HOW THE COMMUNISTS SEIZED POWER
The great Russian author Fiodor Dostoyevsky predicted that Communism would come from Europe and that its introduction would claim tens of millions of victims and that Communism would be a catastrophe for mankind. In the same vein, the exiled Russian philosopher Nikolai Berdyayev, in his book "The Meaning of History" (1923), warned about an ever darker anti-humanist period presaging an apocalyptic horror.Only now has it become relatively easy to describe the chain of events, which led the Bolsheviks to the seat of power. The material, which has so far been made available, is, in itself, very shocking and it can definitively be shown that there was an international conspiracy behind the "revolutions" in Russia.
In 1915 Alexander Parvus (Israel Helphand) made plans for the Bolsheviks' (i.e. the Illuminati's) seizure of power by the aid of the German secret service. He had written the leading role for Vladimir Ulyanov-Lenin.
In the same year, Parvus received 7 million marks from the German Department of Finance "to develop revolutionary propaganda in Russia".
Parvus met Lenin in Zurich in May 1915 to discuss his plans. Lenin stubbornly preferred Switzerland as the victim of the conspiracy.
According to the American newspaper The New Federalist (11th of September 1987) Parvus contributed to the First World War with his intrigues. In any case, he was extremely well informed. He predicted in 1904 that the industrial countries would be drawn into a world war, which would be the bloody dawn of great events.
Meanwhile, Lenin could not believe that the Communists would reach power in his lifetime. He said this in a lecture in Bern on the 22nd of January 1917, thus just before the February coup. ("Collected Works", Vol. 19, p. 357.) Nor did Lenin believe there would be a world war. This, too, shows that he was just a puppet in the hands of the international financial elite.
The Background of the First World War
Here I should mention something about the background to the First World War. It was revealed during the trial of Gavrilo Princip and Nedelko Cabrinovic, the assassins of Franz Ferdinand (the heir to the Austrian throne), that the French Masonic organisation Grand Orient was behind the assassination plans, and not the Serbian nationalist organisation the Black Hand. This enormous provocation had been planned in Paris in 1912 at 16 Rue Cadets, the headquarters of Grand Orient. Nedelko Cabrinovic revealed in court how the freemasons had sentenced Franz Ferdinand to death. He learned this from the freemason Ziganovic (it was he who gave the Jewish assassin Princip a Browning pistol). Princip was also a freemason. The sentence was executed on the 28th of June 1914.Everything according to the stenographic report of the court published in Alfred Mousset's book "L'Attentat de Sarajevo", Paris, 1930. This information was later hushed up.
It has also been kept secret that an attempt was made to murder Grigori Rasputin in Pokrovskoye in Siberia at exactly the same time. Rasputin was the magician of the Tsar's court and the Tsarina's favourite and was decidedly against Russia being drawn into a major war. (Colin Wilson "The Occult", London, 1971, p. 500.) The freemason Prince Felix Yusupov managed to kill Rasputin on December 29, 1916.
The Austrian freemason and Bolshevik Karl Radek (Tobiach Sobelsohn) also knew about this. He had always been well informed. Radek knew Ziganovic personally from his time in Paris. He tried to reveal the secrets about the war during the trial against him in Moscow in 1937, but Stalin's lackeys shut him up. He was not given another chance to speak and carried these secrets with him into the grave (Molodaya Gvardiya, No. 2, 1991, p. 121).
What were the Grand Orient's motives? I do not need to speculate here.
It is best to cite Zionist sources. The Zionist newspaper Peiewische Vordle wrote on the 13th of January 1919:
The rabbi Reichhorn in the periodical Le Contemporain proves that those plans were far-reaching on the 1st of July 1880:
Karl Heise published the British freemasons' map of Europe from 1888.
The map presented the new national borders of Europe, which became reality after the First World War. (Pekka Ervast, "Vapaamuurareiden kadonnut sana" / "The Freemasons' Lost Word", Helsinki, 1965, p. 78.)
His interesting book "Entente - Freimaurerei und Weltkrieg", an analysis of the treacherous role of the freemasons in causing the First World War, was published in Basel in 1919.
In the newspaper Truth, December 1890, a map was published that depicted the borders of Europe, which became reality in 1919. Three empires were gone. This was published as a satire: "Look what the opponents of the freemasons have come up with!" But in 1919, nobody was laughing any more.
As I have related earlier, Parvus also found the money for the coup attempts in 1905. Now he took good care of Lenin. He made him editor of the newspaper Iskra as early as 1901, from his home in a Munich suburb, and also organised a printing office in Leipzig. Parvus made sure that the newspaper reached Russia. Parvus even let Lenin live in his flat in Zurich.
(Lenin lived in Switzerland between 1914 and 1917.)
Parvus had explained to Lenin that the organisation of the revolution needed money and that even more money was needed to stay in power.
Parvus knew what he was talking about, since he acted as a financial adviser to both the Turks and the Bulgarians during the Balkan wars, 1912-13. At the same time he became immensely rich through his own arms deals. Parvus had worked from Salonica in Greece, where he got into contact with the powerful local Masonic organisation.
The most important force behind him was Prince Volpi di Misurata - perhaps the most powerful man in Venice - who helped Parvus with finance, deals and Masonic contacts.
It was this Volpi who, in October 1922, brought the socialist-fascist Benito Mussolini into power, making the King appoint him prime minister. He was also behind the founding of Libya in 1934.
Mussolini had been especially pleased with the murder of the Russian Prime Minister Stolypin, whom he called "the tyrant by the Neva" in an article. Volpi became minister of finance in Mussolini's government. Volpi had been in the centre of the financial circles that provoked the Balkan War in 1912-13. (The New Federalist, 11th of September 1987.)
In 1916, Alexander Parvus suggested that the German government should finance Lenin and his Party still more intensively.
They would be able to make a separate peace with Germany if they reached power in Petrograd. It was also clear to the Germans that the Bolsheviks would be able to efficiently weaken Russia.
The Kaiser's Zionist adviser Walter Rathenau (1867-1922), who was a rich industrialist, also recommended financing the Bolsheviks. Germany's ambassador in Copenhagen, Count Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau, who was a well-known 33rd degree freemason and Illuminatus, was of the same opinion. (Nesta Webster and Kurt Kerlen, "Boche and Bolshevik", New York, 1923, pp. 33-34.) Parvus was close to him and had great influence over him. Parvus himself made 20 million marks from this suggestion.
It was Ulrich Brockdorff-Rantzau's letter on the 14th of August 1915 which finally decided the question of financial support to the Bolsheviks.
This letter, addressed to the German vice-state secretary, summarised a discussion between Brockdorff-Rantzau and Helphand-Parvus. The ambassador strongly recommended employing Helphand to undermine Russia since "he is an exceedingly important man, whose unusual power we should be able to utilise during the war".
But the ambassador added a warning: "It is probably dangerous to use the forces which are behind Helphand, but if we should refuse to use their services, since we fear that we may not be able to control them, it will surely only demonstrate our weakness." (Professor Z. A. B. Zeman, "Germany and the Revolution in Russia, 1915-1918. Documents from the Archives of the German Foreign Ministry", London, 1958, p. 4, Document 5.)
Actually, the first transfer of five million marks from the German Foreign Ministry to the Bolsheviks for "revolutionary propaganda" had already occurred on the 7th of June 1915. The Germans' Estonian agent Aleksander Keskula acted as one of the go-betweens in the transfer. His co-operation with the Germans began on the 12th of September 1914.
Keskula met Lenin for the first time on October 6, 1914. Lenin also had demands to make on the Germans. He demanded, among other things, the chance to occupy India.
Some powerful American forces had exactly the same interest in using the "revolutionaries". It was primarily the American International Corporation, with John Pierpoint Morgan Jr. (1867-1943) at the head, who tried to gain control of those international speculants and adventurers, according to Antony Sutton (doctor in economics). (Antony Sutton, "Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution", Morley, 1981, p. 41.)
It was above all Jacob and Mortimer Schiff, Felix Warburg, Otto H. Kahn, Max Warburg, Jerome J. Hanauer, Alfred Milner and the copper family Guggenheim who financed the Bolsheviks, according to the Jewish historian David Shub.
A document (861.00/5339) in the archives of the U.S. State Department confirms this. Two further names are mentioned in this document: Max Breitung and Isaac Seligman. All those people were Jews and freemasons.
According to the same document, plans to depose the Tsar were made in February 1916. There are always some people who make money out of wars and revolutions. We must not forget this when we seek to understand history.
The Zionist banker and freemason Max Warburg played an important role in funding the Communist propaganda in Russia. He saw to it that the industrialist Hugo Stinnes agreed to give two million roubles to the Bolsheviks' publishing activity on the 12th of August 1916. (Zeman, "Germany and the Revolution in Russia, 1915-18. Documents from the Archives of the German Foreign Ministry", London, 1958, p. 92.)
Thus there are documents extant which show that Max Warburg and other super-wealthy Jews supported Communism. These statements are not just made up, as certain know-it-alls have claimed. Max Warburg was the richest and most powerful banker in Germany. The periodical Hammer (No. 502, on the 15th of May 1923) called him "the secret emperor".
Max Warburg's brother, Paul, was married to Nina Loeb, daughter of the Jewish banker Salomon Loeb. Kuhn, Loeb & Co. were the most powerful United States bank syndicate. Another of Max Warburg's brothers, Felix, married Frieda Schiff, who was the daughter of Jacob Schiff.
The latter was one of the most important men within Kuhn, Loeb & Co. The Schiff family and the Rothschild family owned a twin company in Frankfurt am Main as early as in the 18th century.
Jacob H. Schiff was descended from a distinguished rabbinical family. He came to New York in the 1860s. It was Rothschild who trained him. Schiff began buying himself into Kuhn, Loeb & Co. with Rothschild's money. Both Paul and Felix Warburg became part owners of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
Even Alexander Parvus began preparing the Bolsheviks' take-over of power in 1916. He made sure that Lenin had all the money he needed.
(Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 34.) In this way, Lenin and Parvus received a total of six million dollars in gold. (Karl Steinhauser, "EG - Die Super UdSSR von Morgen", Vienna, 1992, p. 167.)
Meanwhile, as many extremist Jews as possible were recruited into the "revolutionary" movement. The German Jew Karl Kautsky (1854-1938) emphasised that "the Jews in Russia had only one true friend - the revolutionary movement". The Jews then comprised 30-55 per cent of the Bolshevik Party.
Dostoyevsky predicted that the Jews would enslave the Russians so that these would become pack-mules and that the Jews would drink the people's blood.
Where did Russia's Jews Originate?
Most Russian Jews are descendants of the Khazar Jews. According to the Russian historian and ethnologist Leon Gumilev, the Khazar Turks moved to the Volga delta in the third century A.D. Other related Turkish peoples, who used Khazaria as a base for their military operations between 558 and 650 A.D., played the most important role in the development of the Khazar Turks.In the 10th century A.D., the Khazar Turks stubbornly (and successfully) defended themselves against the Arabs, the strongest and most aggressive military power of the day, as they expanded outward from the Arabian Peninsula. The rise of the Khazar Turks lasted for about 150 years - from the middle of the 7th century to the end of the 8th century, at which point the Jews arrested their development.
The first Jews who arrived in Khazaria were fleeing just persecution for anti-government activities in Persia. A second large immigration took place in the 8th century when a large number of Jews left Byzantium to co-operate with the Arabs, which was caused by economic competition from the Greeks and the Armenians. In 723, Emperor Leo III of Byzantium attempted to force Byzantine Jews to adopt Christianity.
The original population of Khazaria remained agricultural, whilst the Jewish arrivals became commercial. Jewish merchants (known as "Radokhnids") in Khazaria immediately took control of the caravan routes between Europe and China. These new merchants were especially interested in the slave trade.
The Kaganate of Khazaria was a powerful kingdom. The King, or Kagan, received expensive gifts from wealthy Jews and had many Jewish women in his harem.
Many children of mixed race were born in the 8th century. These children, and the Jewish people themselves, began to call them-selves Khazars in the 10th century. The original populace may be called Khazar Turks, the newcomers Khazar Jews.
Semender was originally the capital of Khazaria, later being replaced as the capital by Itil (now Astrakhan) on the Volga. Other important Khazarian cities were Sarkel on the Dona and later Kiev on the Dniepr. There were about 4000 Jewish families in Itil. The Khazars bought military services from many contingents of mercenaries, of which there were up to 7000 in Itil. The Jews of Itil plundered the Khazar Turks unceasingly.
At the beginning of the 9th century, a Jewish prophet by the name of Obadiah seized power in Khazaria and introduced a strict theocratic regime. The Kagan was not murdered, but was placed under effective house arrest. Once a year he appeared in public to make it seem as if he still wielded some power. This apparent sharing of power was just a sham.
Obadiah turned the Kagan (Khan) of the Asina dynasty into his marionette and made the Mosaic faith the official state religion. This coup benefited only the Jews.
The Jewish rabbis did not intend to convert the Khazars to Judaism, but kept the faith exclusively for the people who had come into power. The Khazar Turks remained heathens. The coup triggered a civil war in which Obadiah exploited the tactics of total war, which had been used so successfully during the occupation of Canaan, when the Jewish nation tried to annihilate each and every enemy. By 820 A.D., the new regime was in place.
Khazaria became an unnatural union, where the suppressed were constantly confronted by a foreign ruling class. The Khazar Jews were not brave warriors, and instead began terrorising the original population and other neighbouring peoples with the help of Polovtsy (Kipchaks), Pechenegs, Russian and even Islamic mercenaries. They constantly sought to expand their territories and managed to conquer the Crimea for the purpose of trading with the Mediterranean nations.
The Khazar Jews attempted to bring about a coup in France in the middle of the 10th century with the help of their own brethren and Berber mercenaries, but before they succeeded, the slavs managed to seize power and crush the state of Khazaria.
In the middle of the 9th century, Khazar Jews made an agreement with the Varangians (Vikings) to split Eastern Europe between them, but in the 10th century, the Jews took control in most areas. The Bulgars, the Mordvins and other races came under their dominion. The Khazar Jews were at their most powerful at the end of the 9th and the beginning of the 1 Oth centuries. They threatened to bring a catastrophe upon the inhabitants of Eastern Europe. Their opponents had to choose between slavery and annihilation.
Eventually, rebellions broke out. In 922, the Bulgars succeeded in freeing themselves from the oppression introduced by the Jewish.
Khazaria, which originally lay in the Volga delta, later extended between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, and even reached all the way to Volga-Bulgaria and Kiev.
Khazaria existed between the 7th century and 965 A.D. when the Prince of Kiev, Sviatoslav, crushed the Jewish reign of terror. The Khazarian potentates fled and the oppressed Khazar Turks and other peoples were freed. The surviving Khazar Jews founded the Ashkenazi tribes. Their main centres were later in the Ukraine, Poland, and Lithuania. The Khazar Turks mixed with other races. Most of the Khazar Turks later became known as Astrakhan Tartars. Large areas of Khazaria later subsided into the Caspian Sea, where the traces of the great empire were discovered only in the 1960s. (Leon Gumilev, "The Ethnosphere - The History of Man and Nature", Moscow, 1993; Gumilev, "The Discovery of Khazaria", Moscow, 1996.)
The Jews did not change their habits. In 1113, the Prince of Kiev, Vladimir Monomakh, believed it necessary to curb the Jew's usury ("Nordisk Familjebok", Stockholm, 1946, Vol. 20, p. 690).
The Khazar Jews repeated this tried and tested method once more when they founded the Soviet Union, which many of them regarded as a kind of twisted revenge against the Russian people.
Gumilev's view is echoed by an earlier scholar, Isaac Baer Levinsohn (1788-1860), who was also certain that Russia's Jews did not come from Germany, but from the banks of the Volga. ("The Haskalah Movement in Russia" by Jacob Raisin, Philadelphia, 1913-1914, p. 17.)
