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  2. Gulag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulag

    18,000,000 people passed through the Gulag's camps [1] [2] [3] 53 Gulag camp directorates (colloquially referred to as simply "camps") and 423 labor colonies in the Soviet Union as of March 1940 [4] The tentative consensus in contemporary Soviet historiography is that roughly 1,600,000 [b] died due to detention in the camps. [1] [2] [3]

  3. GULAG Operation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GULAG_Operation

    The GULAG Operation was a German military operation in which German and Soviet anti-communist troops were to create an anti-Soviet resistance movement in Siberia during World War II by liberating and recruiting prisoners of the Soviet GULAG system.

  4. Vorkutlag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorkutlag

    In the end, they realized that I was not a prisoner of war at all, as they thought, but a "fifty-eight", i.e. a political prisoner. And when I told them about my work in Moscow and the time of terror, the ice was broken. A good camaraderie was created. The work in the shaft was difficult and also very dangerous. You were often underground for ...

  5. Ignored part of Trump's executive order on immigration calls ...

    www.aol.com/article/news/2017/02/07/trump...

    Since taking office, President Trump has signed a flurry of executive orders and the ones related to immigration have been most controversial.

  6. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandr_Solzhenitsyn

    Publishing of Solzhenitsyn's work quickly stopped; as a writer, he became a non-person, and, by 1965, the KGB had seized some of his papers, including the manuscript of In The First Circle. Meanwhile, Solzhenitsyn continued to secretly and feverishly work on the most well-known of his writings, The Gulag Archipelago. The seizing of his novel ...

  7. Gulag: A History - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulag:_A_History

    Gulag: A History, also published as Gulag: A History of the Soviet Camps, is a nonfiction book covering the history of the Soviet Gulag system. It was written by American author Anne Applebaum and published in 2003 by Doubleday. Gulag won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction and the 2004 Duff Cooper Prize.

  8. Americans in the Gulag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americans_in_the_Gulag

    Most of them, together with the local population, were forcibly assigned Soviet citizenship, even the American-born Americans. Attempts to renounce this citizenship or to contact the American embassy were blocked; these people were harassed by the authorities, and those who were most insistent landed in a gulag on trumped-up charges.

  9. No, Mexico did not pledge to stop migrant caravans after ...

    www.aol.com/no-mexico-did-not-pledge-212014796.html

    Trump announced on Nov. 25 a plan to institute a 25% tariff on all goods imported to the U.S. from Mexico and Canada, calling it punishment for illegal immigration and the flow of drugs into the U ...