES
iYpublic safety regulations
b) issuance of Soviet passports
18. REGISTRATION OF REFUGEES FROM THE PART OF POLAND OCCUPIED BY GERM=
19. ELECTIONS TO THE SO-CALLED "PEOPLE'S ASSEMBLIES', OF THE WESTERN WHITE-
RUTHENIA AND THE WESTERN UKRAINE
a) pre-election campaign
b) candidates for deputies to the assemblies
c) voting
d) counting of ballots
110. ELECTIONS TO THE LITHUANIAN DIET PARLIMENT)
111. ELECTIONS TO THE SOVIET STATE ORGANS IN 1940
112. ATTITUDE OF SOVIET AUTHORITIES TOWARD RELIGION AND TOWARD REPRESENTATIVES
OF VARTOUS DENOMINATIONS
a) Roman-Catholic
b) Orthodox Church
c) Other Christian denominations (not included in the above-mentioned
categories)
d) Jewish
e) Other none-Christian and non-Jewish religious groups
113. ATTITUDE OF SOVIET OCCUPATION AUTHORITIES TOWARD POLISH POPULATION
a persecution and harassing of people
le) abuses during house searches
c) propaganda
d) arrests
e) treatment of those arrested prior to their deportation to Russia
f) various incidents and individual cases (not covered by the above-
mentioned categories)
114. ATTITUDE OF SOVIET AUTHORITIES TOWARD NkTIONAL MINORITIES
-9 Ukrainians
b White-Ru thenians
c) Lithuanians
d) Jews
e) various groups (not covered by the above-mentioned categories)
1311 CONDITIONS OF LIFE UNDER THE SOVIET OCCUPATION
a employment and wages
b) prices of consumer goods
c) unemployment
d) recruiting of workers for work in the USSR
e) introduction of the Soviet currency
f) taxes
g) housing conditions
h) shortcomings in distribution (shortages of necessities, queues)
I) hygiene and health service
j) cultural life
k) anacdotes and jokes
CONFIDENTIAL EXHIBIT F
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w.-fliv,!IZATICS TMUTIORY CF TFZ, U:MT CCCUPATION
117. ATTIT:.;DE AND IEFAVI(.;R CF TBE LOCAL POPUATION
a positive attitudes
b) negative attitudes
c) various (not covered by the abpve-montIoned cate,7:ries
110
o
7LCAP7:;S NiRCA.D f',!,f) T0 TM (2:i.f,f,1!?r-r:ull1 PART CP PtA.AD
Section 2
piss(:':-.); OF ;;:-AR
2'
TRAI:Ci7.'OTITS CAP7-7117D TRcPS
22. CONDITI.PS OF LIF Ir; TM
a on thc Sovit-hcid territory of Poland
b) in the U5".-jR
23. LARCR. CP TITE
a buildim, of rods 2nd canals
b) riir15:0 and quarries
c) exploitation of forests
d) various occupations (not covered b.,y thc above-mentiened catcwories)
NORI.;'.6 C (jj} AJ FOOD RATICS IN TM 5CVIn POW. CAUS.
25. ELIALTE C(:NDITIC;1:6 MU cirALrTymTP -SCITET? CAT,T3
26. ATTIT-ti-DF, OF SO-VL;T. AiTIV.EaTi!-.;3 TC.ARD 'VS POW
27. COnK3ITIELL8E,L111.. STHIMTLM) OF TYE PC ill IF, TEE CAYTP
28. PF..iONAL DATA (..-% r: SCVIEZ CAPTIVITY
a-rcTe7FeIg-e:d in the camps
b) deceased during transportation
c) various porc;onal data on
29. pu:
aYfro: the camps at 1ozie1sk0 Starobielsk and (.fst:,?3shkov
b) from other camps
210.
211.
212.
