- Vladimir Petrov (author)
Vladimir Nikolayevich Petrov (1915,
Krasnodar oblast ,Russia - 1999) was at various times anacademic ,philatelist ,prison er,forced labor er,political prisoner ,adventurer ,factory worker andsoldier . He was at various times a Russian, American, and man of no country, though he was brought up in theUSSR and died in theUnited States . Most of the information concerning his life originates from his personalmemoirs , entitled "Soviet Gold" and "My Retreat from Russia" and collected in the published work "Escape from the Future".Early life
Petrov was born in Russia in 1915 during the last days of the
Tsar . He studied at a Soviet university in Leningrad where he was arrested on the night ofFebruary 17 ,1935 by theNKVD . He was arrested at age 19 as part of the masspurges which followed in the wake of theassassination ofSergey Kirov . He was imprisoned and tortured for months before being formally charged with a crime.According to his memoirs, the tribunal made clear to him that the reason for his punishment had been a series of letters on matters of stamp-collecting that he had exchanged with American enthusiasts. Due to their association with him, multiple of his colleagues were arrested on similar charges of
counter-revolutionary activity. After a one-part trial in which he was not afforded the use of a lawyer, he was sentenced to six years hard labor in the gold fields of theKolyma . This made him a resident of the so-calledGULAG archipelago.Prison term
During his internment, Petrov's life was one of complex vacillations. He at times had more freedom than many prisoners, having some freedom of movement, sufficient food, medical care, private housing, and female companionship. At times he was one of the worst-treated of all prisoners in the GULAG system, living on a bread
ration of less than half a kilogram per day and working near-naked in sub-zero waters in mines. He constantly lived in hope of having his sentence commuted, and constantly lived in fear of Serpantinnaya, a truck stop north ofMagadan which Petrov charges was used by the Russian police to performsummary execution s.He attempted escape numerous times, some of which attempts were only routed based upon lack of provisions and
protective clothing to combat theRussian Winter . He traded in campvodka and performed electrical repairs for fees and favors. He liaised with the wives of camp leaders. He was forced into acts of violence and became exposed to politicaldissidence . During his term he also discovered the largest evergold nugget in the history of the Kolyma gold fields. He was hurt in a mine explosion and spent some time in hospital.It has been claimed that much of his account bears similarities to the later semi-fictional account of
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn inOne Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich .After prison
Released from prison in the week that Nazi Gerrmany invaded the USSR
World War II , Petrov, made his way across Russia on theTrans-Siberian Railroad . He avoided Sovietmobilization ; as an ex-convict he would have been placed in a mine-clearing battalion. The German front established byOperation Barbarossa passed by his town and thus came under control of theThird Reich . He managed, over two years, to work his way acrossEastern Europe , intoGermany and thenItaly .InNazi Germany, he contacted and played a role in the operations of GeneralVlasov . His memoirs give markedly less information concerning his association with Vlasov than they do about almost all his other associations, even those with minor convicts (see Rumors below).After the war
He finally managed to secure transportation to America, though how this came about is not clarified by his memoirs. Here he became an academic and taught at such schools as
Yale University andThe George Washington University while raising a family. He published the first volume of his memoirs, 'Soviet Gold', in 1949, and 'My Retreat from Russia' a couple of years later. 'Soviet Gold' was the first published memoir of a GULAG prisoner in the West, and received a favorable review from Winston Churchill. The collected volume was first titled 'It Happens in Russia' in the 1950s, then published as 'Escape from the Future' in 1973. Prof. Petrov's academic works included 'Money and Conquest', 'A Study in Diplomacy', 'What China Policy?', 'June 22, 1941' and various monographs. He died March 17, 1999 at age 83 at his home in Kensington Maryland, after a brief illness. He was survived by his wife, Jean McNab, nine children, and six grandchildren.Rumors
In the early to mid 1970s, the time of his tenure at the George Washington University, there were rumors among the student body that Petrov was a recruiter for the
Central Intelligence Agency . A relationship with a government agency was their explanation as to why a rather minor and unimportant ex-convict was able to secure passage to America and find meaningful employment therein. These allegations were not publicly addressed by Petrov.ee also
*
GULAG
*Vlasov
*Operation Barbarossa ources
* Petrov, Vladimir (1973). "Escape from the Future", Indiana Press.
* Petrov, Vladimir (1949). "Soviet Gold", Farrar Straus.
* Petrov, Vladimir (1950). "My Retreat from Russia", Yale University Press
* Petrov, Vladimir (1998). "Unpublished autobiography"
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.