Armoured
Well-known
Child labour
Child labour
The perspective one takes on this is important: the time during which the FED factory was founded and after the war were, understatement of the year, not the best times to be children and especially orphans in the USSR (and Ukraine in particular). Due to WWI, the revolution, the civil war, collectivization, the purges, WWII - well, there were a lot of orphans. Read about Holodomor - a lot of adults would likely have been willing to work at FED.
That doesn't mean the cameras are perfect, but 'child labour' is just lack of perspective. Nobody on farms in North America would have thought 14 or 15 young to work at the time, particularly in a role learning a trade.
Child labour
I do agree and look at the link you'll get between "child labour" and "FED" & "Zorki" if you do a search. Seems lucky 14year olds in the West get apprenticeships and unlucky 15year olds in the USSR were merely exploited whilst being expected to pick up a trade in the factory.
Well, this was at the back of my mind when I was typing the first post. My reaction to Fricke's* article was that the factory was the victim of a lot of anti-Soviet feeling, probably misplaced in this instance. And a lot of people in the west would be happy to get board and lodgings from 15 up to the age of 20 whilst serving a proper apprenticeship.
The perspective one takes on this is important: the time during which the FED factory was founded and after the war were, understatement of the year, not the best times to be children and especially orphans in the USSR (and Ukraine in particular). Due to WWI, the revolution, the civil war, collectivization, the purges, WWII - well, there were a lot of orphans. Read about Holodomor - a lot of adults would likely have been willing to work at FED.
That doesn't mean the cameras are perfect, but 'child labour' is just lack of perspective. Nobody on farms in North America would have thought 14 or 15 young to work at the time, particularly in a role learning a trade.