Tit Ary Island* Forced labourers & settlers | Russia's Necropolis of Terror and the Gulag

Tit Ary Island* Forced labourers & settlers

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№14-17

Date of burial
1942-1947
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Address
Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Bulunsky district, Tit-Ary island
Access outside a populated area
Private or specialised transport
Visiting Hours or Restrictions
Unrestricted
Type of burial
Deportees’ graveyard
Current use
Excursions
Presence of memorials, etc.
Yes
Protected status
Not protected
Фотография 2008 года. Фотограф Г. Алекна
Фотография 2008 года. Фотограф Г. Алекна
Background

Forced settlers of various nationalities (Lithuanians, Latvians, Germans, Finns and others) were allocated to Tit Ary Island between 1942 and 1947. There were also inhabitants of Yakutia’s Churpanchinsky district, forcibly mobilised to work in the fishing industry. Those who died were buried next to the settlement and grouped according to their nationality. The total number interred there has not been established. After the fishery closed and the forced settlers dispersed, the graveyard was abandoned.

Since the late 1980s, Lithuanians and Finns have visited the island several times and tidied up their parts of the graveyard. In 1989, an expedition from Lithuania erected a memorial and a tall cross in the cemetery. An inscription in four languages (Lithuanian, Russian, Yakut and Finnish) reads: “Forcibly torn from their native land, fallen but not forgotten”. The area containing Yakut burials has today been almost entirely obliterated.

Books of Remembrance

The List of Repressed Finns – 18,000 names in Latin and Cyrillic scripts.

Research on the Genocide of the Lithuanian People (Lietuvos gyventoju Genocidas; 3 vols. 1999-2009) contains about 130,000 biographical entries (in Lithuanian). Vols 1 & 2 cover the period from 1939 to 1947 and see Deportation of Lithuanians, 1941-1951 for the 28 other burial grounds and commemorative sites on the Map of Memory.

The Memorial online database (2025) lists 9,675 victims in the Republic of Sakha (BR 7,417). 

Under half (4,232) are listed as resident in Sakha-Yakutia. 394 were shot; charges against 2,145 were dropped (21 died in captivity); over 3,000 were sent to the camps; and 1,388 deportees and forced settlers are named: 401 “kulaks”, 300 Soviet Germans, and 341 (almost all born in the Leningrad Region) who were sent to the Bulunsky district.

The Sakha Ministry of Internal Affairs names a further 2,258 individuals deported to or born in (1,102) special settlements in the republic: 435 of them were born in the Leningrad Region, 93 were accused of belonging to the Organisation of Ukranian Nationalists.

 

Nature of area requiring preservation
State of burialsAreaBoundaries
The burials have come to the surface; headboards and crosses have been destroyed
not established
not delineated
Administrative responsibility and ownership, informal responsibility for the site
On land under the control of the Bulunsky district (ulus) administration
Sources and bibliography

[ Original texts & hyperlinks ]

O.A. Markene, “A world without kind people”, Lithuanians on the Arctic Sea (compiler R. Merkite), Yakutsk, 1995

D.P. Chechebutov, With tears in our eyes: Memoirs of settlers from Churpanchinsky district, Yakutsk, 2002 (304 pp; in Yakut)

“Tit Ary Island. Forced labourers and settlers graveyard”, Virtual Museum of the Gulag [retrieved, 26 May 2022; no longer accessible]

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