The Coup in February 1917
As early as in April 1916, the Russian freemasons had a plan ready, according to which the Tsar would be deposed and replaced by a liberal socialist Masonic government. Pavel Milyukov revealed in his memoirs how a preliminary list of the people who were to make up the Provisional Government was drawn up in P. Ryabushinsky's flat on the 13th of August 1915. The only person missing from that list was the Jewish lawyer Alexander Kerensky (actually Aaron Kiirbis).The writer and freemason Mark Aldanov (actually Landau) explained that the final list was finished in 1916 at the hotel Frantsiya. (Boris Nikolayevsky, "The Russian Freemasons and the Russian Revolution", Moscow, 1990, p. 164.)
The list was again re-worked on the 6th of April 1916 at the house of the publicist and freemason Yekaterina Kuskova, a fact evident from a letter written by her on that day. This information, which points to the fact that there was a conspiracy behind the events in Russia in 1917, was published in the exiled Russian historian Sergei Melgunov's book "The Preparations for the Palace Coup" and in Grigori Aronson's book "Russia at the Dawn of the Revolution" (New York, 1962, p. 126).
In 1912, Zionists and Masonic circles had helped the freemason Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) to power in the United States. As president he began working diligently to depose the Tsar of Russia. A campaign of slander was started. An agitatory campaign in 1912 led to a bloodbath by the river Lena. There were no widespread troubles, however.
Russia had borrowed large amounts of money to be able to go to war. This meant that the country was especially vulnerable. According to Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the international Jewish finance world handed an ultimatum to the Russian government - the Jews in the Russian society must be allowed to act as Jews. All credit was immediately suspended.
Without this credit, Russia could no longer wage war. The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Sergei Sazonov, confirmed that the Allies could not help Russia either, since they too relied upon the Jewish financial elite.
Shcherbatov said during a meeting of the government (according to the minutes):
(A. Solzhenitsyn, "Collected Works", Paris, 1984, Vol. 13, pp. 263-267.)
B'nai B'rith and the Illuminati wanted to achieve an even greater chaos in Europe and they succeeded with this. At the international congress of Masonic Grand Masters in Interlaken, in Switzerland, on 25 June 1916 Dr. David planned to annihilate contemporary Europe. (Oleg Platonov, "The Secret History of freemasonry", Moscow, 1996, pp. 586-589.)
In December 1916, the freemasons began working especially hard in Russia. In January 1917 it was decided that the events should begin on the Jewish Purim day, the annual celebration of the mass-murder of 75,000 Persians, according to the book of Esther in the Old Testament (9:16-26).
The first shots were to be fired on the very Purim day - the 23 rd of February (8th of March). The Jewish weekly newspaper Yevreiskaya Nedelya (the Jewish Week) published an article about the "February revolution" on the 24th of March 1917 (No. 12-13) with an especially revealing title: "It Happened on Purim Day!" (i. e. the 23rd of February 1917).
The freemasons began making intense propaganda to have the Tsar deposed. The slogan "For democracy! Against Tsarism!" was used. Of course, all this cost a lot of money, which mostly came from the United States. Jacob Schiff declared publicly in April 1917 that it was through his financial support that the revolution in Russia had succeeded. The freemasons exploited the food shortage. The "revolutionaries" provoked people to come out on political strikes. The freemasons wanted to carry out the Bolshevik take-over in two steps...
The myth says that the troubles, which brought about a social revolt and then a revolution, were spontaneous. Professor Richard Pipes at Harvard University in the United States rejects that description. He states:
"Historians have claimed that the revolutionaries were carried forward by the people. But if we go to the sources, it is evident that they are wrong on all points and build their ideas on myths." He emphasises: "The February revolution in Petrograd in 1917 was not, as we have believed, a social uprising - and this can easily be proved." According to him, the spark that set it all off was the mutiny in the overfilled barracks on the 23rd of February (8th March). It had been necessary to recruit older people, since many Russian soldiers had been taken prisoner. But the mutineers were not against the war, as was later believed. The Bolsheviks knew that peace was an unpopular demand. The peasants wanted land and they got it.
(Dagens Nyheter, 6th May 1992.)
The agitators transformed this insignificant uprising into a revolution on the 27th of February (12th of March) 1917, and three days later, on the 2nd (15th) of March, Tsar Nicholas II was forced to abdicate. He was then staying in Pskov.
Nicholas II left his crown to his youngest brother Mikhail, but the freemasons were furious over the fact that they had not quite succeeded in abolishing the imperial regime in three days flat and on the following day they forced Mikhail to abdicate too. Their goal was to crush the empire altogether.
An Irish member of the British Parliament revealed that Alfred Milner, Grand Master of British freemasonry and leader of the secret group The Round Table (which was funded by the Rothschild family, according to the historian Gary Allen), had been sent ahead to Petrograd in order to depose the Tsar. "Our leaders... sent Lord Milner to Petrograd to prepare the revolution..." (Zeman, "Germany and the Revolution in Russia 1915-18.
Documents from the Archives of the German Foreign Ministry", London, 1958, p. 92.) The MP protested over the fact that the British treated their allies in such a manner. No one denied the statement.
("Parliamentary Debates, House of Commons." Vol. 91, No. 218, 1917, 22nd of March, col. 2081.) Later, the same Milner spent 21 million roubles on the Bolsheviks' take-over... Gary Allen claimed that The Round Table is also fully responsible for the Second World War.
The prime mover behind the fall of the Tsar was the 36-year-old Jewish lawyer Alexander Kerensky who, during the years preceding the coup had exclusively defended "revolutionary" terrorists. Alexander Kerensky, according to the historian Sergei Yemelyanov, was a freemason of the 33rd degree. He was even Grand Master in the Russian branch of Grand Orient in 1916, according to the historian Sergei Naumov. He had found docu-ments confirming this.
Alexander Kerensky was the son of the Austrian Jewess Adler who married the Jew Kurbis, according to the historian Sergei Naumov. His real name was Aaron. His mother later married the teacher Fiodor Kerensky who adopted the boy Aaron. Fiodor Kerensky was first a teacher and later headmaster at the public school in Simbirsk where Vladimir Ulyanov-Lenin also studied for a while. He was eventually named school inspector in Turkistan. In connection with his adoption, Aaron was given a Christian name - Alexander. Alexander Kerensky's doctor confirmed that he was circumcised. (F. Winberg, "The Cross-Roads", Munich, 1922, p. 197.)
The Jew Vladimir Bonch-Bruyevich (a close collaborator with Lenin) confirmed that Kerensky was already a freemason when he was a member of the National Duma.
Here it should again be pointed out that the terrorist Dmitri (Mordekai) Bogrov co-operated closely with Kerensky who, after the murder of Prime Minister Peter Stolypin, fled abroad immediately, according to the historian O. Soloviev.
One of those behind Kerensky was the American freemason and government official Richard Crane, according to Antony Sutton. He was primarily financed by the Jewish banker Grigori Berenson who later moved with his family to London, where his daughter Flora married Colonel Harold Solomon. This man was one of the most important Jews in London. In the 1930s Grigori Berenson began an active Zionist campaign.
He had 28 lodges of the Grand Orient ol Russia at his disposal.
The Austrian political scientist Karl Steinhauser revealed that the British ambassador, the freemason George Buchanan, was the contact man between Kerensky and London, Paris and Washington.
Other high-ranking freemasons within the Grand Orient worked together with Kerensky to have the Tsar deposed: the lawyer Maxim Vinaver (1866-1940), the lawyer Oskar Grusenberg (1866-1940), the historian Alexander Braudo (1864-1924), the writer Leonti (Leon) Bramson, the lawyer Joseph Hessen (1866-1943), the lawyer Y. Frumkin, Yoller and M. Herzenstein.
The contacts with the Grand Orient in France were organised by Sergei Urusov. (Boris Nikolayevsky, "Russian Freemasonry and the Revolution", Moscow, 1990, pp. 56-57.)
Urusov was a landowner and a freemason who betrayed the Tsar. In 1917 he became Minister for Internal Affairs in the Provisional Government. After the Bolsheviks' take-over, he took a high post in the Central Bank. (The Greater Soviet Encyclopaedia, Vol. 56, Moscow, 1936, p. 301.)
The second in command after Kerensky was Nikolai Nekrasov. It should not be necessary to point out at this stage that the Illuminati controlled the Grand Orient.
During the new Tsar's coronation a cross of St. Andrew, which had adorned his ceremonial dress, fell to the floor. A few hours later a terrible panic broke out among the crowd who had come to Moscow to see the new Tsar. Through rumours, people imagined that the gifts which used to be handed out in connection with coronations would not be enough for all the poor this time.
The crowd pressed forward and about two thousand people were suffocated or trampled to death. Millions of Russians saw this event as a bad omen. The Tsar, meanwhile, did not break off his celebration, but continued on to the ball at the French Embassy. The superstitious were proved right...
There are historians who still have not understood why so many important tsarist generals betrayed Nicholas II. The Tsar said repeatedly that he had been betrayed. But now this riddle has also been solved. The most important generals, according to the Jewish freemason Manuil Margulies, were Masonic brothers who obeyed their lodge instead of the Tsar.
Among these generals, he mentioned Vasili Romeiko-Gurko, Mikhail Alexeyev (1857-1918), who later founded the White Army, Nikolai Ruzsky, Alexander Krymov, Alexei Manikovsky, Alexei Polivanov, Alexander Myshlayevsky, Teplov, even Lavr Kornilov, who was ordered to inform the Tsar and his family that they were all under arrest.
Kornilov later broke away from the freemasons. (M. Nazarov, Nash Sovremennik, No. 12, 1991.)
The Tsar Nicholas II was also betrayed by the right-wing member of the National Assembly, Alexander Guchkov, who became Minister for War in the Provisional Government. He later regretted his action and took part in Kornilov's revolt, but it was already too late. Even members of the Romanov dynasty betrayed the Tsar.
On the 2nd (15th) of March, the freemasons had, after the American model, formed a provisional government led by Prince Georgi Lvov (1861-1925). That was why the Jewish freemasons were so angry with Mikhail II for holding power simultaneously. This error was corrected one day later. Mikhail II was ritually murdered in Perm on June 12, 1918.
Every one of the eleven ministers was a freemason. Of course, all the most important freemasons were there: Nikolai Nekrasov (Minister of Communications), Alexander Kerensky (Minister of Justice), Pavel Milyukov (the Minister of Foreign Affairs, professor and leader of the bourgeois Cadet Party) and Mikhail Tereshchenko (Minister of Finance). The Zionist and freemason Piotr Rutenberg, also an infamous terrorist, was named chief of police by Kerensky.
Kerensky and Rutenberg had all the criminals in the prisons released. There were 183,949 prisoners in Russia in 1912. There were tens of thousands of criminals just in Petrograd. This took place on the second day of the coup. The prison gates in other cities were also opened wide.
Then the anarchy began. Criminals raided stores, shops and railway carriages. People were murdered and robbed. Nothing of the sort had ever been seen before. The first victims of the February coup were the policemen. The crowds seized them, beat them to death and dragged their corpses around in the streets. The police force was nearly liquidated.
Then the killing of officers began. During the first days of the coup, 60 officers were killed in Kronstadt alone, among others Admiral von Wiren.
Both his arms were chopped off, after which he was led around the streets until the "revolutionaries" were merciful enough to kill him. In Vyborg, officers were thrown onto rocks from a bridge. In other areas officers were impaled on bayonets. Everywhere people mocked them and tore off their shoulder-straps, following which they were beaten to death, according to Stanislav Govorukhin.
The Masonic government did not wish to use the national anthem "God Save the Tsar", composed, ironically, by Prince Lvov himself and written by the poet Zhukovsky by request of Tsar Nicholas I.
Instead a Masonic anthem, "The Lord Glorious in Zion", was used. German military orchestras played most of the gramophone recordings of this national anthem (from February to October 1917). (Staffan Skott, "Sovjetunionen fran borjan till slutet" / "The Soviet Union from Beginning to End", Stockholm, 1993, pp. 23-24.)
It was later asserted that the press and public opinion of the United States forced the Tsar to abdicate. These claims could not explain the mystery behind the so-called February revolution. Simon Dubnov (1860-1940), a known Zionist, openly admitted that the February revolution took place thanks to the freemasons' intrigues behind the scenes. (Alexander Braudo, "Notes and Recollections", Paris, 1937, p. 48.) The freemasons controlled all the political parties.
The Soviets (kahals) from the autumn of 1905 were re-established in connection with this conspiracy. They were supposed to represent the soldiers and workers. This was also a myth, since the freemason Nikolai Chkheidze became the chairman of the Petrograd Soviet. Alexander Kerensky was a member of the Petrograd "Workers' Council", which was a faithful replica of the kahal organisation in New York. He was also a member of the committee of the National Duma.
Similarities to the Deposition of the Shah
A similar Masonic plot with the aid of the Western financial elite led to the deposition of the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, as he himself revealed on Contadora Island, Panama, in the first television interview with him after his fall. The Shah said to the reporter David Frost (of the BBC):We have all the information... It occurred like a very well-planned conspiracy... they staked about 250 million dollars...
Wherever he (Khomeini) had been in Europe, he would probably have had the same possibilities and the same accomplices. I do not believe that he himself was in charge of the planning... Yazdi was an American citizen, Ghotbzadeh was expelled from Georgetown University because he couldn't keep up with his studies..."
David Frost: "So Khomeini might have received some kind of support from the West?"
The Shah: "How else could all these factors have been combined at the same time?"
(Translator's note: The above interview is a paraphrase of the original since it has been re-translated from Swedish.)
I must remark here that the Russian Tsar was deposed after the same pattern - everything pointed to an international conspiracy.
The American press painted a monstrous picture of the Tsar Nicholas II. That was why the American public was so happy with his deposition. The unfair propaganda continues to this day.
The most audacious lies came from the historian Hans Villius on the 1st of September 1991 in a Swedish television program about the "history" of the Soviet Union. He claimed that the revolution began as a result of the tsarist regime's bloody terror against the population. He never mentioned any numbers.
Every true historian knows that a total of 467 people (i.e. murderers) were executed in Russia between 1826 and 1904. (Professor Vittorio Strada's article "Death Penalties and the Russian Revolutions", Obozreniye, No. 14, p. 25, Paris, 1984.) This comes to 6 death sentences per year. Was this really terror?
How many were killed during the same period in the United States of America? How many Indians were eliminated during the same period? Here I shall just mention the massacre at Wounded Knee where government soldiers murdered three hundred unarmed Indians, including women and children, on the 29th of December 1890.
Hans Villius never mentioned the Bolsheviks' cold-blooded mass-murders, which amounted to 66 million in the beginning and later reached a total of 143 million, according to the English researcher Philipp van der Est. That, it seems, was not terror according to Villius.
Even the Bolsheviks called their own purge "the Red Terror". Hans Villius did everything in his power to twist the truth and thereby uphold the myths.
The Return of Lenin and Trotsky
The conspiracy continued. Trotsky was sent from New York with an American passport on March 26, 1917. Jacob Schiff began financing him in the spring of 1917. In this way the Bolsheviks received via Trotsky a total of 20 million dollars, according to Hillaire Belloc, Gary Allen and other historians. John Schiff also admitted in the New York Journal American on February 3, 1949 that his grandfather "sank about 20 million dollars for the final triumph of Bolshevism". Thus he spent millions of dollars to depose the Tsar and then laid out even more money to help the Bolsheviks to power...Now it was time for Lenin to return as well. When he first read in the Neue Zurcher Zeitung that the Tsar had been deposed, he thought it was German propaganda.
On the 31st of March the German vice-state secretary informed Ambassador Gisbert von Romberg in Bern with a cipher-telegram: "The Russian revolutionaries' journey through Germany should take place as soon as possible, since the Allies have already begun counter-actions in Switzerland. If possible, the negotiations should be speeded up!"
Count Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau (1869-1928) sent a strictly secret telegram from Copenhagen to the Ministry of the Interior in Berlin on April 2, 1917:
But in secret we should do everything to increase the antagonism between the moderate and extreme parties, since we are quite interested in the victory of the latter because the coup d'etat would then be unavoidable."
