KATARZYNA SCHÄFERNAKER

1. [Personal data:]

Volunteer Katarzyna Schäfernaker, section leader, age 43, clerk, married.

2. [Date and circumstances of arrest:]

On 3 April 1940 in Czortków, deported.

3. [Name of the camp, prison, place of forced labor:]

Forced labor, Lenin Sovkhoz, Semipalatinsk Oblast, Novoshulba district, Peschanka village.

4. [Description of the camp, prison:]

A healthy climate. Buildings, housing conditions, and hygiene were partially possible.

5. [The composition of prisoners of war, inmates, exiles:]

There were about 200 families in the sovkhoz, including a dozen Ukrainian families, a few Jewish ones, and the rest were Polish.

6. [Life in the camp, prison:]

Work in the field started at 7:00 AM and lasted until 12:00 PM, and [then] from 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM. The work at the pigsty took all day. Wages and food were very poor, and there were no clothes. [There was] no cultural life. People worked and lived from day to day as much as they could.

7. [The NKVD’s attitude towards the Polish people:]

Very often we were asked about our personal data, correspondences, and relatives. Seven or eight people were arrested for not attending work. Three young women were imprisoned for a year because they took a few pieces of wood. A politically suspect railwayman was arrested and never returned. There were also frequent searches in the houses.

8. [Medical assistance, hospitals, mortality rate:]
Medical assistance was poor. Six children died during the winter, as well as a few (eight)
elderly people (including Lieutenant Colonel Nakoniecznikoff). Fatal accidents: a young man
was hit by a tractor and a woman was hit by a car.

9. [Was there any possibility to get in contact with one’s country and family?]

Contact with the country was possible through letters, parcels, and sending money.

10. [When were you released and how did you manage to join the army?]

I was released in August 1941, due to the amnesty [for Polish citizens in the Soviet Union]. I joined the army in Tehran through the draft commission on 27 October 1942.

Place of stay, 24 January 1943