Books

Go to the archives

Donbas: A True Story of an Escape Across Russia

Jacques Sandulescu

By Jesse Kornbluth
Published: Jan 21, 2024
Category: Memoir

“I was arrested in Brasov on my way to school,” his book begins. And right there your stomach sinks. Because you know what’s coming: a terrible story, told in unadorned prose.

As “Donbas” opens, Jacques is 16 years old, 6 feet 2 inches tall, 180 pounds. He’s the youngest person in the box car filled with Romanians that the Russians are shipping east in January of 1945. But his youth vanishes fast when he watches guards execute some would-be escapees. On one hand, he envies their death: “no more cold, misery, hunger.” On the other, he wants to live. Which means he’ll have to escape.

This is a book about noticing everything, paying sharp attention, looking for an opening. His first conclusion: Don’t try to escape in winter, don’t think you can get out of Russia without knowing Russian. [To read Chapter 1, click here. To buy the paperback from Amazon, click here. For the Kindle edition, click here.]

But after a few days of working in the coal mines of Donbas (now considered part of Ukraine), his thoughts turn from escape to survival. The work is wet and cold. A cave-in could come at any time. Exhaustion, exposure, hunger — death comes in many forms here.

I have never read an account of work in a mine that made me so claustrophobic. I found myself reading faster, as if getting to the end of a particularly horrible shift would provide some relief. But it didn’t — above ground, there were sadistic guards and icy winds. “Many prisoners died,” Jacques reports matter-of-factly. “Over half the camp. Four hundred and fifty weak and sick weren’t suffering any more.”

Jacques is comparatively well off. He is strong and uncomplaining, a good worker. He gets privileges — when he goes to nearby homes for dinner, it’s a delight to read as he eats and eats and eats. But he’s never fooled; there’s always a power-mad guard around the corner. And one does beat him so badly he almost dies. Which makes it all the more satisfying when, with the permission of a senior officer, Jacques stomps that sadist mercilessly. “It was a good feeling while it lasted,” he says. I think even a pacifist would agree.

After two and a half years, his luck runs out. Jacques is trapped in a cave-in and rescued only by a friend’s heroic efforts. He fears his legs will be amputated. It’s winter, but so what — he must escape. His legs are running with pus, he is a mass of sores, but he slips onto a train, hides in an open coal car and begins the slow, freezing ride to the West.

Books like this have a built-in handicap — we know the author survived. Only the best of the breed make us forget that there’s a happy ending. And this is the best; reading these pages, you will feel cold and hungry, raging with fever, wet and dispirited. But mostly, you will feel Jacques Sandulescu’s spirit, his unyielding insistence on life, life in free air, life at all costs. After you put his book down, you will, literally, take a deep breath.