Young Pioneer camp ( ) was the name for the
vacation or
summer camp of
Young
Pioneers.
In the 20th century these camps existed in
many socialist countries, particularly in the Soviet Union
.
The Young Pioneer camps of the Soviet Union were the place of
vacation for children from the
Young Pioneer
organization of the Soviet Union during summer and winter
holidays.
The first All-Union Young Pioneer camp,
Artek
was formed
on June 16, 1925.
The Young
Pioneer camp phenomenon grew in popularity and in the USSR
there existed approximately forty thousand Young
Pioneer camps in 1973. Approximately 9,300,000 children had
vacations in these camps that year. There were different types of
camps: sanitation camps, sports camps, tourist camps, thematic
camps (for young technicians, young
naturalist, young
geologists and children of other potential
careers). Generally speaking if parents wanted their child or
children to go to one of these Young Pioneer camps, they had to pay
a fee to apply for accommodation in the camp. However, typically
the state organization where the parent worked "sponsored" the
child by allotting the worker's child a place in the camp free of
charge to the parent or parents as an incident to the parent's
employment.
The main
Young Pioneer camps of the Soviet Union were All-Union Young Pioneer camp
Artek
(near
Gurzuf
), republican camps: Orlyonok (near Tuapse
, Russian SFSR, opened in 1960), Okean
(near Vladivostok
, Russian SFSR, opened in 1983) Molodaya Gvardiya (near Odessa
, Ukrainian SSR) and Zubryonok (in Minsk Oblast, Byelorussian SSR). It was very
difficult to apply for accommodation to the main camps, especially
to Artek, as they were very popular.
In 1977 a group of Canadian teens and pre-teens from across Canada
were sent to the Soviet Young Pioneer camp, Orlyonok. The book
Lost in Moscow by Kirsten Koza details their unusual
escapades at this elite summer camp in the USSR.
In
East
Germany
the Ernst Thälmann Pioneer
Organisation built a pioneer camp (known as a "pioneer
republic") in 1952 at Werbellinsee north-east of Berlin
. It
was based on the Artek. It was considered a privilege to be chosen
to go to this camp; every year about 1,000 pioneers were chosen to
go there.
References
-
http://www.primarysourcesonline.nl/ead/archdesc.php?faid=527toc.xml
- http://www.kirstenkoza.com/lost-in-moscow.php