2130
BEPAITICR CF CAPTLfRii'M BY SOVIET TRCCTS
CONTACT CF PC-A' ?:;ITP TEI :0TE''.73I,AND
C'?ILT,':RAL AND Pr:Idr3n.,,!s LrF,,L ITF
ESCAP.:3 TRAI",':SPORT3 AND K CATS
NFIDTIAL
EXPJBlr F
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19.9.:...49.33./
INTERNEES
31. CONDITIONS OF LIFE iN THE INTERNMENT CAMPS
a) in Lithuania and Latvia
b) in the USSR
c) others
32. TRANSPORTS OF INTERNEES FROM THE BALTIC COUNTRIES 10 THE USSR
MR= LABOR OF INTERNEES
At ATTITUDE OF AUTHORITIES TOWARD THE INTERNEES
a 17-711.1rtiroarendTh?ENIT--
b) in the USSR
lit COMPOSITION (SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF THE INTERNEES IN THE SOVIET CA/TS
CONTACTS OF INTERNEES WITH THEIR MOTHERLAND
lit INTERNEES DECEASED IN CAMPS AND DURING TRANSPORTATION
2, BEHAVIOR OF INTERNEES
121 CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS LIFE OF INTERNEES
9. ESCAPES OF INTRNEES FROM TRANSPORTS AND SOVIET INTERNMENT CAMPS
Section
PRISONERS (other than POW and internees?
,
translatoros note)
41. SOVIET PENAL PROCEDURE
al reasons for arrests
b) tortures (personal experiences of)
c) various methods of interrogatiDg prisoners not covered by the
above mentioned categories)
d) reports on tortures of coinmntes
e) court trials and sentences
f) sentences in absentia (Osoboye Soveshehaniye NKVD)
g) death sentences and executions
42. CONDITIONS OF LIFE IN PRISONS
a pr-T?T?.sonta. for men in the Soviet-occupied part of Poland
b) women Ti IT IT It If
C) men in the USSR
d) ft tt women " ii Ti
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ATTITUDE OF SOVIET AUTHORITIES TOWARD PRISONERS
TRAPSPORTATION OF PRISONERS
lbe?*r?stweenva-Fi;33Eigrs or to Forced Labor Camps
b) inside the FLC
Jj EVACUATION OF PRISONS FROM THE -SOVIET-OCCUPIED PART OF POLAND IN JUNE 1
(after the German attack on Russia -- tran4i-Aorts note
46. ORGANIZATION OF FORCED LABOR CAMPS IN THE USSR
47. CONDITIONS OF LIFE IN THE SOVIET FLC
-E) building of roads and canals
b) mines and quarries
c) timber camps ? .
d) various occupations (not covered by the above-mentioned categories)
e) description of FLCs and general conditions of life in them
/it NORMS OF WORK AND FCOD RATIONS IN THE SOVIET FLCs.
121 HEALTH CONDITIONS AND MORTALITY
a) in prisons
b) in FLCs
CARE FOR MOTHER AND INFANT
a) in prisons
b) in FLCs
411. CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS LIFE
a) in prisons
b) in FLCs
412, COMPOSITION SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF PRISONERS),
a in the Soviet-occupied part of Poland
b) in prisons on the territory of the USSR
c) in Soviet FLCs
lilt MOST PRDMINENT SOVIET PRISCNERS
414. FOREIGN PRISONERS IN THE USSR (other than Polish citizens--translators note)
415. ORDINARY SOVIET CRIMINALS
416. MINOR (CHILD) PRISONERS IN THE USSR
417. POLISH CITIZENS ARRESTED BY SOVIET OCCUPATION AUTHORITIES
3) deceased during transportation
b) " in prisons and FLCs
c) held in prisons and FLCs despite the amnesty
CONFIDENTIAL EXHIBIT F
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d) various personal data(not covered by the above-mentioned categories;
lists of names etc.)
?lg. BEHAVIOR OF PRISONERS, POLISH CITIZENS
17) in Soviet prisons
b) in Soviet FLes
.4221 ATTITUDE OF SOVIET PRISONERS TOWARD THE POLISH CITIZENS
420. ESCAPES OF PRISONERS FROM PRISONS AND FLCs
421. CONTACTS OF PRISONERS POLISH CITIZENS WITH THEIR MOTHERLAND
Soetion
DEPORTEES
Si. TRANSPORTS CF DEPORTEES FROM EASTERN POLAND TO SOVIET RUSSIA
a 10 February 19 0
b) 13 April 1940
c) June-July 1940
d). June 1941
e) at other times (not covered by the above-mentioned categories)
f) resettlement of deportees between various places in the USSR
54.