Lenin signalled to the German government on the 4th of April that he was ready to return to Russia. His journey was approved by Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg, who belonged to the Bethmann banking family in Frankfurt am Main, and by State Secretary Arthur Zimmermann. Then these men proceeded to organise the journey together with Count Brockdorff-Rantzau and Alexander Parvus.
They thought it best if Lenin travelled through Sweden, where he would be joined by their contact man, Jakub Furstenberg-Hanecki (Ganetsky).
(Antony Sutton, "Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution" (Morley, 1981, p. 40). Ganetsky was called "the hands and feet of the party".
On the 9th of April, Lenin and his group began their journey from Bern to Russia. Before they had left Zurich, they heard cries of: "German spies! Traitors!" from the platform.
The German General Staff could not imagine that the Bolsheviks would ever turn against Germany and Europe. The German Major General Max Hoffman later wrote: "We neither knew nor foresaw the danger to humanity from the consequences of this journey of the Bolsheviks to Russia." (Antony Sutton, "Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution", Morley, 1981, p. 40.)
According to the author Hans Bjorkegren, the carriage in which Lenin and his 32 companions travelled was not sealed, as another myth has it.
The German authorities had asked the "revolutionaries" not to leave the carriage, where two German officers, who went under the Russian names Rybakov and Yegorov, accompanied them. (Akim Arutiunov, "The Phenomenon Vladimir Ulyanov/Lenin", Moscow, 1992, p. 61.)
Lenin's company was to join together with Trotsky's in Petrograd and eventually begin a take-over of power from the Provisional Government together with other leading forces to introduce the Communist (i.e. Judaist) dictatorship.
The German Kaiser Wilhelm II learned about the operation when Lenin had already reached Russia. The Germans' motive was to obtain a separate peace treaty and later advantages in trade with Russia. Lenin only wanted a Communist dictatorship and the Russians' wealth. German patriots did not suspect that dark Illuminist forces were only using official Germany to camouflage their own activities...
Lenin's travelling companions were mostly Jewish extremists. 19 of them were Bolsheviks. Here I shall name only the most important among these: Nadezhda Krupskaya, Olga (Sarra) Ravich, Grigori Zinoviev (actually Ovsei Gershen Radomyslsky), his wife Slata Radomyslskaya, their eight-year-old son Stefan Radomyslsky, Moisei Kharitonov (Markovich, who became Petrograd's chief of militia), Grigori Sokolnikov (actually Brilliant, editor of Pravda and later People's Commissary for Banking Affairs), David Rosenblum (whom Stalin jailed in 1937, in Leningrad), Alexander Abramovich (who became an important functionary within Comintern), Grigori Usiyevich (actually Tinsky), Yelena Usiyevich-Kon (daughter of a well-known Jewish Bolshevik, Felix Kon, from Poland), Abram Skovno, Simon Scheineson, Georgi Safarov, Zalman Ryvkin, Dunya Pogovskaya (an activist within the Jewish Workers' Union Bund), her four-year-old son Ruvin, Ilya Miringov (Mariengof), Maria Miringova, Mikhail Goberman (who became a powerful functionary within Comintern), Meier Kivev Aizenud (Aizentuch), Shaya Abramovich, Fanya Grebelskaya (Bun), Lenin's lover Inessa Armand (who was born on the 16th of June, 1875, in Paris).
Lenin's journey was regarded as so important that the Crown Prince's train had to stop for two hours in Halle until Lenin's train had passed. A stop was made in Berlin where Lenin received new instructions from the German Foreign Ministry. The company met Ganetsky in Trelleborg (Sweden). When the group arrived in Malmo, Brockdorff-Rantzau immediately reported to Berlin.
Lenin arrived at Stockholm's Central Station just before ten o'clock in the morning on Friday the 13th of April 1917. Karl Radek (Tobiach Sobelsohn), another important freemason and "revolutionary", arrived together with him but remained in the Swedish capital to help Jakub Hanecki (Ftirstenberg). It was this same Hanecki (known as Ganetsky) who channelled the German money to the Bolsheviks in Petrograd via Nya Banken (the New Bank) in Stockholm and the freemason Olof Aschberg (Obadiah Asch).
Karl Radek, an Austrian citizen, showed his "gratitude" to the Germans by later taking part in terrorist activities against the German Kaiser and preparing a plot to depose him. MOPR or the Red Aid later gave Karl Radek the task of provoking the German workers to a "proletarian revolution". He was a member of the Central Committee. Stalin had him arrested in 1937. Radek readily gave evidence against other Bolsheviks but this did not save him.
Three new conspirators joined Lenin's group in Stockholm: Rakhil Skovno, Yuri Kos and Alexander Grakas.
The aim of the conspirators was to enforce Illuminist rule in Russia after the model of Weishaupt-Hess-Marx. There was a reserve plan for a Communist base in case the take-over failed. The Communists had chosen Sweden for this purpose, according to Solzhenitsyn's book "Lenin in Zurich" (Paris, 1975, p. 168).
The Swedish Social Democrats helped those Bolshevik criminals by all means possible. Lenin and his fellow criminals were allowed to use Sweden as their most important base for the planned state terrorism in Russia, thanks to the freemason and socialist leader Hjalmar Branting and the helpful attitude of the Swedish Social Democrats. (Dagens Nyheter, 5th of November 1985, p. 4.)
They also helped to organise the Bolsheviks' Fourth Party Congress in Folkets Hus (the Social Democrat centre) in Stockholm in April-May 1906. Branting gave the speech of welcome at the congress. Branting also knew about the financing of the Bolsheviks' activities ("Vem betalade ryska revolutionen?" / "Who Paid for the Russian Revolution?", Svenska Dagbladet, 31st October 1985).
Stockholm's socialist mayor Carl Lindhagen met Lenin and his companions on the platform at Stockholm's Central Station. Parvus had also travelled to Stockholm to meet Lenin, according to one source.
There was one socialist politician, Erik Palmstierna, who guessed how dangerous Lenin could become and therefore suggested organising a police provocation at the station and have Lenin shot in the resulting tumult. The others just laughed at him (Svenska Dagbladet, 21st October 1990). Palmstierna became minister for naval defence on the 19th of October 1917.
Lenin stayed just over eight hours in Stockholm. He spent most of that time at the Hotel Regina on Drottninggatan. He continued to Haparanda at 6:37 on the same evening. Before his departure, the Swedish socialists had time to buy a suit and the world-famous cap for him at PUB (a department store in Stockholm). (Aftonbladet, 28th August 1989.) At the same time Lenin met Hans Steinwachs, a representative of the German Foreign Ministry. Steinwachs was the chief of German espionage in Scandinavia, according to Hans Bjorkegren's book "Ryska posten" / "The Russian Post" (Stockholm, 1985, p. 264).
The Polish Jew Moisei (Mieczyslaw) Bronski-Warszawski, who travelled under a false name, was also among Lenin's companions. He was still in Bern on the 7th of April, but joined Lenin in Stockholm on the 13th April. The Swedish socialist Fredrik Strim, who was responsible for the reception of the conspirators, confirmed this.
Steinwachs sent the following telegram to Berlin on the 17th of April:
(Zeman, "Germany and the Revolution in Russia 1915-18: Documents from the Archives of the German Foreign Ministry", London, 1958, p. 51.)
Towards the end of April, Milyukov no longer wanted to be a member of this government and so he resigned.
The German government paid for the tickets for Lenin's group's journey from Bern to Stockholm. The German government, and not the General Staff, was behind Lenin's journey, as revealed by Nesta Webster and Kurt Kerlen in "Boche and Bolshevik" (p. 25). The government had been strongly influenced by the socialists.
The Russian Provisional Government paid for the tickets for the journey from Stockholm to Haparanda and from there to Petrograd. Lenin later claimed that he was not welcome in Russia and that he lacked a visa. He even asserted that the Provisional Government would have imprisoned him, since he travelled without permission. This is all just Soviet propaganda. The whole company was given a group visa by the Russian Consulate General in Stockholm (except for Fritz Platten, since he was not a Russian citizen). This visa is still preserved in the Helsinki City Archives, where it can be seen that it was first issued on the 13th of April 1917. Lenin and his 29 travelling companions are all on the list. Some (Karl Radek for instance) remained behind. Three new conspirators joined instead. This was revealed by Hans Bjorkegren in his book "The Russian Post" (Stockholm, 1985).
Lenin wanted to appear as an exceedingly poor revolutionary. That was why he began with his beggar antics in Switzerland, which he later continued in Sweden. Of course, he did not say a word about the fact that he had also begged for money from the Bolsheviks' secret fund in Stockholm.
He received up to 3000 crowns from this source, according to Hans Bjorkegren. Alexander Parvus had founded this fund by the aid of the banker Max Warburg.
I telephoned the headquarters of Svenska Handelsbanken (Swedish Bank of Commerce) on January 24, 1991 and asked how much 3000 crowns were worth in 1917. This money was equivalent to 56,250 crowns (approximately £5000) in 1991. 3000 crowns were nearly equivalent to two years of a worker's wages (3256 crowns). I must point out here that a worker with an annual income of 1628 crowns in 1917 could support his wife and children.
In 1991, the workers received an average of 120,000 crowns per year. It is impossible to support a wife and children with this wage without also relying on the wife's salary and various benefits (child benefit, housing benefit, etc). That is to say: 3000 crowns then might actually have been closer in value to 350,000 crowns in 2002.
Lenin was not content with this. In Haparanda he received a further 300 crowns (more than two months' wages for a worker) as a contribution from the Russian consul. Lenin confirmed this himself in a letter to a known Zionist conspirator, Alexander Shlyapnikov. (Hans Bjorkegren, "Ryska posten" / "The Russian Post", Stockholm, 1985, pp. 264-265.)
In 1913 the Swedish worker earned an average of 135 crowns per month (135 x 100 = 13 500 today, 1350 US dollars). Mikhail Goberman had scrounged together another 1000 Swiss francs. The Swiss socialists had, through Fritz Platten, donated a further 3000 Swiss francs to Lenin.
Platten, by the way, was in charge of solving all practical problems during the journey. The Bolsheviks of Petrograd sent another 500 roubles. Lenin sent begging-letters to Swedish socialists too, who managed to scrape together several hundred crowns. Those socialists had no idea that Lenin actually had plenty of money. At the end of March he had written to Inessa Armand: "There is even more money than I expected for the journey." Lenin could never get enough.
The trade unionist Fabian Mansson organised a collection among the members of parliament. Even right-wing politicians gave money to Lenin, since comrade Mansson had pointed out that the Bolsheviks would be in power in Russia as early as the next day. The Swedish Foreign Minister Arvid Lindman gave Lenin 100 crowns (a lot of money then). The Swedish refugee committee gave Lenin 3000 crowns as well.
A second class ticket from Stockholm to Haparanda only cost 30 crowns in 1917. Besides, the Russian government paid for all the tickets! In Finland, Lenin continued his journey to Petrograd, but now travelling third class so that the Russians receiving him would see how poor he was...
That was the way Lenin's journey to Russia was organised. He arrived at Petrograd's Finland station at 11:10 in the evening of the 16th of April.
The freemason Nikolai Chkheidze, who was the chairman of the Petrograd Soviet, came with flowers to meet him. Chkeidze even gave a speech of welcome. Stalin was not among those at the reception. Not one photograph confirms Stalin's presence, despite the fact that he later claimed to have been there. There was even an armoured car waiting there. Lenin jumped up onto the car and held an agitatory speech at once. Lenin was much worse at public speaking than Trotsky, according to the Swedish Communist Anton Nilson.
Lenin was later welcomed at the Winter Palace by a representative of the Provisional Government, the Minister for Employment Mikhail Skobelev, who was a Menshevik and a freemason.
In April 1917, there were still many British agents in Petrograd who provoked the soldiers to mutiny and gave them money. On the 7th of April, General Yanin received a complete report about the actions and hiding places of these British agents. This report is still extant.
In May, another still larger group of 200 "revolutionaries", led by the Menshevik L. Martov and Pavel Axelrod, arrived from Switzerland. Many others followed after. Some of those conspirators travelled on credit. The Board of Swedish National Railways desperately tried to collect the 30,000 crowns owed to them, but were just laughed at by the "revolutionaries", according to Hans Bjorkegren. They believed they were exercising their "revolutionary" right not to pay.
Thousands of Jewish conspirators came also from the United States. A total of 25,000 international "revolutionaries" arrived in Russia. Dr George A. Simons, the priest at the American Embassy, related the following about these events: "There were hundreds of agitators who had followed Trotsky from New York. We were surprised at the fact that the Jewish element dominated from the very beginning."
Lenin began publishing a large number of newspapers and periodicals, a total of 41, including 17 daily newspapers. The circulation of Pravda increased from 3000 copies to 300,000 in May 1917. It was given out free, also among the soldiers at the German front. The newspaper, which was financed by the Germans, propagated a separate peace with Germany.
The German Minister of Foreign Affairs, Richard von Kiihlmann, wrote to the Kaiser Wilhelm II on December 3, 1917: "It was not until the Bolsheviks had received from us a steady flow of funds through the various channels and under varying labels that they were in a position to be able to build up their organ Pravda, to conduct energetic propaganda and appreciably to extend the originally narrow base of their party." (Anthony Sutton, "Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution," p. 39.)
The Bolsheviks even bought a printing office for 260,000 roubles, according to the findings of the historian Dmitri Volkogonov. But the Bolsheviks remained unpopular despite their vast propaganda machine.
The United States Congress had declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917. Among the people who had worked hardest to draw America into the world war were the bankers George Blumenthal and Isaac Seligman, the industrialists Daniel Guggenheim and Adolf Lewisohn, as well as the rabbis David Philipson (1862-1949) and Stephen Samuel Wise.
The rabbi Isaac Wise (1819-1900), chairman of the B'nai B'rith lodge in Cincinnati, has explained:
(The Israelite of America, 3rd of August 1866.)
The freemason Winston Churchill emphasised that if the Americans had not entered the First World War, peace would have been made with Germany and the Russian Tsar would not have been deposed. Then the Bolsheviks would not have been able to reach power either.
(Social Justice Magazine, No 3, 1st of July 1939, p. 4.)
B'nai B'rith and the Illuminati wanted to create even greater chaos in Europe, which they succeeded in doing. At the international conference of Masonic Grand Masters in Interlaken, Switzerland, on the 25th of June 1916, Dr David promised that the Jews, after causing great bloodbaths of Aryans, will take control over the whole world. (Oleg Platonov, "The Secret History of Freemasonry", Moscow, 1996, p. 589.)
The Bolshevik slogans were: "Peace! Bread! Land!" and "All power to the Soviets!" The same slogans were used at the Jacobin coup in France in 1789, since the Jacobin slogan was: "All power to the bourgeoisie!"
The Bolsheviks could act freely. Lenin himself admitted after his arrival in Petrograd that Russia was the freest nation in the world. The Bolsheviks were unsuccessful at the beginning. The Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries, who supported the Provisional Government, dominated the Soviets.
Despite this, the German Minister of Foreign Affairs, Richard von Kiihlmann, reported to his ambassador in Bern: "Those who support Lenin's peace policy are growing in number. Pravda's circulation has increased to 300,000."
The Bolsheviks organised several large demonstrations in May and June. Comrade Alexander Kerensky, meanwhile, wanted to set up a Russian revolutionary army. Freemasonry was legalised in Russia on the 24th of June 1917. In the beginning of July, Trotsky officially went over to the Bolshevik Party, where he was immediately made one of the most important leaders.
Revelations in the Press
The Bolsheviks of the lower ranks were very eager to seize power as soon as possible. Trotsky and Lenin believed that the astrological time was not right yet! Some Bolshevik leaders, however, began acting on the 3rd (16th) of July. Trotsky agitated to restrain the Red Guards. He gave a speech before the Tauridian Palace where he said outright: "Go home! Calm down!"The situation exploded anyway on the 4th (17th) of July. Attempts at a coup d'etat were underway. At the same time, the Germans launched a new offensive at the front. Prince Lvov and his government were nearly ready to leave their posts. It was really too early. The freemasons made a desperate attempt to halt this development. They had sensitive material delivered to the Russian authorities. On the 4th (17th) of July, the French attache Pierre Laurent had visited Colonel Boris Nikitin, then chief of the Russian Secret Service. (H. Bjorkegren, "Ryska posten", Stockholm, 1985, p. 262.) He gave Nikitin copies of 29 telegrams from Lenin, Ganetsky, Kollontay, Sumenson, Kozlovsky and Zinoviev and three letters to Lenin.
