Mikhail Rodionovich Matveyev (Russian: Михаил Родионович Матвеев; 1892–1971) was a senior NKVD executioner, sent to begin the mass shootings at Sandarmokh in Karelia in the late 1930s.

Youth

After completing two years of education at a village school, the young Matveyev moved to St Petersburg where he held various occupations: he was a doorman at an apartment block, for instance, before becoming in 1913 an assistant to a metal-worker at the Vulcan works.[1] Following the 1917 February Revolution he joined the Bolsheviks and soon was serving as a Cheka executioner. In 1923 he took a few years away from his new occupation. From 1927 onwards Matveyev was back with the successor organisations, the OGPU and NKVD, as an executioner in the Leningrad Region.[2]

Condecoration

On 28 November 1936, together with two other future Sandarmokh executioners (A.P. Polikarpov and P.D. Shalygin)—and the notorious V.M. Blokhin—Captain Matveyev received the Order of the Red Banner for his "struggle to secure the socialist system", viz. they acted as executioners of those supposed to be its enemies.[3]

Sandarmokh, 1937-1938

Matveyev was personally involved in the shooting of the prisoners of the "lost Solovki transport" between 27 October and 3 November 1937, who included many members of Ukraine's Executed Renaissance.

The Sandarmokh killing field was only found in July 1997 after lengthy searches and at first it was not known how many thousands had been shot and buried there.[4] The identity of the 1,111 prisoners brought from the Solovki "special" prison in the White Sea was first established in the summer of 1996.

Their deaths were followed over the next 13 months by those of a further 3,500 inhabitants of Karelia and 4,500 workers from the White Sea Canal, leading to a total of 9,500 killings, with the bodies buried in 236 communal pits. The executions were part of the Great Purge that ran from 1936 to 1938.[5]

Later career

On 20 December 1937, Captain Mikhail Matveyev was given a commemorative gift, a radiogram and a set of gramophone records, for his "selfless work in the struggle against counter-revolution", i.e. his work at Sandarmokh between 27 October and 10 November that year.

On 11 March 1939 he was himself arrested on the orders of the new head of the NKVD Lavrenty Beria and sentenced to 10 years in a corrective labour camp. (On hearing this news, his fellow executioner Alexander Polikarpov shot himself.) Matveyev was not deprived of his awards and medals, however, and soon his sentence was reduced to three years, which he served in a camp in the Vologda Region.

Released early when Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, during the Leningrad Blockade Matveyev was made komendant (chief executioner) of the NKVD internal prison in the city. He later received the highest Soviet award, the Order of Lenin, for his work in those years.[6] He retired in December 1949.[1]

Life after Stalin, 1953-1971

Certain of those involved in selecting, escorting and then shooting the Solovki transport were questioned and investigated after Stalin's death as part of the process of rehabilitating their victims.

Like Matveyev, Major Pyotr Raevsky (1892-1967) was also arrested in 1939. He was accused of being "one of the leaders of a counter-revolutionary, insurgent organisation among the convicts on Solovki" and was sentenced in 1941 to 8 years in the camps. There he was employed as head of the solitary confinement unit in the punishment block. Released in 1947, Raevsky was rehabilitated in 1957 and re-admitted to the Communist Party. In the early 1960s, he was subjected to internal Party discipline for his active part in the Solovki executions.[7]

No such investigation troubled Matveyev's later years and he died, a State pensioner, in 1971.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Nikita Petrov (2017), "The butchers of Sandarmokh", Novaya gazeta, No. 84, 4 August 2017, pp. 8-9 (in Russian).
  2. Anatoly Razumov (n.d.), A Path of Sorrow: the Solovki transports, 1937-1938 (Skorbny put: Solovetskie etapy, 1937-1938) (in Russian), pp. 38-39.
  3. Anatoly Razumov (n.d.), A Path of Sorrow: the Solovki transports, 1937-1938 (Skorbny put: Solovetskie etapy, 1937-1938) (in Russian), p. 3.
  4. Hoffman, David (1997). "Site of 1,100 Stalinist executions found". Washington Post, 13 July 1997. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  5. 1 2 Fishman, Mikhail (2017). "Stalin's Shadow: How a Gulag Historian Fell Victim to Russia's Dark Past". The Moscow Times, 9 June 2017. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  6. Anatoly Razumov (n.d.), Skorbny put: Solovetskie etapy, 1937-1938 (in Russian), p. 39-40.
  7. Anatoly Razumov (n.d.), Skorbny put: Solovetskie etapy, 1937-1938 (in Russian), pp. 36-40.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.