LOCATIONS OF SETTLEMENTS OF DEPORTEES IN THE USSR AND THEIR EMPLOYMENT
at
CONDITIONS CF LIFE OF DEPORTEES FROM EASTERN POLAND IN THE USSR
a in agricultural settlements
b) in forest
c) in industrial "
'd) At road and canal construction projects
e) in mines and quarries
11 in building projects
g) in tams
h) general descriptions of places of deportation
NORMS OF WORK AND FOOD RATIONS OF THE DEPORTEES
55. RESTRICTIONS OF FREEDOM OF MOVEZENT OF THE DEPORTEES
ISSUE OF SOVIET PASSPORTS TO THE DEPORTEES
56.
57.
58.
ATTITUDE OF SOVIET AUTHORITIES TOWARD THE DEPORTEES
HEALTH CONDITIONS IN SETTLEMENTS OF THE DEPORTEES
a .seases, ep emics an morrla. y
b) medical care, dispensaries, hospitals
511 CARE FOR MOTHER AND INFANT IN THE SETTLEMENTS OF THE DEPORTEES
? CONFIDENTIAL EXHIBIT F
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9, WORK OF EASTERN POLAND IN SOVIET RUSSIA
DEPORTEES UNFIT FOR WORK
CHILDREN OF DEPORTEES FROM EAST RN POLAND IN SOVIET RUSSIA
.g.2*
SOVIET KINDERGARTENS AND SCHOOLS
CULTURAL. LIFE OF DEPORTEES
. RELATIONS BETWEEN THE DEPORTEES AND THE LOCAL POPULATION
RELIGIOUS LIFE OF THE DEPORTEES
.141. COMPOSITION (SOCIAL S DEPORTEES
EPORTEES
.g.?. POLISH CITIZENS DEPORTED TO SOVIET RUSSIA
a deceased during transportation
b) it in exile
e) held in places of settlement despite the amnesty
d) various personal data (not covered by the above-mentioned categories;
list of nanes, statistics)
.512. . ESCAPES OF DEPORTEES
ILL BEHAVIOR OF DEPORTEES IN SOVIET RUSSIA
CONTACTS OF DEPORTEES WITH THEIR /LOTHERLAND
Section 6
CONSCRIPTS INTO THE RED Aaa
61.
62.
63.
K.)BILIZATION ORDE-,,S OF SOVIET OCCUPATION AUTHORITIES IN EASTrAN INDLAW
CONDITIONS OF LIFE IN THE RED ARMY AND ITS AUXILIARY UNITS
STROYBATALYONY (Stroitelnve Batalony) CONSTRUCTION BATTALIONS
POLISH CITIZENS CONSCRIPTED INTO THE RED ARMY
a) deceased in the Red Army units
b) held in the Red Army and Stroybatalyony despite the amnesty
c) various personal data (not covered by the above-mentioned categories)
65. BEHAVIOR OF POLISH CITIZENS CONSCRIPTED INTO THE RD) ARIy
66. ESCAPES OF PCLISH CITIZENS FROM THE RED AMY
Section 7
RECRUITED FOR 1ORK IN THE USSR
71. CONDITIONS OF LIFE OF POLISH CITIZENS RECRUITED FOR TCRK IN THE USSR
CONFIDENTIAL
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72. RELATIONS BF,1INEE/1 THE POLISH CITIZENS RECRUITED FOR WORK IN THE USSR
AND THE LOCAL POPULATION ?
al RELATIONS HET'LfEEN THE POLISH CITI'iENS RECRUITED FOR WORK IN TEE U3SR
MID SOVIET AUTHORITIES
Lt. ATTITUDE AND BEHAVIOR OF POLISH CITIZENS RECRUITED FOR rfORK IN THE USSR
Section 8 ?