All that material was very revealing. The information was immediately leaked to the newspapers by patriotic forces. Rumours that the press in Petrograd was going to publish revelatory articles on Lenin, Zinoviev and Trotsky began circulating on the same afternoon.
Zinoviev later claimed that Lenin had discussed the question of the take-over in the Tauridian Palace on the 3rd (16th) of July. This was incorrect, since Lenin was in Bonch-Bruyevich's villa in Finland then, and returned only on the 4th (17th) of July. (Mikhail Heller and Alexander Nekrich, "Utopia in Power", London, 1986, p. 30.)
The Bolshevik leaders were worried and began working more actively. No one had time for coup plans any longer. Stalin persuaded Nikolai Chekheidze to telephone the editorial staffs of the newspapers and prohibit the publication of those sensitive documents. Stalin understood as well as the other Bolshevik leaders that the disclosure of that information would damage the Bolsheviks also in the long term.
Even the Provisional Government wanted to sweep the whole business under the carpet at this point. They did not want to take any measures whatever.
There was one small newspaper, The Living Word, which ignored the prohibition and published the Social Revolutionaries Grigori Alexinsky's and Vasili Pankratov's article about the German funding of Lenin's party on the 5 th (18th) of July. That was another reason why Lenin began to hate the right wing faction of the Social Revolutionaries.
In their article, the authors presented various excerpts from those documents, which showed that the Bolshevik leader, Vladimir Lenin, had been given money for his agitatory campaign by the Germans through a certain Mr. Svensson who worked at the German Embassy in Stockholm.
Lenin had received money and instructions from reliable people like Jakub Furstenberg alias Yakov Ganetsky and Alexander Parvus in Stockholm and Ganetsky's relative, the Jewess Yevgenia (Dora) Sumenson (actually Simmons) in Petrograd. She worked at the Fabian Klingsland firm in Petrograd and had lived in Sweden and made business trips to Denmark during the war. She also worked with speculations on the stock market.
The German money was transferred from the German Imperial Bank in Berlin via Nya Banken in Stockholm to the Bank of Siberia in Petrograd.
All this according to Hans Bjorkegren. Another who received this German money was the Jewish Bolshevik lawyer Mieczyslaw Kozlowski from Poland. He was in constant contact with Alexander Parvus and Jakub Fiirstenberg.
German Imperial Bank had, according to order 7433 of the 2nd of March, opened accounts for Lenin, Trotsky, Ganetsky, Kollontay, Kozlovsky (Kozlowski), Sumenson and other important Bolsheviks. Not only Lenin was involved in shady financial transfers, but also Trotsky, Zinoviev, Sverdlov, Dzerzhinsky, Kollontay, Josef (Isidor) Steinberg, Volodarsky, Ganetsky, Kozlowski, Radek, Uritsky, Menzhinsky, Yoffe and a few others.
On the same day, the 5th (18th) of July, Pavel Pereverzev, the minister of justice, was made the official scapegoat for the fact that those secret documents had leaked to the press, and was forced to resign. It was claimed that the government first wanted a thorough investigation into the Bolsheviks' alleged high treason.
The Bolsheviks' premature attempt to take over power ended. It is explained in the collection "The History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union" (Moscow, 1959, p. 218) that the workers and soldiers had sufficient strength to overthrow the Provisional Government and seize power in July but that it was too early. Why it was too early was not explained. That was why the students were taught that what happened on the 3-4th (16-17th) of July was just a "peaceful July demonstration".
On the 6th (19th) of July, Lenin published a defensive article in the newspaper Listok Pravdy, where he angrily repudiated the accusations against him as a "rotten invention" of the bourgeoisie. Lenin averred never to have met Sumenson and to have nothing in common with Kozlowski and Furstenberg. Lenin was not convincing in his unashamedness, however, and his letters showed the opposite of what his article said. Nor could he explain where he obtained the money to give out 17 different daily newspapers, whose total circulation amounted to 1.4 million copies every week. (Vladimir Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 35, Moscow, p. 260.)
Trotsky tried to maintain that the money came from the workers. But could the workers really collect hundreds of thousands of roubles every week just to support the Bolsheviks when there were other labour parties, which were more popular than they were? Trotsky convinced no one with his blatant lies.
On the 6th (19th) of July, other newspapers also began publishing telegrams reporting transfers of German money to the Bolsheviks in Petrograd under various innocent pretexts. (David Shub, "Russian Political Heritage", New York, 1969.)
In Lenin's official biography (p. 177), all these accusations were regarded as libel on the part of the provocateurs. On the evening of the 6th (19th) of July in Margarita Fofanova's flat, Lenin said to Stalin: "If the least fact in connection with the money transfers is confirmed, it would be exceedingly naive to believe that we should be able to avoid death sentences." (Akim Arutiunov, "The Phenomenon Vladimir Ulyanov /Lenin", Moscow, 1992, p. 73.) He might have believed so, but he was wrong.
The government knew that Lenin had sent a letter to Ganetsky and Radek in Stockholm on the 12th (25th) of April 1917, in which he told them: "I have received the money from you!" That the Provisional Government knew about these shady affairs and had access to Lenin's secret letters is proved in the periodical Proletarskaya Revolyutsya (The Proletarian Revolution) which, in the autumn of 1923, published several of Lenin's strictly secret letters. He had sent one of those letters from Petrograd to Ganetsky in Stockholm on April 21st (4th of May). He wrote:
"The money (two thousand) from Kozlowski got here." The editorial staff had obtained the letters from the Archive of the Revolution in Petrograd.
The chief of that archive, N. Sergievsky, related that the letters had been found in the archives of the Provisional Government's Department of Justice.
Thus the Provisional Government copied all of Lenin's letters, knew about his illegal activities and were even aware that Lenin had contact with a German spy, Georg Slarz, but took no measures whatever. On the contrary, they connived with the Bolsheviks. N. Sergievsky, who sent those copies to the periodical Proletarskaya Revolyutsya without knowing what the letters contained, disappeared without trace in 1926. (Akim Arutiunov, "The Phenomenon Vladimir Ulyanov/Lenin", Moscow, 1992, p. 73.)
The most sensational thing was that the Provisional Government's agent in Stockholm helped the Bolsheviks smuggle some of the German money into Petrograd in a courier's bag. (H. Bjorkegren, "Ryska posten", Stockholm, 1985, p. 137.) This was evident from Lenin's correspondence with Ganetsky-Fiirstenberg. All this was extremely embarrassing for the Provisional Government.
Ganetsky-Fiirstenberg was on his way to Petrograd from Stockholm with important party documents just before the revelations. He learned about the scandal in Haparanda and cancelled his journey. He stayed in Haparanda at first, then returned to Stockholm to be on the safe side. His representative, Solomon Chakowicz, a Polish Jew, stayed in Haparanda with his luggage. The French military attache Pierre Laurent sent an agent to Haparanda to steal Furstenberg's luggage. Whether he was successful has not yet been revealed.
Parvus rapidly disappeared from Copenhagen and turned up again in Switzerland in the wake of this scandal. He never answered Radek's and Furstenberg's telegrams where they asked him to deny the accusations. He preferred to keep quiet.
Of course, Parvus was scared. Perhaps he feared that information about his role in the February coup would be revealed in connection with the money transfers. Later, however, he claimed that he had pulled many of the strings whilst living at Stureplan in Central Stockholm and that the troubles had been provoked.
Because of the concrete proof against Lenin, the chief prosecutor had no other choice but to begin an investigation into his activity. During the investigation it was revealed that there were 180,000 roubles on Yevgenia Sumenson's bank account and that a further 750,000 had been successively transferred during a period of six months from Nya Banken in Stockholm. (A. Karayev, "Lenin".) A telegram from Sumenson read:
"Have Nya Banken send a further 100,000." She had earlier received a total of just over two million. A lot more money had been transferred to the lawyer Kozlowski's account - 1.3 million a month.
There was no longer any choice - Lenin was accused of treason to his fatherland and espionage. On the 7th (20th) of July the Provisional Government wrote an order of arrest for Lenin, Grigori Zinoviev and Leon Kamenev (Rosenfeld). The latter was editor-in-chief of Pravda (Truth). A writ was also issued. The bourgeois as well as the social revolutionary newspapers demanded that the accusations against Lenin should be tried in court. At the same time, Alexander Parvus' name also appeared in the press.
There were some Bolsheviks who thought Lenin could clear his name from these serious accusations before a court and therefore wanted to see him tried. Stalin and Ordzhonikidze were decidedly against this.
The minister for war and naval affairs, Alexander Kerensky (1881-1970), stepped forward on the 8th (21st) of July (he had just visited the front) and took over the post of prime minister to resolve this conflict with "peaceful means", as the phrase went.
President Thomas Woodrow Wilson (a freemason) immediately began praising Kerensky as an eminent statesman and a worthy member of the Democratic Union of Honour. At the same time, Wilson blocked all attempts at peace negotiations with Germany.
On the 9th (22nd) of July at 11 o'clock in the evening Lenin left Petrograd together with Zinoviev. He wanted to avoid the risk of being revealed as a German agent. Lenin had stayed in Maria Sulimova's flat and not with Sergei Alliluyev, as was officially claimed. Joseph Stalin and Sergei Alliluyev followed Lenin out of town. At first he stayed in Sestroretsk and later in Razliv. One month later, he travelled to Jalkala (Finland) and finally ended up in Helsinki.
The most remarkable and puzzling thing was that no one, despite the order of arrest, looked for Lenin. No one wanted to arrest him, despite the fact that the Soviet propaganda later claimed the opposite. Alexander Parvus, meanwhile, began publishing spiteful attacks against Alexander Kerensky in the German press. He also sabotaged any possibility of peace.
Lenin's, Zinoviev's and Kamenev's denials were repeated in Maxim Gorky's paper Novaya Zhizn on the 1 lth (24th) of July.
On the 13th (26th) of July, the Petrograd Soviet demanded that Lenin and Zinoviev should be put on trial. Lenin continued to ignore those demands since he knew very well what might be revealed during a trial.
The Bolshevik and freemason Nikolai Sukhanov (actually Gimmel) maintained, like many of his comrades, that Lenin was innocent and had nothing to fear from a possible trial. Lenin was afraid of such an investigation.
In September 1991, the lawyers' union in St. Petersburg demanded that the accusations against Lenin should be investigated after the event. They wanted to put him on trial posthumously.
Pavel Milyukov's bourgeois newspaper Rech (Speech) also accused Leon Trotsky of having received 10,000 dollars for propaganda. That was why Trotsky called July 1917 "the month of the greatest libel in the history of the world".
The pressure of public opinion led to the arrest of Leon Trotsky and Anatoli Lunacharsky (actually Bailikh-Mandelstam) on August 5th. The authorities also arrested Alexandra Kollontay (1872-1952). Finally, even Mieczyslaw Kozlowski, Leon Kamenev and Yevgenia (Dora) Sumenson were arrested. This was only done to calm the public. All those people were accused of having contacts with Alexander Parvus who was regarded as an agent of the German Kaiser.
The man in charge of the investigation, Alexandrov, collected plenty of material, filling a total of 24 volumes. They were kept in a special archive and made available to historians only after the fall of Communism. The authorities never got any further than this, despite having all the evidence they needed that the accused persons had collaborated with the enemy during wartime. This evidence would have been enough to execute all those involved. But the authorities took no further action.
The 6th Bolshevik Congress began on the 26th of July (8th August).
Some of the delegates (Joseph Stalin, Sergo Ordzhonikidze, Nikolai Skrypnik, Nikolai Bukharin) were against Lenin and Zinoviev appearing voluntarily in court. V. Volodarsky was among those who wanted Lenin put on trial. Lenin never forgot this and Volodarsky was assassinated on June 20th, 1918, less than a year later. Lenin decided to revenge himself upon Volodarsky immediately upon hearing that he had raked together much too big a fortune, which should have been the property of the Party leadership. Lenin had himself emphasised that the Bolsheviks must never forget anything.
Kerensky began releasing arrested Bolsheviks as early as the 17th of August. Kamenev was the first to be set free.
Kornilov's Revolt
The Supreme Commander of the Russian army, General Lavr Kornilov (1870-1918), no longer wanted to take part in the shady game of the revolutionary freemasons. He broke away from them and began preparations in Mogilev to overthrow Kerensky's government. Kornilov understood that those left-wing ministers, who for many years had been shouting that they could do better than the Tsar's ministers were actually perfectly ignorant people.According to the prevailing myth, the February revolution was a very positive event. In reality, this coup d'etat led only to anarchy, as the writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn emphasised in a BBC interview.
On the 19th of August (1st September), Kornilov ordered his Cossacks to attack Petrograd. On the 25th of August (7th September) Kornilov said to his chief of staff: "It is time to hang the Germans' supporters and spies led by Lenin. And we must destroy the Soviets so that they can never assemble again!"
On the same day he sent General Alexander Krymov's troops towards Petrograd with orders to hang all soviet members. (John Shelton Curtiss, "The Russian Revolution of 1917", New York, 1957, p. 50.)
In his proclamation on August 26th (September 8th), (Novoye Vremya, 11th of September 1917), Kornilov accused the Provisional Government of co-operating with the Germans to undermine the state and army. He wanted to dissolve the Soviets and demanded that Kerensky should step down and give the power up to him. Kornilov understood that the Bolsheviks were the greatest danger to Russia. That was why he wanted them all imprisoned.
Kerensky knew he had been exposed. His game was over. So he continued releasing imprisoned Bolsheviks. Kozlowski was also set free. He worked as a Chekist after the Bolsheviks' take-over of power.
Kerensky was seized with panic and declared on the 27th of August (September 9th) that Komilov was a mutineer and officially deprived him of his command. Kerensky turned to the Bolsheviks for help against Komilov to salvage whatever he could.
All the Bolsheviks were, as if by magic, immediately cleared of all charges and presented as the best possible defenders of democracy. Had not Trotsky said in the United States that power should be given to whoever was best able to develop democracy in Russia? The Bolsheviks, however, did everything they could to keep Kerensky in power. It was still too early for them to take over. The Bolsheviks had completely "forgotten" Lenin's slogan: "No support for the Provisional Government!" ("The Shorter Biography of Lenin", Moscow, 1955, p. 168.)
The Bolsheviks began organising political strikes. They encouraged the workers and soldiers to defend the government. On the 27th of August the socialists founded a Central Committee against the counter-revolution together with the Bolsheviks. They ordered thousands of sailors from Kronstadt to Petrograd. The workers of Petrograd were forcibly mobilised. The Bolsheviks threatened to kill them if they did not obey. The Red Guards were immediately given back the weapons, which had been confiscated during the fierce July days.
The Soviets began arresting people, primarily those who were suspected of sympathising with Komilov. Thousands of officers were arrested in this way. A total of 7000 politically "suspect" people were arrested. (John Shelton Curtiss, "The Russian Revolution of 1917", New York, 1957, p. 53.) The railwaymen were also mobilised and began sabotaging the railways. Thus Komilov's elite troops were halted and surrounded.
International freemasonry suddenly began using enormous resources to halt Komilov, since the appearance of his revolt on the political scene had not been in the manuscript; he had to be removed by any means possible, including guile and violence. He was depicted as the worst thing that ever happened to Russia. Myths about him continue to be spread to this day. It is even claimed that he was ignorant of politics.
The freemasons began a huge propaganda campaign among Komilov's soldiers who were thoroughly scared and confused. General Alexander Krymov (a freemason) was invited to negotiations with Kerensky. I do not know what they threatened Krymov with, but upon leaving this meeting he shot himself (if it was really he who held the weapon).
