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Siberian gulag escapees travel 4,000 miles by foot to freedom in India.
Valka: You say too many prayers for an innocent man.
[first title cards] Title Card: In 1941, three men walked out of the Himalayas into India. / They had survived a 4000 mile walk to freedom. / This film is dedicated to them.
[last title cards] Title Card: 8TH MAY, 1945 VISTORY IN EUROPE / 1945-1948 SOVIET UNION IMPOSES COMMUNISM ON POLAND / AN 'IRON CURTAIN' FALLS OVER EASTERN EUROPE / 1956 HUNGARIAN UPRISING / 1961 BERLIN WALL GOES UP / 1968 SOVIET UNION SENDS TROOPS INTO PROGUE / 1980 POLISH SOLIDARITY MOVEMENT CHALLENGES COMMUNISM / 1989 COMMUNISM COLLAPSES / POLAND FREE
Mr. Smith: Kindness. That will kill you here.
Valka: Don't you know what "Stalin" means, funny man? Means man-of-steel. He takes from rich, and gives to poor. Zoran: Yes, of course he does. Then he takes both of them, and puts them in Gulag for 25 years.
[last lines] Man: Where have you come from? Janusz: Siberia. Man: Siberia? Religious man: [speaks to crowd in unknown language] Man: And how did you come, sir? Janusz: We walked. Man: Walked? [crowd noise]
Mr. Smith: You should be grateful we are here at all. Valka: Grateful is for dogs.
Valka: Prison is okay. Debt is bad. But there are many prisons, they don't find me. Zoran: What about America? Valka: Oh, it's not for me, freedom. I wouldn't know what to do with it, I swear to God.
Mr. Smith: In the camps, some saw death as freedom. Janusz: Then why didn't you just kill yourself? Mr. Smith: Survival was a kind of protest. Being alive was my punishment. Janusz: Punishment for what? Mr. Smith: I brought David to Russia. Janusz: And now no one can forgive you. And you can't forgive yourself...
Mr. Smith: Kindness. That can kill you here.
Janusz: We are not criminals. We are escaping from criminals.
[first lines] [in Polish, using English subtitles] Interrogator: [presents pen to sign confession] Janusz: No. Interrogator: Bring in the witness. Janusz's Wife, 1939: [brought in] Interrogator: Do you know this man? His name? Janusz's Wife, 1939: Janusz Wieszczek. Interrogator: Witness, what's your relationship with this man? Janusz's Wife, 1939: [crying] I am his wife. Interrogator: Accused, do you confirm this? Janusz's Wife, 1939: Yes. Interrogator: Witness, what do you have to say about the accused? Janusz's Wife, 1939: [agonizing] From his conversation, I have come to know he is critical of the Party, especially the leader of the Soviet people, Comrade Stalin. Janusz: What have they done to you?
Janusz: [eating snake] Tastes like chicken. Zoran: Yeah. A big black poisonous chicken with no legs.
Janusz: Why would an American move to Russia for God sakes? Irena: The Depression.