Semyon Firin

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Semyon Firin
19330000 semyon firin.jpg
Semyon Firin
Born(1898-06-30)June 30, 1898
DiedAugust 14, 1937(1937-08-14) (aged 39)
Political partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union

Semyon Grigoryevich Firin (Russian: Семён Григорьевич Фирин; June 30, 1898 – August 14, 1937) was a Soviet officer in the intelligence services OGPU and NKVD. Later in his career, he was a leader in different Gulag forced labor camps until he was executed during the Great Purge.

Life and career[]

Firin was born to a Jewish family.[1] His original surname was Pupko.[2] In the 1920s, he served as an intelligence officer in various European countries.[3]

He became the deputy chief of White Sea–Baltic Canal forced labor camp under the supervision of Matvei Berman in 1932. He was awarded the Order of Lenin for his participation in the management of the construction of the canal in 1933.[4] Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn named Semyon Firin as one of the six supervisors responsible for 30,000 deaths during the construction of the canal in his book The Gulag Archipelago.[5]

After the White-Sea Baltic Canal was finished, he became the leading NKVD official alongside Sergey Zhuk and Lazar Kogan in the Dmitlag forced labor camp based in Dmitrov where the inmates were building the Moscow Canal.[3] In August 1933, Firin was upset that there were too many frail workers who were not meeting production goals. He ordered the camp leaders to cut their food rations as a punishment which meant they only got weaker and thus were "unloaded".[6]

Firin was arrested for allegedly participating in a Operational-Chekist coup to prepare a "palace revolution" on 28 April 1937. He was executed by a firing squad on 14 August, 1937.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ Mendes, Philip (2014). Jews and the Left: The Rise and Fall of a Political Alliance. Springer. p. 132. ISBN 9781137008305.
  2. ^ Kotkin, Stephen (2017). Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929-1941. Penguin. p. 413. ISBN 9780735224483.
  3. ^ a b Ruder, Cynthia A. (2017). Building Stalinism: The Moscow Canal and the Creation of Soviet Space. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 117. ISBN 9780300227536.
  4. ^ "Документ:Постановление ЦИК СССР от 04.08.1933/Текст" (in Russian). Memorial (society). Retrieved 2021-12-29.
  5. ^ The Gulag Archipelago, Volume 2, Part 3, Chapter 3.
  6. ^ Alexopoulos, Golfo (2018). Illness and Inhumanity in Stalin's Gulag. Yale University Press. pp. 76–78. ISBN 9781786733566.
  7. ^ Dundovich, Elena (2003). Reflections on the Gulag: With a Documentary Index on the Italian Victims of Repression in the USSR. Feltrinelli Editore. p. 13. ISBN 9788807990588.
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