The freemasons succeeded with their combined efforts in stopping Kornilov's national troops barely a week later, on the 30th of August (12th September).
The left-wing leaders have always regarded right-wing national patriots as the biggest threat to their socialist world-view. Kornilov was arrested on the 1st (14th) of September but later managed to escape. The Bolsheviks immediately took the initiative in the Soviets. On the same day Kornilov was arrested, they gained a majority in the Petrograd Soviet in the local elections. They became dominant in Moscow on the 8th (21st) of September.
Trotsky was also released from prison on the 4th (17th) of September. Nobody wanted to remember anything about the July scandal any longer.
Now the time was ripe to prepare a quiet, peaceful transfer of power. The suitable astrological time for the seizure of power had been calculated in advance.
The Take-Over of Power
To confuse and to camouflage their Illuminist order in Russia, the Bolshevik leadership intended to call the future regime the Soviet (i.e. Kahal) regime.On September 21st, 1917, Jakub Furstenberg sent a telegram from Stockholm to Raphael Scholan (Shaumann) in Haparanda (it is preserved in the American National Archives):
Fiirstenberg."
Meanwhile, the United States demanded ever larger contributions to the war from Kerensky. The Provisional Government reluctantly complied.
The minister for war affairs, Alexander Verkhovsky, resigned in protest. It is interesting to note that the American demands ceased immediately after the Bolsheviks had seized power.
I must point out here that, according to Antony Sutton, different documents in the archives of the American State Department prove that David Francis, the American ambassador in Moscow, was kept well-informed about the Bolsheviks' plans. The White House knew at least six weeks in advance when the Bolsheviks would take over power. That event had been appointed to take place on a date, which happened to coincide with Trotsky's birthday. So, those plans were known in the United States as early as the 13th (26th) September 1917.
The president of the United States Thomas Woodrow Wilson knew in advance that the Bolshevik take-over would prolong the world war. But he did nothing to stop their plans. On the contrary, he did everything in his power to aid them. The United States of America was the only nation to make a huge profit on the war. All the other warring powers lost gigantic sums and came to owe the United States a total of 14 billion dollars. It has been calculated that the international financial elite made a total of 208 billion dollars on the war.
The British government also knew about the Bolshevik plans, since they also recommended that their subjects leave Moscow at least six weeks before the take-over. (Antony C. Sutton, "Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution", Morley, 1981, p. 45.) So it appears both London and Washington knew whom they were dealing with.
The 8th of November came ever closer and the Bolsheviks did everything in their power to spread apathy among the workers and soldiers, which they later intended to exploit. They also tried to tempt people with the magic word: "Peace!", which no longer felt so treasonable.
The Bolshevik Party was not very large at this point. Furthermore, it had an Illuminist core of 4000 members who were most active.
Meanwhile, the circulation of Pravda decreased from 220,000 to 85,000 copies.
According to Margarita Fofanova, Lenin returned to Petrograd on the 5th and not the 20th of October, as officially claimed. He stayed with Fofanova until the take-over. The authorities knew perfectly well that Lenin was in Petrograd. Lenin's sister Maria confirmed this to an official.
The Provisional Government did not in any way try to pursue or arrest Lenin.
The Bolshevik plans to seize power were no secret. The general public was not ignorant about them and least of all the Provisional Government.
Zinoviev and Kamenev wrote quite openly of their plans in the newspaper Novaya Zhizn on the 31st of October. Lenin had also spoken publicly of those plans on a number of occasions. The historian E. M. Halliday admitted in his book "Russia in Revolution" (Malmo, 1968, p. 114) that the authorities knew of the Bolshevik plans in detail. So why, unless they were involved in the conspiracy, did they do nothing about it?
For several historians, however, the mystery was not so much the fact that the Bolsheviks had officially discussed their take-over plans in the press, but that the Provisional Government took no steps to protect itself; in fact it did quite the opposite. Prime Minister Alexander Kerensky refused to order special troops to Petrograd, when this was suggested.
(Mikhail Heller and Alexander Nekrich, "Utopia in Power", London, 1986, p. 37.)
It is of course a fabrication that the leading Bolsheviks gathered on the 23rd of October (5th of November) in Nikolai Sukhanov's (Gimmel's) flat and only then decided to organise the assault on the Winter Palace. Any other Bolshevik leaders but Lenin and Trotsky would have said that armed action was completely unnecessary, since they would gain power at the Second Soviet Congress on the 25th October (7th of November) anyway.
This seems to have been a later invention since Trotsky had already formed a military revolutionary committee on the 12th (25th) of October.
The power was transferred to this organ in secret on the 21 st of October (3rd of November). (Heller and Nekrich, "Utopia in Power", London, 1986, p. 38.) All the available facts today suggest an organised plot and not any kind of spontaneous action.
Lenin was not seen between the 2nd and 7th of November. He was not needed. It was Trotsky who organised everything. Lenin disappeared from Fofanova's flat in the late evenings. Only Stalin knew anything about Lenin's mysterious disappearances. Lenin was not at Fofanova's on the evening of the 24th of October (6th of November). Neither was he in the Soviet building in the Smolny palace. This was confirmed in the book "About Nadezhda Krupskaya", published in 1988 in Moscow. Nadezhda had come from Smolny to Fofanova's flat to look for Lenin. But he was not there. The historians Heller and Nekrich came to the same conclusion:
Lenin was not even in Smolny in the late evening of the 6th of November.
According to other sources, he turned up only on the 7th of November. He had taken a tram to Smolny. Lenin said to Trotsky in German: "Es schwindelt!" (I'm dizzy!). He was in control!
Lenin immediately began threatening with executions if he was not completely obeyed. But it was still Trotsky who led the show.
The Soviet Congress, which had taken up residence in the Smolny Girls' School, was led by Fiodor Dan (actually Gurvich, 1871-1947), one of the Menshevik leaders. The conspirators announced already at 10:40 in the morning of the 7th of November that the Provisional Government had been overthrown and the power seized by the Soviets.
The Soviet Congress accepted the motion to form a new government - the Council of People's Commissaries (Sovnarkom). The suggestion received 390 votes out of 650. The government was to be exclusively composed of Bolsheviks with Lenin at the head. The leader of the Mensheviks, L. Martov, left the congress together with the other members of his party.
It was actually the military revolutionary committee who had seized the power. The Bolsheviks modelled it on the revolutionary committees the Jacobins created during the so-called French Revolution. The committee in Petrograd consisted of 18 Commissars. Most of them were either Jews or married to Jewesses.
The chairman was Leon Trotsky (Jew). Other members were:
- Vladimir Ulyanov-Lenin (half-Jew),
- Adolf Yoffe (Jew),
- Josef Unschlicht (Jew),
- Gleb Boky (Jew),
- Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko (Jew),
- Konstantin Mekhonoshin (Jew),
- Mikhail Lashevich (Jew),
- Felix Dzerzhinsky (Rufin, Jew),
- P. Lazimir (Jew),
- A. Sadovsky (Jew),
- Pavel Dybenko (married to the Jewess Alexandra Kollontay),
- Nikolai Podvoisky,
- Vyacheslav Molotov (actually Skryabin),
- Vladimir Nevsky (Feodosi Krivobokov),
- Andrei Bubnov and Nikolai Skrypnik (Jew).
Something inexplicable happened at this point: in fact - nothing at all happened on the afternoon of the 7th of November. The historians cannot understand why the Winter Palace was not taken at once. The Soviet Congress also paused a while. Trotsky went into another room to rest. It was officially claimed that Lenin was in the building too, and went to sleep in another room in the afternoon.
At this time Lenin seemed to be but Trotsky's bloodhound. At the Soviet Congress, only Trotsky was seen as he now and then came out to speak with some members. Lenin was nowhere to be seen. He only sent a few notes to Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko, Nikolai Podvoisky and some of the others at the congress. (Sergei Melgunov, "How the Bolsheviks Seized Power", Paris, 1953.)
According to the myth, about 5000 sailors had already gathered around the Winter Palace to prepare the storming early in the morning of the 25th October (7th of November).
In actual fact, this building was taken over by a few hundred "revolutionaries", including 50 Red Guards, who calmly just marched straight into the palace.
What happened to all of those tens of thousands of "revolutionary soldiers" who are so warmly spoken of in the history books? This was just another fabrication, for the Winter Palace was never stormed. It was not necessary. But to take over the seat of power at a carefully calculated point in time was a symbolic act with astrological connotations for Lenin and Trotsky.
That was why Trotsky still wanted to gather as many people as possible. 235 workers were brought from the Baltic Dockyard. Only 80 were fetched from the Putilov Factory, despite 1500 Red Guards having been officially registered there. A total of 26,000 worked there. All the important sites in the city were taken over by a few thousand "revolutionaries"...
The first Red Guards gathered by the Winter Palace only at around 4:30 in the afternoon, according to the exiled Russian historian Sergei Melgunov. The chief of the Red Guards, Vladimir Nevsky (who later became people's commissary for communications), received orders to wait. At around six o'clock, the principal of the Artillery Academy in Mikhailovsk ordered his cadets to leave the Winter Palace. The Cossacks also left.
(Sergei Melgunov, "How the Bolsheviks Seized Power", Paris, 1953, p. 119.) Eventually only two companies of the women's battalion and 40 disabled soldiers remained. This cannot be explained in any other way than that the Provisional Government did everything in its power to hand the Winter Palace over to the Bolsheviks as peacefully as possible. The Provisional Government no longer held any power. It was all just a big show for the public.
The theatres held their performances, the restaurants stayed open.
Nobody noticed that anything strange was going on. The bridge watchmen had no idea about the real situation, either. Lenin and Trotsky, wishing to be on the safe side by securing all the transport routes between the different areas of the city, had bribed all the bridge watchmen.
Time passed and still nothing happened. Everybody waited. According to the myth, the Bolsheviks had issued an ultimatum to the Provisional Government, which refused to answer. But how could they issue an ultimatum to a government, which already on the 3rd of November had voluntarily handed over power to the military revolutionary committee? Besides, Trotsky had confirmed at 2:35 in the afternoon of the 7th of November that the Provisional Government no longer existed.
At 10 o'clock the Soviet Congress had proclaimed: "Government power lies with the Military Revolutionary Committee!"
Why it was necessary for Trotsky to put up a show will soon be evident to the observant reader. Trotsky wanted the whole spectacle to appear more dramatic than it actually was. For this reason, he had a number of shells fired from the Peter-Paul Fort while trams continued to roll over the Troitsky Bridge, according to the British ambassador Sir George Buchanan (who, by the way, was involved in the deposition of the Tsar).
The remarkable thing was that those shells never hit the Winter Palace. The official explanation was that they were aimed too badly. But why could the Bolsheviks not find anyone among all those thousands of "revolutionary soldiers" who could aim properly?
It appears that those who fired the shells suddenly lost their ability to aim straight. All those explosions only managed to break one single window. Why were precisely 35 shells fired? Did that number have some Cabbalistic meaning?
The Red Guards waited for a while outside the Winter Palace despite the absence of guards at the side-door, according to Mikhail Heller and Alexander Nekrich ("Utopia in Power", London, 1986, p. 41). Neither did the Petrograd Garrison take any action against the Bolsheviks. They just watched the show.
The Red Guards walked around in the city and coerced a few sailors into following them to the Winter Palace, including Indrikis Ruckulis, who was a 27-year-old Latvian officer from Kronstadt and the commander of a group of sailors. He was threatened with death when he refused to accompany the Red Guards. He asserted that no single shell was fired from the armoured cruiser Aurora to give the signal for the storming, as was later claimed. (Expressen, the 17th of October 1984.) This was another myth.
There was no storming of the Winter Palace. Everything proceeded calmly. No blood was spilled. The Red Guards just waited until it was time to march in. They waited until 1:30 in the morning, according to Indrikis Ruckulis and several other sources. They opened fire for fifteen minutes for the sake of appearances. Nobody was hurt during this "battle", according to a young Marxist, Uralov, who was there. There was nobody to hurt. The Bolsheviks' fire was never answered.
The Red Guards and sailors then walked through side doors into the Winter Palace, according to the historians Mikhail Heller and Alexander Nekrich, who had found testimonies relating this. The remaining members of the women's battalion made no resistance, but "capitulated immediately".
When the Bolsheviks had coolly walked in through the unguarded entrances, they strolled about in the halls and corridors and greeted the "defenders", who did not resist, in a friendly manner (E. M. Halliday, "Russia in Revolution", Malmo, 1968, p. 120). Even E. M. Halliday confirms that there was never a battle. Only in Moscow was any kind of resistance offered. The Kremlin was fired upon until three in the morning, despite the fact that the cadets had left the building by 7 o'clock on the previous evening.
Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko (1883-1937), who was a comrade of Trotsky, had been given the task of removing the Provisional Government.
Here something extremely puzzling occurred. Radio Russia related this on the 12th of August 1991 at two in the afternoon.
Antonov-Ovseyenko and his Red Guards reached the Malachite Hall just before two o'clock and waited behind a door leading to the council chamber of the Provisional Government. The government (without Kerensky) had, against all reason, gathered there. Why?
Antonov-Ovseyenko just stood looking at the clock. Red Guards and sailors also stood waiting for Antonov-Ovseyenko's signal. They waited there for about ten minutes. He later sent a telegram to Lenin: "The Winter Palace was taken over at 2:04."
At 2:10 Antonov-Ovseyenko said: "It is time!" ("Para!") to the Red Guards. He opened the door and said something very cryptic: "Gentlemen! Your time is up!"
We may presume that the Bolsheviks officially took over on the 26th October (8th of November) 1917 at 2:04 in the morning. A closer astrological investigation reveals that the sun was just then in the precise centre of the sign of Scorpio (14°58').
North 59°55', East 30°15' - Greenwich mean time, 7th November 1917, 11:02:44 P.M.
In the horoscope of the Soviet regime, MC (Medium Coeli = the zenith) lay 4°28' in Gemini (which stands for power) - an aspect which was favourable to the seizure of power. This horoscope was the worst possible for the subjects of the Soviet Union. It shows that everything was based upon deceit. Only technical development was favoured, spiritual values were entirely rejected. Only the terrorist power-mongers were at an advantage.
According to its horoscope, the Soviet regime brought nothing good at all into the world. People should have been wary of such a deadly power. It brought only enormous problems and catastrophes. The Swedish astrologer Anders Ekstrom in Skyttorp confirms this interpretation.
All this goes to show that the Bolshevik freemasons were well-versed in the secrets of astrology. Their most important astrologer was the Jewish Bolshevik Lev Karakhan (Karakhanyan), later vice people's commissary for foreign affairs. To later exclude others from similar research, the Bolsheviks immediately declared that astrology was mere bourgeois nonsense and superstition. A very clever move. Russian and Polish Jews also founded the state of Israel. If we investigate Israel's horoscope, we see that the most suitable time had also been calculated there. The result was the best possible. In this way, they favoured their own at 4:37 in the afternoon of the 14th of May 1948...
The fact that Antonov-Ovseyenko waited until 2:10 favoured only the new regime. 2:10, when the members of the Provisional Government were taken away, was presumably a key time. (Nicholas Campion, "The Book of World Horoscopes", Wellingborough, 1988, p. 280.)
Lenin also claimed this. Trotsky had his 38th birthday on the 26th October (8th of November) 1917, and the whole spectacle became his birthday party as well as the beginning of a new epoch. (The phases of the moon are repeated every 19th year.) Scorpio is the eighth sign of the zodiac - the sign of crime and death.
Certain days had a special significance for the Bolshevik leadership.
Why else conceal Lenin's true date of birth? I should like to point out here that the Soviet army did everything in its power to take Berlin on May 1st, 1945 so that the red flag of the Illuminati could be hoisted over the city on that very day.
It is obvious that the official time (8th of November) was extremely important to the conspirators. Had not Kerensky already relinquished power to the Bolshevik elite, without the public at large hearing anything about it, on the 3rd of November (21st of October)? To mislead their subjects, the Bolsheviks began officially celebrating the revolution on November 7th.
