Thomas Sgovio was an American artist, ex-Communist, and former inmate of a Soviet Union GULAG camp in Kolyma.
Background
His father was an Italian American communist, deported by the United States authorities to the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics because of his political activities. He was born in Buffalo, New York on 7 October 1916. Sgovio moved to the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics at the age of 19 with his father Joseph "..who the United States deported as a communist agitator in 1935." On arrival in the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics he gave up his United States passport.
Career
He became disillusioned after three years living in Moscow, tried to reclaim his passport at the United States embassy there and was arrested by the People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs on 12 March 1938 as he left the embassy. After his arrest, he was first taken to Moscow"s Lubyanka Prison and later transported to Taganka Prison in a Black Raven. After a perfunctory and routine inquiry in which the Soviet authorities seem mainly to have been concerned with his attendance at the embassy, he was sentenced by a troika of three officials to forced labour as a "socially dangerous element".
Some years later Sgovio sought to have his case reviewed.
The prosecutor who dealt with the application concluded that, "Sgovio does not deny that he did make an application at the American Embassy. Therefore I believe that there is no reason to review Sgovio"s case.
Sgovio was transported in a prison train to Vladivostok. Sgovio wrote, "Our train left Moscow on the evening of 24 June.
lieutenant was the beginning of an eastward journey which was to last a month.
I can never forget the moment. Seventy mentor. began to cry." From Vladivostok he was shipped aboard the Steamship Indigirka to the Kolyma camps. Within the camps the professional criminal classes were often kept alongside and dominated the other prisoners including the political prisoners.
Tattoos of various types were one of the hallmarks of the professional criminal and as a professional artist, Sgovio became part of the tattoo trade.
Foreign a while Sgovio was also personal orderly to a senior guard in the camp. At another time he was part of a tree-felling brigade.
During the Second World War, Sgovio learned of the conflict in the Pacific when machine parts wrapped in old newspapers arrived in the Gulag having been diverted from the United States Lend-Lease program with the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics. He witnessed and later wrote about the starvation and deaths of countless Gulag prisoners and victims of the Soviet authorities. Sgovio survived his ordeal.
After a 16 year sentence in labor camps, he was released but initially had to remain in the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics where he was stigmatised as a former prisoner.
Eventually he was permitted to return to the United States in 1960. He related his experiences and the lethal nature of the camps in his memoir, Dear America! His fate is also recounted in Tim Tzouliadis" book The Forsaken.
Politics
Why I Turned Against Communism, published in 1972.