May 11, 2004
A FEW MORE STEPS TO WALK:
OBIT: Slavomir Rawicz: A modest man's struggle against the tides of war and oppression (John B Adams, May 5, 2004, The Guardian)
In the early 1950s, Slavomir "Slav" Rawicz, who has died aged 88, met a journalist, Ronald Downing. So taken was Downing with the epic story of Slav's escape from a Siberian labour camp in 1941 that he persuaded him to write about his experiences.In 1955, The Long Walk was published. It was the story of a good and gentle man caught up in the savageries that followed Germany's invasion of Poland in 1939, when that country was partitioned between the Nazis and the Soviet Union.
Slav's account started in the notorious Lubyanka prison in Moscow, as he was sentenced to 25 years' hard labour for "spying", after the 12 months of interrogation that had followed his arrest on November 19 1939. Dispatched to Siberia, he and thousands of others were transported in open cattle trucks, in sub-zero temperatures, to the end of the line at Irkutsk, where, chained together, they were force-marched hundreds of miles to Camp 303 - which the survivors had to build from scratch.
In April 1941, with the aid of the camp commandant's wife, Slav and six others escaped in a blizzard. They then walked 4,000 miles south, living off the land, through the Gobi desert and over the Himalayas, until they reached India and were rescued by a Gurkha patrol. Sheer determination had overcome bitter cold, suffocating heat, thirst, starvation and injury. It took them a year. Three of the seven died on the way.
By the end of his ordeal, Slav weighed 5 stone. He never recovered his full health, but his humane will never betrayed it. After a period in hospital, the four dispersed, never to meet again.
Slav, the son of a landowner-cum-artist, was born near Pinsk, in western Poland (now Belarus). His mother, an accomplished musician, was Russian, and he grew up to speak the language fluently. As an adventurous boy, he roamed the glades and rivers of the Pripet marshes, fishing, sailing, making shelters and trapping his own food, all of which helped in his later, testing years.
Following private education, from 1932 to 1938 he studied architecture and surveying in Warsaw. In 1937, he joined the Polish reserve army, qualifying at the cav alry cadet officers' school the following year. In summer 1939, he married. The young couple had 48 hours together before Slav was mobilised as Germany invaded Poland. He never saw his wife again.
Poland's valiant defence ended after three weeks. Slav returned to Pinsk, where he was arrested by the advancing Soviet forces. He never saw his parents, siblings or home country again.
After India, in 1942 he was sent to Iraq, then to Palestine, where he taught at the Polish cadet school, helping at an orphanage in his spare time. Personally recommended by Lieutenant General Wladyslaw Anders, legendary commander of the Second Polish Corps, he came to Britain in 1944 to train as a pilot with the Polish air force.
His book is a marvelous ode to the human desire for freedom. If he weren't a Pole and he'd escaped from Nazi Germany instead of the Soviet Union it would have been filmed decades ago. Posted by Orrin Judd at May 11, 2004 9:45 AM
It's a terrific book and extremely cinematic.
Agreed. There ought to be a film.
Posted by: Rick Heller at May 11, 2004 11:07 AMBut the Soviets are The Good Guys (TM) who Can Do No Wrong!
All their Fifth Column of Intellectuals and C*E*L*E*B*R*I*T*I*E*S says so!
Posted by: Ken at May 11, 2004 12:41 PMSpeaking of something that WAS filmed decades ago on the same subject: a 1982 television movie that I absolutely loved "Coming Out of the Ice", which was the story of Victor Herman, a Russian-born American who spent 40 years in the gulag.
It contains one of Willie Nelson's two great (and I mean that with complete sincerity) great acting performances (The other, of course, was in Barbarossa.)
Posted by: H.D. Miller at May 11, 2004 3:24 PMH.D.:
Someone recommended the book to me lasty year, but I've not found it yet.
Willie is also good in Electric Horseman, a great movie despite its stars' politics.
Posted by: oj at May 11, 2004 3:40 PMI just purchased this book a few days ago at a Barnes & Noble, and looked it up on Amazon afterwards. While the book is unquestionably a good one, there do seem to be some questions about whether Mr. Rawicz either embellished his story or made it up completely. A number of outdoorsmen who wrote reviews at Amazon swear that there is no way this guy could have done what he said he did, including trekking 30 miles a day through Siberia without snow-shoes.
None of the people he claimed to have traveled with have ever been located, including at least one American. As a result, attempts to verify his story have proved to be maddeningly elusive. He also claims to have seen an abominable snowman while in the Himalayas, which seems inherently doubtful.
That said, I have no doubt that this story would have been made into a film if it didn't conflict with Hollywood's sympathy for communist thugs and tyrants. In fact, I have a hard time thinking of more than a few Hollywood films that have ever depicted communism in a negative light. This is as good a reason as any to do exactly the opposite of whatever celebrities and the glitterati tell you to do.
Posted by: Matt at May 11, 2004 6:33 PM