That elite who actually became a secret red transitional government were responsible for the show. Those ten men, of whom at least half were secret freemasons, made up the Politburo and the Military Revolutionary Committee, which had been founded on the 16th (29th) of October - Yahweh's doomsday.
They were:
- Vladimir Lenin (half-Jew),
- Leon Trotsky (Jew),
- Grigori Zinoviev (Jew),
- Leon Kamenev (Jew),
- Grigori Sokolnikov (Jew),
- Yakov Sverdlov (Jew),
- Joseph Stalin (half-Jew),
- Felix Dzerzhinsky (Jew),
- Moisei Uritsky (Jew) and
- Andrei Bubnov (Russian).
Not one single historian has been able to explain logically why the Bolsheviks waited on the evening of the 7th of November and did not take the Winter Palace at once. The only reason that any historian has come up with is that the Bolshevik leadership lacked resolution on that evening.
The reader may decide whether to accept this explanation or not.
The next question is: why did the Provisional Government give up voluntarily and so easily? Trotsky tried to explain this by saying that the Provisional Government wanted to avoid bloodshed. Trotsky was hardly a reliable man. He simply wanted to conceal that the Masonic brothers had made up certain deals among themselves.
I must mention here that there was a mysterious figure who represented the Bolshevik freemasons but took part in the meeting of the Provisional Government. His name was Yuri Steklov (actually Nakhamkis) and was the agent of the Bolshevik Central Committee. His behaviour made it seem as if it was he who decided how long the Provisional Government was allowed to act and remain in power. It was as if he alone acknowledged and allowed the very existence of the Provisional Government. He acted as if he were in charge of seeing that the government did not overstep its authority and mandate. (Vladimir Nabokov, "The Provisional Government and the Bolshevik Coup", London, 1988, p. 116.) Yuri Steklov was a freemason of the 32nd degree and Kerensky's son-in-law.
The ungrateful Lenin showed appreciation only to his Masonic masters in Paris, who had helped him into power. In 1919, he sent enormous amounts of money to the Masonic order Grand Orient de France, to be used for the renovation of their palatial headquarters in Paris, propaganda and other purposes. Meanwhile, millions of Russians were starving to death. (Oleg Platonov, "Russia's Crown of Thorns: The History of the Russian People in the Twentieth Century", Moscow, 1997, p. 557.)
It became Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko's task to tell the Provisional Government that their time was up. The mob who, somewhat later than the Red Guards, entered the Winter Palace, began plundering and destroying the furniture. The eyes of the portraits were cut out, valuable books and icons were thrown on the floor and trampled on. They also began to rape women.
According to yet another myth in the huge Bolshevik repertoire, all the ministers (except Kerensky) were arrested and sentenced to imprisonment, but there are names among them who later turned up in the Bolshevik administration. For instance, the freemason and former minister of communications, Nikolai Nekrasov, became a bureaucrat in the Cooperative Central Union in 1920. (Professor N. Pervushin's article "The Russian Freemasons and the Revolution" in the newspaper Novoye Russkoye Slovo, New York, August 1, 1986, p. 6.)
Even the Greater Soviet Encyclopaedia (Vol. 56, Moscow, 1936, p. 301) confirmed that Kerensky's minister of the interior, Sergei Urusov, later worked in the Soviet National Bank. He was still the emissary of the French freemasons.
The world is truly puzzling and the official history contains so many incredible fairy tales for adults that "A Thousand and One Nights" pales in comparison.
According to the official Bolshevik version, Kerensky managed to escape to Gachino near Petrograd wearing a woman's clothing, whereupon he went on to Pskov. Nothing more. Kerensky claimed in his memoirs that he put on a sailor's uniform and escaped to Gachino where he wanted to organise a resistance but failed, since the troops went away (!?).
The historians Nesta Webster and Kurt Kerlen, however, have found some revealing information, which they published in their book "Boche and Bolshevik" (New York, 1923, p. 19). According to this version, Lenin and Trotsky let Kerensky "disappear" in recognition of his contributions when he protected them from the public in July 1917.
It was also Kerensky who saw that the railway tickets for Lenin's and his group's journey from Stockholm to Petrograd was paid for. And finally, he left the power in their hands. According to the myth, Kerensky was opposed to the Communists. He was actually the Grand Secretary of the Grand Orient in Russia. Lenin and Trotsky supplied him with false documents and a large amount of money and had him escorted to Murmansk, which had been occupied by the British.
Kerensky was received as a "White" refugee in Murmansk. He boarded an Italian steamboat and sailed to England, according to documents, which have been preserved in London. Kerensky later lived in Berlin, Paris and California as a wealthy man. He died in New York on the 12th of June 1970.
Even the great falsifier of history E. M. Halliday admitted in his book "Russia in Revolution" (Malmo, 1968, p. 117) that Kerensky left the Winter Palace and Petrograd on the morning of November 7th in an automobile, which was placed at his disposal by the American Embassy. The car carried an American flag.
So now we know how he got to Murmansk and from there to England.
This must have been planned well before the Bolshevik take-over. He had time enough for this but not enough to call on special troops to defend Petrograd. Was this not most peculiar?
All this forces an independently thinking person to wonder whether the Provisional Government did not actually prepare for the coming terror of the Bolsheviks. Why else did the United States of America and Great Britain order their people to leave Russia in good time before the transfer of power? The Bolsheviks were then officially just as democratic as Kerensky and his lackeys.
What happened in February (March) 1917 was not a revolution, but a coup d'etat organised from without. The Bolsheviks themselves, however, did not carry out a coup d'etat in October (November) 1917, as we have learned in the West, but simply took over power. It was an internationally controlled conspiracy. If this was not the case, then a great number of important facts cannot be explained; instead, everything becomes dim and incomprehensible. If we assume that it really was a planned conspiracy, then all those strange events, which I described earlier, immediately have a clear explanation.
The Soviet-Estonian Encyclopaedia maintained that the very fact that Marxism was introduced in Russia proves that it is a true ideology. No other evidence was necessary. Lenin said after the take-over: "We shall now build the socialist order." Trotsky corrected him: "We must establish a socialist dictatorship."
The Jewish author Alexander Zinoviev said in an interview in the spring of 1984 that "the Soviet regime is eternal, the Soviet society cannot be destroyed even in a thousand years". He stressed to the interviewer, George Urban: "The Soviet system will remain until the end of human history." Not even Trotsky and Lenin could believe that.
The astrologer E. H. Troinsky calculated in 1956 that the Soviet state would begin falling apart after 72 years and 7 months, i.e., after July 1990.
As we all know, the Soviet regime was seriously weakened precisely after June 1990 and finally fell in August 1991. The Soviet Union was officially dissolved four months later.
The German Aid
The Masonic Bolsheviks wanted to be certain that they could stay in power. That was why they asked the Germans for help. German troops were sent to throw an iron ring around Petrograd so that no oppositional forces, including General Piotr Krasnov's Cossacks, could threaten the Bolshevik government (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 24).It was also the Germans who put down a revolt among the cadets at an army training school in Petrograd, captured the Kremlin for the Bolsheviks in Moscow, fought back Krasnov's Cossacks and performed other similar actions vital to the survival of the Reds. General Kirbach promised that Moscow and Petrograd would be occupied by German troops if the Bolshevik government was threatened. The weak Soviet regime was protected by up to 280,000 disciplined German soldiers.
Part of those German troops was called the international battalions in the beginning, but in the Soviet history books they were known as "Latvian riflemen". There were just 20 Latvians among these "Internationalists", according to the historian Igor Bunich ("The Party's Gold", p. 79).
In the autumn of 1918 there were 50,000 men in this international army. That number had increased to 250,000 in the summer of 1920 (M.
Heller and A. Nekrich, "Utopia in Power", London, 1986, p. 95). There were also a considerable number of Chinese soldiers and Polish Jews in those troops. The latter usually played a leading role.
Colonel Heinrich von Ruppert had travelled with a Swedish passport to Petrograd as early as April 1917 to give secret instructions to the German prisoners of war, who later helped the Bolsheviks in every way imaginable, according to Igor Bunich.
A highly interesting American report, which reached Washington on the 9th of December 1917, stated, among other things, that General William V. Judson saw many Germans when he visited Trotsky in Smolny.
(Antony C. Sutton, "Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution", Morley, 1981, p. 45.) The Germans also supplied the "revolutionaries" with weapons. The ship Yastreb brought weapons and ammunition from Friedrichshafen and reached Russia in time for the Bolshevik take-over.
The Germans got their longed-for separate peace with Russia on the 3rd of March 1918, though Lenin had proclaimed his decree of peace immediately on the 7th of November 1917.
A parade of the "internationalists", that is, the Germans, for Lenin and his Bolshevik government was organised for the 29th of October (11th of November) 1917. The Germans had received instructions to shout: "We greet you, World Revolution!" But instead they shouted: "We greet you, Kaiser Wilhelm!" Lenin took this as an insult. (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 24.)
The American president Thomas Woodrow Wilson also gave orders not to intervene against the Bolshevik revolution, according to Antony Sutton.
But just in case things still went wrong, the leading Bolsheviks had been given foreign passports so that they could flee abroad just as unexpectedly as they had turned up. (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 8.) Nikolai Bukharin (actually Dolgolevsky) had made plans to escape to Argentina. Lenin calmed his fellow criminals: "We have always been lucky and so it shall remain!"
So, these were actually Jewish criminal groups who had come to power in order to suck the life from the body of the victim. Other Jews were immediately given privileged positions.
This is actually confirmed by the rabbi Elmer Berger in his book "The Jewish Dilemma", published in the United States in 1946. Berger wrote that the Soviet government privileged the Jews for being Jews, not just through the fact that Jews dominated the Soviet regime. By a single stroke of the pen, every suggestion of anti-Semitism became punishable with death.
The Beginning of the Government Terror
The Jewish gangster groups who called themselves Bolsheviks became particularly dangerous, since the theory behind their activities attempted to justify the crimes they committed (in the name of the workers) and to practise deceit and sabotage against the spiritual culture.Lenin was well aware that the Bolsheviks needed all the help they could get to acquire Russia's wealth. That was why he said that they must make use of common criminals as allies with Communism. (Louis Fischer, "The Life of Lenin", London, 1970.)
The criminals took Lenin's slogan "Plunder what was plundered!" seriously and managed to find a large amount of well-hidden valuables.
The Bolsheviks then captured them, confiscated their loot and murdered those rivals on the spot. The criminals probably realised soon enough that the Bolsheviks intended to monopolise crime, like they did the truth. In this way gang after gang of bandits were liquidated.
As I have mentioned previously, the Bolshevik speculators around Lenin found it hard to believe that all their plans would actually succeed, so they immediately began to plunder Russia of its wealth. All those riches were quickly sent abroad, primarily to Berlin.
The international bankers were very happy about this turn of events, according to Igor Bunich. The Bolsheviks acted with such haste and violence that it seems they thought the plundering and murdering might have to cease on the very next day. By the aid of "contracts of sale" written under threat, many estates and houses were handed over to Jewish "businessmen" living outside Russia.
The Bolshevik leaders immediately took over stately homes to live in.
Lenin became the "owner" of Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrov's estate in Gorky near Moscow. All the villagers were forced to leave their homes to make room for Lenin's bodyguards. Trotsky got hold of Prince Felix Yusupov's castle. The Bolsheviks were especially interested in items of gold. The leading Chekists, for example, used only golden plates for their meals.
The Bolshevik leader had, immediately after the take-over, given orders to draw up lists of people who absolutely had to be executed. Lenin declared that an entire social class (the bourgeoisie) would have to be eliminated. The chief revolutionary believed that the children absolutely had to watch while their parents were murdered. It was the Bolsheviks who decided who was bourgeois. In that way many ordinary, simple people were also murdered.
Talented intellectuals quickly perceived the true nature of this crime syndicate, which called itself the Bolsheviks-Communists. The intellectuals' name for this extravaganza of murder and robbery was Jewish Bolshevism. They looked on with alarm as the wealth was snatched from the hands of the Russians. Lenin and his fellow criminals wanted to rid themselves of these clear-sighted intellectuals as quickly as possible. Only the spiritually blind or those blinded by envy were allowed to live.
This giant robbery was transformed into a kind of malformed business.
The New York Herald Tribune wrote: "It seems as if the Bolshevik revolution in Russia is actually an enormous financial operation, the goal of which is to transfer the control of vast sums of money from the Russians to European and American banks."
At the beginning of April 1919, George Pitter-Wilson confirmed in the Globe (London): "The aim of Bolshevism is to gain complete power in the non-Jewish areas, so that no wealth remains in non-Jewish hands. In this way, the Jews would be able to gain power over everyone, ostensibly in the interest of others."
Meanwhile, they began spreading the most famous myth, according to which the Jews had nothing to do with the so-called Russian revolution. It was not in their interest to allow the truth to come out. For this very reason Lenin said: "The revolution needs no historians!"
The Bolsheviks have to be regarded as the worst mythomaniacs the world has ever seen, since they and their henchmen immediately began spreading the lie that these events were solely the holy action of the Russian people. Unfortunately, most historians took service with untruth.
They believed it necessary to adapt to the situation.
The Bolsheviks began confiscating as much private property as they could. They also prohibited private commerce. The subjects were regarded as the property of the state (i.e. the Jewish Bolshevik leadership).
The following lines could still be read in Nordisk Familjebok (a Swedish encyclopaedia) in 1944 (reprint of the 3rd edition, Vol. 10, col.
1228): "The strong Jewish element in the leadership of the Russian Bolshevik regime stirred up resentment in many places in Russia and led to the spreading of the belief that Bolshevism was predominantly a Jewish movement."
Communism was simultaneously used as camouflage for international criminal activity. That was why Communism became a modern form of a collective slave-state. The Communist Party later became a real Mafia and its general secretary was just like the Capo di tutti i capi (the boss of all bosses).
The Russian people faced a dreadful time of violent clashes and complete degradation. The Red Jews' aim was to subdue the Russians as quickly as possible and later expand their power into other countries. In the beginning these criminals managed, with the help of German troops and American financial support, to eliminate or force into exile nearly all the honest and independently thinking people in Russia and transform the nation into a criminal society.
There were also German and other foreign elite soldiers among the Chekist Special Forces, according to Igor Bunich. A total of 280,000 so-called internationalists protected the Bolshevik regime. The Germans declared that they would immediately send troops if any threat to the Soviet regime appeared. Lenin's bodyguards were also primarily Germans; among them was Friedrich von Platten from Switzerland.
The Germans also continued to give the Bolsheviks financial aid. In November 1917 they received 11.5 million marks, a sum which was the equivalent of 130 million dollars in 1975. Lenin was forced to keep his promise. On December 15th he made separate peace with Germany. After the signing of the peace agreement in Brest-Litovsk on the 3rd of March 1918, he received 40 million roubles in gold to fight against the Whites.
On the 20th of August 1918, Lenin, in return, wrote an open letter to the American workers and asked them not to fight against Germany.
93.5 tons of gold (245.5 tons, according to Oleg Platonov, "Russia's Crown of Thorns: the History of the Russian People in the Twentieth Century", Moscow, 1997, p. 528) were to be transferred to Germany in connection with the Brest-Litovsk peace agreement. This "affair" was also concealed from the people.
The rabbi Judas Magnus from the American Jews' committee in New York, admitted on the 24th of October 1918 that he also was a Bolshevik and liked the ideas of the new regime in Russia. The leading Zionist newspapers Jewish Chronicle (London) and American Hebrew (New York) praised the Bolshevik regime in Russia as a triumph for the Jewish model of society in their editorials from December 1918 up to Lenin's death in 1924.
It was certainly a triumph. In fact, the world had never before seen such a triumph of evil and violence.
American Hebrew wrote on September 8, 1920:
Another report to the American secretary of state in 1918 stated that the leadership of each city-soviet was comprised of at least 50 per cent Jews, especially malign Jews "of the worst type", many of whom were anarchists. ("U.S. State Department Report, Foreign Relations 1918, Russia", Vol. 11, p. 240.)
