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Kishka

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Kishka is a Slavic word meaning gut, or intestine.

Kishka is also an East European sausage made with pig's blood and barley and traditionally served with breakfast. It is named after the pigs' intestines that are used as a casing. Polish: Kiszka, Ukrainian: кишка, kyshka.

A kishka is also a type of prison cell used in Soviet political prisons. The cell was named after the gut, in that it was tall and narrow, like an intestine, but more like a chimney. The prisoner had room to stand, but could not sit or kneel, let alone lie down. In some Soviet prisons there was no drainage and the prisoner was forced to excrete standing up and to stand in his own urine and feces. In some cases the cells were never cleaned. Prisoners could be held in these cells for months at a time. This practice was intended to soften the prisoner so that he would make a "voluntary" confession.