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Excerpt from "The gulag archipelago", by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. -Part 2
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The traditional image of arrest is also trembling hands packing for the victim
—a change of underwear, a piece of soap, something to eat; and no one knows
what is needed, what is permitted, what clothes are best to wear; and the Security
agents keep interrupting and hurrying you:
“You don’t need anything. They’ll feed you there. It’s warm there.” (It’s all
lies. They keep hurrying you to frighten you.)
The traditional image of arrest is also what happens afterward, when the poor
victim has been taken away. It is an alien, brutal, and crushing force totally
dominating the apartment for hours on end, a breaking, ripping open, pulling
from the walls, emptying things from wardrobes and desks onto the floor,
shaking, dumping out, and ripping apart—piling up mountains of litter on the
floor—and the crunch of things being trampled beneath jackboots. And nothing
is sacred in a search! During the arrest of the locomotive engineer Inoshin, a tiny
coffin stood in his room containing the body of his newly dead child. The
“ jurists ” dumped the child’s body out of the coffin and searched it. They shake
sick people out of their sickbeds, and they unwind bandages to search beneath
them.
For those left behind after the arrest there is the long tail end of a wrecked and
devastated life. And the attempts to go and deliver food parcels. But from all the
windows the answer comes in barking voices: “Nobody here by that name!”
“Never heard of him!” Yes, and in the worst days in Leningrad it took five days
of standing in crowded lines just to get to that window. And it may be only after
half a year or a year that the arrested person responds at all. Or else the answer is
tossed out: “Deprived of the right to correspond.” And that means once and for
all. “No right to correspondence”—and that almost for certain means: “Has been
shot.”
That’s how we picture arrest to ourselves.
The kind of night arrest described is, in fact, a favorite, because it has
important advantages. Everyone living in the apartment is thrown into a state of
terror by the first knock at the door. The arrested person is torn from the warmth
of his bed. He is in a daze, half-asleep, helpless, and his judgment is befogged.
In a night arrest the State Security men have a superiority in numbers; there are
many of them, armed, against one person who hasn’t even finished buttoning his
trousers. During the arrest and search it is highly improbable that a crowd of
potential supporters will gather at the entrance. The unhurried, step-by-step
visits, first to one apartment, then to another, tomorrow to a third and a fourth,
provide an opportunity for the Security operations personnel to be deployed with
the maximum efficiency and to imprison many more citizens of a given town
than the police force itself numbers.
In addition, there’s an advantage to night arrests in that neither the people in
neighboring apartment houses nor those on the city streets can see how many
have been taken away. Arrests which frighten the closest neighbors are no event
at all to those farther away. It’s as if they had not taken place. Along that same
asphalt ribbon on which the Black Marias scurry at night, a tribe of youngsters
strides by day with banners, flowers, and gay, untroubled songs.
But those who take, whose work consists solely of arrests, for whom the
horror is boringly repetitive, have a much broader understanding of how arrests
operate. They operate according to a large body of theory, and innocence must
not lead one to ignore this. The science of arrest is an important segment of the
course on general penology and has been propped up with a substantial body of
—a change of underwear, a piece of soap, something to eat; and no one knows
what is needed, what is permitted, what clothes are best to wear; and the Security
agents keep interrupting and hurrying you:
“You don’t need anything. They’ll feed you there. It’s warm there.” (It’s all
lies. They keep hurrying you to frighten you.)
The traditional image of arrest is also what happens afterward, when the poor
victim has been taken away. It is an alien, brutal, and crushing force totally
dominating the apartment for hours on end, a breaking, ripping open, pulling
from the walls, emptying things from wardrobes and desks onto the floor,
shaking, dumping out, and ripping apart—piling up mountains of litter on the
floor—and the crunch of things being trampled beneath jackboots. And nothing
is sacred in a search! During the arrest of the locomotive engineer Inoshin, a tiny
coffin stood in his room containing the body of his newly dead child. The
“ jurists ” dumped the child’s body out of the coffin and searched it. They shake
sick people out of their sickbeds, and they unwind bandages to search beneath
them.
For those left behind after the arrest there is the long tail end of a wrecked and
devastated life. And the attempts to go and deliver food parcels. But from all the
windows the answer comes in barking voices: “Nobody here by that name!”
“Never heard of him!” Yes, and in the worst days in Leningrad it took five days
of standing in crowded lines just to get to that window. And it may be only after
half a year or a year that the arrested person responds at all. Or else the answer is
tossed out: “Deprived of the right to correspond.” And that means once and for
all. “No right to correspondence”—and that almost for certain means: “Has been
shot.”
That’s how we picture arrest to ourselves.
The kind of night arrest described is, in fact, a favorite, because it has
important advantages. Everyone living in the apartment is thrown into a state of
terror by the first knock at the door. The arrested person is torn from the warmth
of his bed. He is in a daze, half-asleep, helpless, and his judgment is befogged.
In a night arrest the State Security men have a superiority in numbers; there are
many of them, armed, against one person who hasn’t even finished buttoning his
trousers. During the arrest and search it is highly improbable that a crowd of
potential supporters will gather at the entrance. The unhurried, step-by-step
visits, first to one apartment, then to another, tomorrow to a third and a fourth,
provide an opportunity for the Security operations personnel to be deployed with
the maximum efficiency and to imprison many more citizens of a given town
than the police force itself numbers.
In addition, there’s an advantage to night arrests in that neither the people in
neighboring apartment houses nor those on the city streets can see how many
have been taken away. Arrests which frighten the closest neighbors are no event
at all to those farther away. It’s as if they had not taken place. Along that same
asphalt ribbon on which the Black Marias scurry at night, a tribe of youngsters
strides by day with banners, flowers, and gay, untroubled songs.
But those who take, whose work consists solely of arrests, for whom the
horror is boringly repetitive, have a much broader understanding of how arrests
operate. They operate according to a large body of theory, and innocence must
not lead one to ignore this. The science of arrest is an important segment of the
course on general penology and has been propped up with a substantial body of
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