Professor Israel Shahak put it bluntly:
(Israel Shahak, "Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years", London, 1994, p. 17.)
"Anti-Communism is anti-Semitism!" The infamous American Zionist organisation, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), has been of the same opinion since the beginning (Executive Intelligence Review, No. 39, 30th September 1988). This organisation has very close connections with B'nai B'rith.
Did not the Bolshevik, M. Kogan, coolly state in his article "Services of Jewry to the Working Class": "Without exaggeration, it may be said that the Great Socialist October Revolution was indeed accomplished by the hands of the Jews... The symbol of Jewry, which for centuries has struggled against capitalism, has become also the symbol of the Russian proletariat, which can be seen even in the fact of the adoption of the Red five-pointed star, which in former times, as is well-known, was the symbol of Zionism and Jewry."
(Kommunist, Kharkov, 12th April 1919.)
This is confirmed in a leaflet written by the famous author Maxim Gorky, which praised the enormous contributions of the Jews to the introduction of socialism. This leaflet worried Trotsky and Lenin. They thought it was formulated in such an unfortunate way that they feared enemies of the revolution (i.e. anti-Semites) would be able to use the information contained therein - so the leaflet was forbidden.
Maxim Gorky had not always been so friendly towards the Jews, however. Just after the unsuccessful coup attempts in 1905, he published a violently anti-Semitic leaflet in which he exhorted: "Arise, Russian people, against the Jews!" Later, when he had become the willing tool of the Jewish "revolutionaries", he wanted to forget all about his earlier leaflet.
The Bolsheviks concealed as much as they could about themselves. All kinds of truths immediately became state secrets. Lenin was the master of all liars.
Who were those robbers and bandits who believed violence to be the best way of controlling a society? The Bolsheviks' primary and most important controlling organ after the take-over became the Politburo, which consisted of the following seven people: Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, Leon Kamenev, Grigori Sokolnikov (Brilliant), Grigori Zinoviev, Joseph Stalin and Andrei Bubnov. Only the last of those named was a Russian.
Those men, together with the Party Central, decided at 2:30 A.M. on November 9th to form a one-party government (Sovnarkom), ignoring the other parties. Lenin named himself head of government. He wanted to make Trotsky his second in command - People's Commissary for Internal Affairs. He would thereby also have become vice-chairman of Sovnarkom.
Lenin wanted Trotsky to crush the "bourgeoisie" and the aristocracy. Trotsky declined and afterwards explained:
Leon Trotsky was made responsible for foreign affairs instead.
So, Trotsky and other Jews in the Politburo wanted as few Jews as possible to be visible in the Bolshevik government. The answer was to employ a number of Russian puppets: V. Nogin (1878-1924) who was responsible for trade and industry; the freemason Ivan Skvortsov-Stepanov, who became people's commissary for financial affairs; Nikolai Avilov (Glebov), communications; Vladimir Milyutin, agriculture; and the Ukrainian Pavel Dybenko (1889-1938) who became people's commissary for naval affairs. The half-Jew Joseph Stalin was also allowed to take responsibility for questions of nationality, an artificial office. He was hardly ever seen at the People's Commissariat.
The other members of the first Soviet government were Jews, however:
the freemason Anatoli Lunacharsky (actually Bailikh-Mandelstam), who became people's commissary for educational affairs; the freemason Nikolai Krylenko (Aaron Bram, 1885-1938), who became People's Commissary for Military Affairs; Ivan Teodorovich, who became commissary for foodstuffs; Georgi Lomov (actually Oppokov), who was responsible for justice; Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko (1883-1939) and finally Alexander Shlyapnikov (actually Belenin), who was responsible for employment. So, there were 15 members in the very first Soviet government, according to the Worker and Peasant Government's Newspaper, No. 1, 10th of November 1917.
It soon became evident that the Russians in the Bolshevik government were unable to introduce the gangster regime of which the Jewish freemasons dreamed, despite the fact that all those puppet-Russians were surrounded in their offices by Jewish aides who, according to several protocols, eagerly took part in government meetings. I shall mention a few of those advisers here: Fanigstein-Daletsky, Abram Slutsky and Altfater.
So Lenin subsequently exchanged the Russians for Jewish Bolsheviks and also introduced new commissary posts.
The alcoholic Rykov's post was given to Grigori Petrovsky (1878-1958) just 20 days later. Georgi Lomov had to leave his post as commissary for justice. This post was instead given to the Jew Josef (Isidor) Steinberg.
Vladimir Milyutin was exchanged for the Jew Alexander Schlichter (1868-1940). Nikolai Avilov (1868-1940) had to make way for the Jew Vyacheslav Zof. There were also two new members: the Jew V.
Volodarsky (actually Moisei Goldstein) became people's commissary for propaganda and press and the Jewess Alexandra Kollontay was named people's commissary for social affairs.
There were a total of 17 government members, of whom 11 were Jews, two half-Jews and only four were Slavs (three Russians and one Ukrainian). The Jewish members subsequently became more visible.
The first chairman of the Central Executive Committee was the freemason Leon Kamenev (Leiba Rosenfeld), in the West flatteringly termed "president". His assumed name Kamenev means "stony". He was married to Trotsky's youngest sister, Olga. Kamenev held this high post for only 13 days before he was replaced by another Jewish freemason, Yakov Sverdlov (Yankel-Aaron Movshevich Solomon). Kamenev instead became the mayor of Moscow. He was also the vice-chairman of the Council of People's Commissars for a while. He was named People's Commissary for Commerce in 1926. He was executed on the 25th of August 1936.
The Bolsheviks opened a Pandora's box, drowned Russia, and later inundated many other countries in terrible sufferings. They introduced a feudal banditregime they called Bolshevism. Only hope and fear remained.
Streets, squares and even cities were eventually named after the Jews in power: Volodarsky, Slutsk, Sverdlovsk...
The Social Revolutionaries protested strongly against Lenin's actions.
To keep up appearances, Lenin offered the left wing of the Social Revolutionaries four posts in the Sovnarkom. In the beginning they declined the offer, but somewhat later the Social Revolutionaries Josef Steinberg, V.
Trutovsky, Vladimir Karelin and A. Kolegayev wanted to join the Bolshevik government and thereby support Lenin's terrorism. This split the left wing faction of the Social Revolutionaries.
Meanwhile, Lenin officially prohibited freemasonry to camouflage his designs. The Jacobins had done the same. He was unable to conceal the predominance of Jews within the government power apparatus.
The Jews dominated everywhere, even from the autumn of 1917 - in the People's Commissariats and in the leadership of every institution, despite the fact that they made up only six per cent (6.1 million) of the population of Soviet-Russia.
The mayor of Petrograd was the Jew Schreider. Even the leadership of the other parties consisted of Jews. But a considerable part of the Jews in the other parties left to join the Bolsheviks, who began a massive propaganda campaign to win the parliamentary elections.
The Jews also controlled all the newspapers. Behind Izvestiya, which was originally a soviet newspaper and was later transformed into a government organ, were Yuri Steklov (Nakhamkis), Ziperovich, Goldenberg and other Jews. The periodical Kommunist was controlled by its Jewish editor-in-chief Vilhelm Knorin. His successor was another Jew - Stytsky. The editorial staff of Znamya Truda were Karl Lander, Levin and Noi Davidson. Volja Truda was led by Sachs, Polyansky and Katz.
The Jew Moisei Kharitonov (Markovich) was named chief of the militia in Petrograd. He had travelled together with Lenin from Switzerland to Stockholm. He later became a Trotskyist. Grigori Sokolnikov (Brilliant) was the editor of Pravda at an earlier stage. After the Bolshevik take-over, he worked as chief commissar for banking affairs. He was appointed people's commissary for financial affairs in 1921. Stalin had him arrested in 1937 and he died two years later in the GULAG archipelago. The Polish Jew Jakub Hanecki (Furstenberg) became chief of the National Bank.
The Bolsheviks failed to win the elections for the Constituent Assembly on the 25th (12th) of November 1917. Of 707 seats, the Social Revolutionaries won 410 and thereby secured a majority, the Bolsheviks won 175, the Liberals 105, the Mensheviks won only 16, the Bourgeois Cadets 17, the United People's Movements 86... So the Bolsheviks only got 24.7 per cent of the votes (9 562 358 votes of 40 million), despite the fact that they had manipulated the electorate as much as they could.
Lenin had even abolished the freedom of the press by a decree on the 9th of November. Trotsky had ordered a demonstrative burning of the bourgeois newspaper Rech's entire edition one day earlier. Lenin banned all bourgeois parties at the end of December.
The Constituent Assembly met on the 5th (18th) of January 1918 and rejected the Bolshevik government with 237 votes against 136. On the following day, Lenin had the "Latvian riflemen" (i.e. the German troops) dissolve the parliament. German soldiers opened fire on the crowd who tried to defend the Constituent Assembly. This was when the Bolsheviks actually performed their coup. They had no intention of leaving power at this stage.
There was too much left to plunder. The Bolsheviks plundered riches amounting to 7.5 billion roubles in gold just from the churches, according to a conservative estimate by Western experts.
The Bolsheviks had already set up revolutionary tribunals, had begun "nationalising" (that is - plundering) private property; they abolished the military ranks and in all secrecy founded the political police (the Cheka).
There were an incredible number of freemasons among the Bolsheviks.
Here I can further mention Nikolai Bukharin, Grigori Zinoviev, a member of B'nai B'rith and the Grand Orient, according to Valeri Yemelyanov's book "De-Zionisation", Paris, 1979, p. 14), Mieczyslaw Kozlowski, Semyon Sereda, who later became people's commissary for agriculture, Ivan Skvortsov-Stepanov, Mikhail Skobelev, Nikolai Sokolov, Leonid Krasin, Gorky's wife J. Peshkova and her stepson Zinovi Peshkov (Yakov Sverdlov's brother).
There were also a great number of freemasons occupying high posts within the Soviet administration in the 1950s, according to the freemason and publicist Yekaterina Kuskova (Novoye Russkoye Slovo, 1 st of August 1986, p. 6).
Communist agents who were freemasons in the West received considerable help in their careers from their lodge brothers. Here I can mention Georges Ebon, who was arrested in France in the 1950s. (Terry Walton, "KGB in France", Moscow, 1993, pp. 67-68.)
On the 28th of January 1918, Lenin decided to set up the Red Army and the Germans and Americans had to give all kinds of support to the Bolsheviks. The situation was catastrophic, because enemy troops were approaching Petrograd, and on March 11, 1918, the Bolshevik government fled to Moscow where it remained. The flight was organised by Alexander Shlyapnikov. (Stalin had him executed in 1937.) Moscow was afterwards made capital. Lenin also introduced the new (Gregorian) calendar.
The Social Democratic Bolshevik Party was renamed the Communist Party on the 8th of March 1918. These Communists now formed a new, Jew-dominated government where Leon Trotsky became people's commissary for military affairs. Another Jew, Georgi Chicherin (actually Ornatsky) whose Jewish mother was called Meierdorf, was named people's commissary for foreign affairs. Previously, he had twice been put in a mental hospital. This must have suited the Communists perfectly: the crazier, the better.
The evil now broke out over the whole of society. Power became even more centralised than at the time of the Jacobins' coup in France. Trotsky wanted to see his subjects as militarised slaves. All forms of begging were forbidden, just like the Paris Commune had done by a decree on April 16th, 1871. Those breaking this decree were shot.
The bourgeoisie were forced to sweep the streets and shovel snow.
Their children were excluded from higher education. Lenin's instructions that the universities should welcome, above all, those people who just wanted a diploma rather than knowledge, were followed later as well.
Even the early Taoists knew that:
Moisei Uritsky (actually Boretsky) became chief of the Cheka in Petrograd. He worked in an especially brutal manner and gained the nick-name "the butcher of Petrograd". It was Uritsky who, with the aid of sailors and German soldiers, dissolved the Parliament in January 1918.
Despite the fact that the Jewish "revolutionaries" and executioners preferred to live under assumed names, the ordinary people of Russia soon came to realise who ruled their land with an iron hand. The Jewish parties Bund and Po'alei Zion were still allowed to remain when the other parties were banned in 1920. The latter merged with the Communist Party in December 1928.
Not one single synagogue was destroyed or converted into a public toilet or storehouse, as happened to the churches. Not a single rabbi was crucified. Many churches in Moscow were torn down in 1922 and instead a synagogue with space for two thousand people was built. A total of 60,000 churches were destroyed.
The Jewish executioners used to shout: "Long live the red terror! Death to the bourgeois!" They soon enforced work duty. Vagabonds were executed on the spot.
The Times admitted on September 18, 1920:
In 1920, a total of half a million Jews already worked in the Soviet party and state apparatus, in various institutions, as company leaders and in all other possible fields of practice within the Soviet regime. Many of those Jews had moved to Russia, primarily from Poland and Lithuania.
("The Book of Russian Judaism", New York, 1968, p. 137.) The Soviet Union's most important diplomats were also Jews. There were also Jewish functionaries within the first Soviet representation in Stockholm, for instance Aaron Zimmermann.
Here follows a list of just a few of the most powerful Jews in the early Soviet administration. The prosecutor general was D. Kursky. The lawyer of the Council of People's Commissaries was Vladimir Bonch-Bruyevich (1873-1955). Yemelyan Yaroslavsky (Minei Gubelman, 1878-1943) became the Kremlin's Commissar and the secretary of the Central Committee. It was he who led the take-over of power in Moscow.
Other leading Jews: Moisei Frumkin (who became people's commissary for finance and foreign affairs), Adolf Yoffe, Karl Radek (Tobiach Sobelsohn), Sara Khavkina (worked in the Central Committee), Alexander Ghe (Goldberg), Yuri Larin (actually Mikhail Lurye, 1882-1932), Vatslav Vorovsky (Orlovsky), Mieczyslaw Bronski (actually Moisei Warszawski, who became deputy commissary for trade and industry), Abram Skovno (1888-1938), David Rosenblum, Christian Rakovsky (Bulgarian Jew who became head of the red government in the Ukraine), Mikhail Lashevich, David Ryazanov (Goldenbach, 1870-1938, a Jew from Odessa, arrived from Switzerland with the second train, became director of the Marx Institute), Aaron Scheinman, Georgi Safarov, Yakov Surits, Aaron Soltz, Nikolai Krestinsky (member of the Central Committee), Yevgenia Bosh, Rulkovsky, Rozovsky, Samuel Kaufman (who became a people's commissary), Isidor Gukovsky (people's commissary), Feningstein (people's commissary), Olga Ravich (Sarra Gavvich, worked with people's commissary Feningstein), Yelena Stasova (secretary of the Central Committee), Theodor Rothstein (leading man in the Foreign Commissariat), Ivan Maisky (actually Steinman), Yan-Yakov Gamarnik, Moisei Rukhimovich, Alexander Shotman (1880-1939), Dashevich, Mikhail Kobetsky, Mikhail Goberman, Nikolai Gordon (Leiba Alie Chael, close collaborator with Grigori Zinoviev), Sergei Syrtsov, Mikhail Tomsky (Honigberg), Mikhail (Meier) Trilisser, Joseph Unschlicht, Arkadi Rosengoltz, Grigori Chudnovsky, Joseph Pyatnitsky (Tarsis), Yevgeni Gnedin (Leon Helphand, son of Alexander Parvus who became head of the Paris Bureau of the Cheka), Bor and many, many others.
The Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party, which was elected in August of 1917, was comprised of 24 members. Of these, at least 14 were Jews and 2 half-Jews. Even Moisei Uritsky's secretary was a 17-year-old Jewish girl. (Heinrich Laretei's memoirs "To the Toy of Fate", Lund, 1970, p. 75.)
All kinds of Jewish speculators and anarchists, who were enamoured with Bolshevism, travelled to Soviet Russia at the very beginning. They came from many countries (from Turkey, Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Bohemia, Slovakia, and the United States of America).