AMNESTY
81. TRANSPORTS OF AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
a) en route
b) settlement and employment
82. CONDITIONS OF LirF, OF AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
-ann villages
b) in industrial settlements
c) in towns
d) in various places (not covered by the above mentioned categories)
mats CFIVORK AND WAGES OF THE AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
1.3.4..t HEALTH (XNDITIONS OF THE AM:ESTI:0 POLISH CITIZENS
a) diseases, epidemics and mortality
b) medical care
.c) dispensaries and hospitals
85. CULTURAL LIFE OF THE AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
86* RELIGIOUS LIFE OF THE AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
87. RELATIONS OF THE AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS WITH THE LOCAL SOVIET POPULATION
88. ATTITUDE CF SOVIET AUTHORITIES TOWARD THE AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
a) issue of discharge certificates
b) pressure to accept Soviet citizenship or to join the Red Army
c) prohibition to settle in cities and to leave the places of residence
d) various administrative regulations (not covered by the above-dtentioned
categories
e) various aspects of attitude of Soviet authorities toward the amnestied
Polish citizens (not covered by the above-mentioned categories)
89. RECRUITING IN THE POLISH AMY IN THE USSR: CONSCRIPTION INTO THE
ilEittahb IS ARM
810. ACTIVITIES OF POLISH OFFICIALS IN THE USSR
811. AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
a) deceased after the amnesty
b) rearrested after the amnesty
c) remained in the USSR
d) various personal data (not covered by the above-named categories)
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812. BEHAVIOR OF THE AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
.81.24 COMPOSITION 1SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF THE AMNESTIED POLISH CITIZENS
Section 9
U. s. s. R.
.21,1 RELIGION IN THE USSR
Az EDUCATION MID CULTURE IN THE USSR
22, PROPAGANDA IN THE USSR
2.L. ATTITUDE AND BEHAVIOR OF THE SOVIET POPULATION
25.1 ORGANIZATIDN OF THE ECONOMIC LIFE IN THE USSR
commercea) industry and
b) transport and communication
c) agriculture
HEALTH OONDTTIONS AND MORTALITY IN THE USSR
at, NATIONAL mrnicarrns IN THE USSR
b) Slavic (other than Polish)
c) Jewish
d) other (not covered by the above-mentioned categories)
it.. SOVIET CITIZENS
a) Kolkhoz man
b) land laborer
c) worker and employee in industrial enterprises, commercian and
transportation organizations
d) worid.ng intelligentsia (professionals)
e) Soviet woman
f) Soviet child
g) Soviet deportee ("Spetspereselentsy"-"specia), settlers")
h) old people and invalids
221 THE SOVIET ARMY
sao. COMMUNIST PARTY IN THE USSR
511. SO VET TRADE UNIONS
21.2., THE NKVD AND ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE
913. CLIMATE AND NATURAL CONDITIONS OF THE USSR
2. VARIOUS GEOGRAPHIC DATA ON THE USSR
CONFIDENTIAL
EXHIBIT F
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915. ATTITUDE OF SOVIET CITIZENS TOWARD FOREIGN COUNTRIES
216,11 PROTECTION OF LABOR AND SOCIAL SECURITY
.212.1 NORMS OF WORK AND WAGES
Alit TAXES AND PUBLIC DUTIES
Section 10
THE POLISH ARMY IN EXILE
101. RECRUITMENT AND VOLUNTARY ENLISTMENT
a) deserters from the German Army
b) POW
c) deported laborers
d) partisans, maquis, Polish home army (Armya Krayova ? AK)
e) other categories
102. ASSISTANCE AND OBSTACLES CF VARIOUS AUTHORITIES
1, British
b) Amerien
c) French
d) Soviet
19.2i BERLINGIS ARMY
a) mobilization of Poles in
b) Polish units in the USSR
o) Food and uniforms
d) its participation in the
(offensive on Warsaw).
the USSR
their strength aid organization
fighting on the territory of Poland
Not listed in the card index: Conditions under the German occupatiou
EXHIBIT F.
CONFIDETITIAL
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