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American Friends Service Committee — Part 31
Page 33
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ter in the well, the washroom was alternately i. . - to over-
Howing or completely deserted. When it was filled, three or four
persons sometimes crowded around a single basin, one attempt-
ing to wash his face, another his feet, a third to cup his hands
for a drink and a fourth to fll a water jug. Under these cireum-
stances, washing was not a leisurely occasion.
The hotel teemed with a melange of people from all parts
cf the Soviet Union, and indeed from the whole Communist
world. Most of the accommodations were dormitory style, but
there were a number of small private rooms into which as many
beds as possible were crammed. The overflow slept on the floor
and on benches or chairs in the central lobby. Most of the guests
appeared to be minor government officials or farmers in town
for business purposes in connection with the new lands program.
Certainly the hotel was not being used as a transient center for
new recruits coming into the region to work on the massive new
state farms. These people are quartered in dormitories better
equipped to handle the numbers involved.
Labor Not Quite Forced
Akmolinsk is an overcrowded conmunity thrust into promi-.
nence by the great project which it helps to service. We were
impressed by the large numbers of young people to be seen on
the streets and concluded that young people make up the buik
of the new farm Iabor needed in the region. As far as,we could
learn, these recruits are not actually dragooned into coming out
into this empty prairie land, but they are certainly given every
encouragement to do so. In the first place, there is a wage incen-
tive: wages offered by the government on a three-year contrae-
tual basis are almost double those offered by state farms in the
Ukraine. Second, since this is apparently not enough, consider-
able pressure is placed on the graduates of agricultural schools
to go into the new lands region on the completion of their train-
ing.
We have no grounds for suggesting that such a move is
actually obiigatory, but we concluded that unless a person had
a pretty good reason for not doing so, he would be likely to end
up in Axmolinsk or Barnaul or one of the other centers serving.
the new lands program. Obviously, some pressure is exerted,
because the region is not an appealing one in which to invest
one's life, or even a few years of it.
In retrospect, our stay in Akmolinsk emerges as one of the.
most interesting and illuminating experiences of our whole
Soviet visit, although while it was in process we felt only frus-
tration, annoyance and physical discomfort. It was here that
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