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Report - - The "Goli otok" prison/Croatia's Alcatraz/October 2012 | European and International Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - The "Goli otok" prison/Croatia's Alcatraz/October 2012

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Asuriell

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
After three attempts of visiting the "Goli otok" island, we've finally managed to reach it. Every time we decided it's time to go to the island, very harsh weather conditions sabotaged our plans...

We traveled from Zagreb to Rab island, and then hooked up with some locals to give us a lift to the island. The conditions were perfect...
Upon our arrival we made camp and decided to take photos and explore the southern part of the prison. You have a certain eerie feeling while walking alone at night through the corridors of this abandoned hell.

The next day we visited the rest of the island, explored the whole day and after an awesome day of walking and photographing finally went to sleep. In the morning the weather was picking up, strong winds almost destroyed the ship that was supposed to take us back to civilization - maybe the island didn't want us to leave... Who knows? ;)

Some history of this location:
Despite having long been an occasional grazing ground for local shepherds' flocks, the barren island was apparently never permanently settled other than during the 20th century. Throughout World War I, Austria-Hungary sent Russian prisoners of war from Eastern Front to Goli otok.

In 1949, the entire island was officially made into a high-security, top secret prison and labor camp run by the authorities of FPR Yugoslavia, together with the nearby Sveti Grgur island, which held a similar camp for female prisoners. Until 1956, throughout the Informbiro period, it was used to incarcerate political prisoners. These included known and alleged Stalinists, but also other Communist Party members or even nonparty citizens accused of exhibiting sympathy or leanings towards the Soviet Union. Many anticommunist (Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian, Albanian and other nationalists etc.) were also incarcerated on Goli Otok. Non-political prisoners were also sent to the island to serve out simple criminal sentences and some of them were sentenced to death. Numbers of total prisoners and massacred victims are unknown but Vladimir Dedijer estimates 32,000 male prisoners in Goli otok only; other historians estimates 4,000 killed.

The prison inmates were forced to labor (in a stone quarry, pottery and joinery), without regard to the weather conditions: in the summer the temperature would rise as high as 35 to 40 °C, while in the winter they were subjected to the chilling bora wind and freezing temperatures. Inmates were also regularly beaten and humiliated either by guards or, predominantly, by other inmates. Guards did not kill any inmate but they did not prevent inmates from killing each other either.

After Yugoslavia normalized its relations with the Soviet Union, Goli Otok prison passed to the provincial jurisdiction of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (as opposed to the Yugoslav federal authorities). Regardless, the prison remained a taboo topic in Yugoslavia. Antonije Isaković wrote the novel Tren (Moment) about the prison in 1979, waiting until after Josip Broz's death in 1980 to release it. The book became an instant bestseller.

The prison was shut down in 1988 and completely abandoned in 1989. Since then it has been left to ruin.

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The rest of the photos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/croatiainfiltration/sets/72157631797701513/
 

Bobo Frett

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
These are ace. I've been browsing this site wondering if Goli Otok was here. Brill.
 

kingrat

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Nice!!
Was there earlier this year, props for getting to see the cinema, it was locked tight when we visited :(
 
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