First Quote Added
4ě 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Even so, the new leadership, among whom Nikita Khrushchev slowly emerged as the head, went ahead with gradually setting free many of those imprisoned in the GULag. While labor camps would continue to exist right up to the end of the Soviet Union, Khrushchev removed them as a key part of the countryâs economy, which under Stalin had been completely dependent on prison labor. Hundreds of thousands of prisonersâpolitical protesters, petty thieves, foreign soldiers, those who belonged to the âwrongâ nationality, and those many who had no idea why they had been arrestedâstarted to emerge from the camps, and struggled to get home or find a new place in society. These are the people the Russian Nobel laureate Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn immortalized in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and the process Ilya Ehrenburg called âThe Thaw.â But Khrushchev himself later admitted that the new leaders âwere scaredâreally scared. We were afraid that the thaw might unleash a flood, which we wouldnât be able to control and which would drown us.â"
"The new Soviet leaders understood that some of Stalinâs policies had created the resistance that had boiled to the surface after his death, not just in East Germany but elsewhere as well. But they were also afraid that the East German rebellion could be repeated elsewhere if they were not careful. By late 1953 they had therefore developed what they called a ânew course,â which was intent on reform without weakening the Communistsâ monopoly on power. The main parts of the reform program were reducing the number of people who were arrested or otherwise excluded from society, amnesty for most political prisoners, cuts in heavy industry and defense industry output, and improvements in the production of food and consumer products."