Without the right of correspondence

"Without the right of correspondence" (WRC) (Russian: Без права переписки, abbreviated as БПП in official documents) was a clause in a sentence of many political convicts in the Soviet Union.

Meaning

WRC was used as a euphemism to cover the true nature of a court sentence.

In many cases during the late 1930s 'Great Purge' campaign of political repression, the sentence handed down was "10 years of corrective labor camps without the right of correspondence", which was announced to relatives, while the paperwork contained the real sentence: "the highest degree of punishment: execution by shooting".[1][2] Many people did not understand the official euphemism and incorrectly believed that their relative was still alive in prison;[2] this gave officials 10 years to invent an 'accident' in the prison camps that had killed the 'prisoner', as an explanation for why the victim did not return.

As Alexander Solzhenitsyn put it in The Gulag Archipelago:

"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."[3]

For example, all of the bodies identified from the mass graves at Vinnytsia and Kuropaty had received a WRC sentence.[4]

Notable victims

See also

References

  1. "An Aluminum Cross", a documentary case published in Zvezda magazine #7, 2003
  2. Cohen, Stephen F. (2011). The Victims Return: Survivors of the Gulag After Stalin. London: I. B. Tauris. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-84885-848-0.
  3. Solzhenitsyn, Alexander (1974). The Gulag Archipelago. I. New York, NY: Harper Perennial. p. 6. ISBN 0-06-092103-X.
  4. Robert Conquest, The Great Terror: A Reassessment: 40th Anniversary Edition, Oxford University Press, USA, 2007. p. 287
  5. Михаил Ефимович Кольцов — За что? Почему? (часть-1)
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