For example, a Bohemian Zionist communist from Prague, Ernest (Arnost) Kolman, worked in Moscow as a party functionary between 1918 and 1919 and as a politruk in Moscow and then in Siberia in the 1920s. He later worked with subversive activities in Germany where he was arrested and expelled to the Soviet Union. Most of them came from the United States.
The most famous of these were Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman, who were sent to Petrograd by the American authorities in January 1920. Those anarchists had praised the Soviet state as paradise on earth around the United States. Later, they described how the Bolsheviks in Smolny's restaurant had introduced a system of privileges, where the leading Communists received better food than the others. A total of 34 levels of privileges were established.
Here follows a list of the names of some important American Jews who worked in the Soviet state apparatus: Minnor was active as a political commissar at the Commissariat for Internal Affairs, Kisswalter worked in the Supreme Soviet as chairman of the economic restructuring committee, Kahan was active in the committee for the abolition of private banks, Simson co-ordinated the work of the Soviets, Gubelman was political commissar in Moscow's military district, Michelson was named adviser to the People's Bank and a high post was also held by Isaac Don Levine.
Of course, the American Jews held high posts within the Cheka. Meichman and Meherbey, who proved themselves especially dangerous, were among the most important Chekists in Petrograd. (Maurice Pinay, "The Secret Driving Force of Communism", p. 45.)
Trotsky's comrade Clara Sheridan wrote quite openly in the New York World on December 13, 1923: "The Communist leaders are Jews and Russia is entirely dominated by them. They are in every town, in every government bureau, in the offices and in the editorial staffs of the newspapers. They drive away the Russians and are responsible for the increasingly anti-Semitic attitude."
John Gates (actually Israel Regentreif), one of the Communist leaders in the United States, has also confirmed in his autobiography that the Jews held an absolutely dominant position in the Russian and the international Marxist movement. (John Gates, "The Story of an American Communist", New York, 1958.)
Here I must point out that the Russian extremist Jews and their fellow travellers were only tools in the hands of Jewish international bankers, who wanted to transport as much wealth as possible out of Russia.
Everything that happened during the Jacobin's reign of terror in France was repeated in Russia.
The banker Jacob Schiff had given Leon Trotsky 20 million dollars to organise a Bolshevik take-over. That gamble certainly paid off. 600 million roubles in gold were transferred to the United States of America between 1918 and 1922, according to the historian Gary Allen.
In the first half of 1921 alone, the banking house of Kuhn, Loeb and Co. made a profit of 102,290,000 dollars on the wealth the Bolsheviks had robbed, according to the New York Times, August 23rd, 1921. Multiply that sum by one hundred and you have the present-day value of that money.
The Russian historian Dmitri Volkogonov revealed after findings in the Communist Party archives that "just the Tsarina's private reserves amounted to 475 million roubles in gold (plus 7 million for the crown jewels)". (Dagens Nyheter, 31st of August 1992.)
The Bolshevik financial department Goskhran confiscated all of this. Some Swedish journalists (including Staffan Skott) have, in accord with the prevailing myth, tried to explain that most of this wealth was handed over to the Communist parties in other countries, while millions of Russians died of starvation. That is not entirely accurate.
According to the historian Igor Bunich, Lenin and Trotsky took care of this money personally. The gold, meanwhile, was smuggled out of Russia and deposited into personal bank accounts around the world. (30 tons of gold per year were produced in the Tsarist era in Russia.)
That was apparently the reason why the British newspaper The Guardian, in March 1923, called the Bolsheviks the Party of the Yellow Satan. Here follows an actual case.
The freemason Yuri Lomonosov, who was the right-hand man of the minister of communications during the time of the Provisional Government, lived in the United States between 1918 and 1919. He returned to Russia and held a high post in the Bolshevik regime. In 1920, the Tsar's gold was exported to the United States of America under the control of this same professor Lomonosov and by the aid of Jacob Schiff's banking corporation Kuhn, Loeb & Co. and the Jewish banker Olof Aschberg (Nya Banken) in Sweden.
Three shiploads with a total of 540 packing-cases of gold were sent away from the harbour of Tallinn in the Republic of Estonia. (U.S. State Department Decimal File, 861.51/837, 4th of October 1920.) Professor Lomonosov returned to the United States at the same time, when his mission had been accomplished. Each case was worth 60,000 roubles in gold. The total value was thus 32.4 million. The Bolsheviks also used the Harju Bank in Estonia to transfer money.
Eventually, all of the Bolsheviks' gold reserves ended up in the United States, according to the Russian historian Igor Bunich. Over 600,000 miners died under forced labour in the gold mines of Kolyma alone.
To ensure an even greater success, the banker James Warburg from New York and Frankfurt am Main also financed Lenin and Trotsky. (Gary Allen, "Say 'NO!' to the New World Order", California, 1987, p. 22.)
While the murdering and plundering was going on, over 1.6 million Russians escaped abroad. The Communist Party's 19 564 leading Jews and the Jewish Communist Parties Bund and Po'alei Zion tried to gain complete control over the Russian society. Hundreds of thousands of Russians were forced to become Communists.
Meanwhile, these Jewish extremists, who were obsessed by Marxist hallucinations, transformed Russia into a temple of evil. Soviet Union became a new perfect temple of Solomon for the Jewish freemasons. Over one hundred million people were sacrificed there.
In the Soviet Union, Masonic terms typical of the Communist movement were used constantly. They wanted to "build a new society" and a "better and brighter future". Or they wanted to rebuild the old (perestroika).
The emotive propaganda apparatus was completely in the hands of "revolutionary" Jews. They even had their own news agency, YETA, which diligently reported all manifestations of anti-Semitism. The Jewish functionaries even began to publish Pravda in Yiddish (Varhait) on the 3rd of March 1918, and from August 1918, the same newspaper was also published in Hebrew (Emet). (The Greater Soviet Encyclopaedia, Moscow, 1932, Vol. 24, p. 120.)
Jewish authors produced combat literature. Jewish composers composed all kinds of marches and mythsongs to inspire ordinary Russians to heroic acts in the name of Socialism. Much was staked, also abroad, on the songs of Isaac Dunayevsky and the Pokrass brothers.
Dmitri Pokrass' work included the well-known "Konarmeiskaya", which the Swedish socialists eagerly sang under the name of "The Song About the Reaction", and the "Budyonny March". The latter was composed by Dmitri Pokrass at twenty years of age in Kiev in the summer of 1920. In the same year, his brother who was two years older, wrote "We Build the Nation", where it is claimed that the Red Army was the strongest of all. The Red Army soldiers hold their weapons firmly in callused fists.
This revolutionary song was taken over by the Swedish socialists who made it their own anthem. This song was sung at the funeral of Olof Palme (the Swedish Prime Minister, murdered in 1986) in Stockholm.
Samuil Pokrass was later invited to Hollywood. Of course, there was nothing to prevent his emigration to the United States. He died in New York in 1939. His brother, Dmitri Pokrass, later won the Stalin award for his contribution to the process of indoctrination.
Isaac Dunayevsky's most famous melody was named "The March of the Young Enthusiasts". Jewish composers (Leon Knipper, Alexander Tsfasman, Matvei Blanter, Yan Frenkel, Alexander Kolker, Mark Fradkin, Oskar Feltsman, N. Brodsky, I. Shvarts, Eduard Kolmanovsky, Venyamin Basner, Alexander Flyarkovsky, Alexander Bronevitsky, David Tukhmanov and others) maintained their control over the Russian musical culture.
The Jews, of course, also dominated the most important branch of the media - the film industry. The most important film directors were: Leo Arnstam, Abram Room, Leonid Trauberg, Friedrich Ermler, Dziga Vertov, Josef Heifitz, Mikhail Romm, Mark Donskoy, Sergei Jutkevich, Juli Raizman... Vsevolod Meyerhold developed the new theatre.
The Jewish director and freemason Sergei Eisenstein made several propaganda films ("The Armoured Cruiser Potyomkin", "The Strike", "October"). The screenplay for his most famous film, "The Armoured Cruiser Potyomkin", was written by a Jewish publicist, Alexei Kapler.
Even the advertisement poster for this film was drawn by the Jewish Steinberg brothers from Sweden.
The Jews dominated the Ukrainian cultural life to an even higher degree (76 per cent of those registered in the cultural unions were Jews).
Lenin also took the opportunity to proclaim sexual freedom in December 1917 (even homosexuality was decriminalised), as happened after the Jacobin coup in 1791. Stalin, however, prohibited homosexuality in 1934, at the same time as he banned abortion and made the very liberal marriage laws stricter. Lenin made the Soviet organs proclaim: "From the age of 18, every young woman is the property of the state." Unmarried women had to register themselves at the Bureau of Free Love. Omission was punished severely. Each registered woman had to choose a man between 19 and 50 years of age.
The men also had the right to choose women, but they had to carry documentation that they belonged to the proletariat. The others were not allowed to have a sex-life since they were class-enemies (i.e. enemies of the Jews). In the interest of the state, men had the right to choose women registered at the Bureau of Free Love, even if the said women did not comply. The children that were born from these unions became the property of the republic. (Mikhail and August Stern, "Iron Curtain for Love", Stockholm, 1982, p. 26.)
Jewish Bolsheviks frequently organised naked marches and propagated group-sexuality. Those new measures caused deep psychological disturbances in the traditionally family-oriented Russian people. The communist leaders wanted to eliminate the concept and practice of family life.
Abortion, meanwhile, was legalised. Rape also became far more common.
The communist poet Vladimir Mayakovsky immediately propagated the new policy in the following way:
will I rape.
And contemptuously
will I spit on her!
The moral norms were quickly subverted in Soviet Russia. One person who became an especially "good example" for this process of dissolution was the nymphomaniac Alexandra Kollontay. As a people's commissary, she gave orders for several sailors to come to her every day. Their job was to sleep with her. She was especially excited by the sailor's uniform. The party functionary Oleg Agranyants revealed in 1989 that Alexandra Kollontay had earlier been a brothel-keeper.
As soon as the moral norms had been dissolved, sexuality was prohibited.
The goal had been reached and a new slogan was invented: "Sexuality is the enemy of the revolution!" Women were to become draught-animals instead. The Jewish commissary for education and culture, the freemason Anatoli Lunacharsky declared:
Bakunin maintained that the red bureaucracy would cramp the morals and ideas of the people.
The Jewish psychologist Alexander Zalkind admitted in his book "The Revolution and the Youth" (Moscow, 1925), that the Communist Party was to subject the Russian people to racial manipulation. He wrote:
"Society has the total and unconditional right to intervene in the sexual life of the people and improve the race by introducing an artificial sexual selection." In other words, the Jewish extremists wanted to make sure that they would have suitable (not too intelligent) slaves in the future.
Oleg Platonov writes the following in his book "The History of the Russian People in the Twentieth Century" (Moscow, 1997, p. 520): "One of the first symbols of Bolshevism was the swastika, proposed by Jewish officials as the chief element of the arms of state. Among other uses, the reversed swastika appeared on uniform sleeves in the Red Army, and, in 1918, on bank notes in denominations of five and ten thousand roubles." He goes on to state:
Every Master Mason uses a ritual hammer. We can find the background of this tradition in the Old Testament, where it is written that Yahweh has been like unto a hammer in his destruction of other peoples (Jeremiah 50:23). The freemason and communist leader Mao Zedong also declared in 1950: "Communism is a hammer which crushes our enemies."
The sickle also comes from freemasonry. It symbolises destruction (the gelding of Urano). It is also mentioned in Jeremiah (50:16). The Zionist Socialist Party, which acted most intensively in Russia during the coup attempts in 1905-06, was called The Sickle.
With the help of Great Britain, America, Germany and other countries, the Soviet regime was established in Russia. That regime propagated terror, deceit, plunder and political prostitution. Communism became especially dangerous because it justified its incredibly evil crimes with an equally incredible propaganda of lies.
So, Russia became infected with Marxism which, like a cancer, destroyed the body of society and began to spread the red disease abroad to other countries.
Those Russians who survived were used as cudgels against the other nations, which were subdued by the Communist masters.
The responsibility lies above all with those who used these cudgels as weapons. One nation after another was more or less eliminated.
Approximately 800,000 Bashkirians (57 per cent of their population) were liquidated in the years 1917-1922. (Kaarel Haav, Rein Ruutsoo, "The Estonian People and Stalinism", Tallinn, 1990, p. 36.)
Lenin stressed that he welcomed the assimilation of different national groups; everything which led to different peoples becoming a single nation. (Lenin, "Works", Vol. 20, p. 18.)
The reason for the deportation of the Tartars, Armenians and Greeks from the Crimea in World War Two has now also been revealed. The Jewish Communists had suggested the founding of a Jewish republic in the Crimea on the 15th of February 1944, but the plans were never fully realised (Ogonyok, No. 5, 1990, p. 22).
Lenin's crime syndicate became more and more powerful, since it was supported by international bankers and in the beginning also by the German government. On the 18th of May 1918, the German Foreign Minister Richard von Kiihlmann sent a telegram to Ambassador Wilhelm von Mirbach in Moscow: "Spend large amounts, since it is in our interest that the Bolsheviks remain in power."
On the 3rd of June 1918, Mirbach reported that he needed 3 million marks for this purpose. On the 6th of July 1918, the Bolshevik terror regime was about to collapse in connection with the revolt of the Social Revolutionaries but was saved by the German troops and not by "Latvian riflemen" as the official propaganda claimed.
(Akim Arutiunov, "The Phenomenon Vladimir Ulyanov/Lenin", Moscow, 1992, p. 13.)
The Jewish Communist leaders from Soviet Russia arranged a May Day demonstration in 1919 in the capital of Latvia, Riga, where they had erected several obelisks decorated with Masonic symbols and a pyramid crowned with the all-seeing eye that contained secret Masonic symbols.
The German government spent a total of 50 million marks on the Bolsheviks, according to the Jewish socialist politician Eduard Bernstein in Germany (Vorwarts, 14th of January 1921). After World War Two, American soldiers found the archives of the German Foreign Ministry in the Harz Mountains.
The archive contained documents from the years 1876-1920. Some of these papers were published in the periodical International Affairs in London in 1957. In the same year, the collection of documents "Lenin's Return to Russia", edited by Werner Halweg, was published in Holland.
Communism was an ideology, which depended on violence to survive.
The truth needs no violence. Meanwhile, the Communist system only encouraged the lowest of all human mentalities. Bandits ruled the good.
This reign brought about the spiritual death of the Russian society. This was the very aim of the Illuminati. This time their terror was called revolution, and this time it was a huge one. The Communists primarily propagated class-war and hatred, by which means the people were turned into a rabble, a herd.
The Czech author Karel Capek declared that the Soviet system was an attempt to tear the human world to pieces and achieve total international confusion. Nature had to be subdued - it was regarded as an enemy. Their central slogan was: "We need no alms from nature, we will take from nature!" In that way the Bolsheviks began a massive campaign of environmental destruction.
It was Lenin who, on the 21st of December 1920, gave orders to irrigate the area around the Aral Sea with artificial canals. Through this decision, he ordered the destruction of the Aral Sea. This salt-lake has almost dried up today and the surrounding land is poisoned with high levels of salt and chemicals.
Lenin also wanted other countries under his sway. That was why he ordered Maxim Litvinov (Hennokh Wallakh) and Theodor Rothstein to begin preparations for an international infiltration net. Lenin financed that operation with diamonds found during the plunder of Russia.
Comintern decided in 1919 that they would convert all the European nations into Soviets. The Masonic Bolsheviks made attempts in Hungary, Bavaria, Slovakia. The Jewish Spartacist leadership in Germany also attempted to impose a red dictatorship. Eventually their powers focused on the underdeveloped China.
Lenin asserted that internationalism meant that one must support the revolutionary movement in all nations, without exception. (Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 30, p. 170.) This was, of course, true imperialism. Karl Radek stated in a similar vein that:
Lenin, of course, was extremely angry with Kautsky and called him a renegade. Lenin, at this point, had to re-draw his plans for world revolution. He had founded a special organisation for this very purpose - Comintern (The Third International). Its executive organ became the International Red Aid. The best Comintern agent was the Jewish Communist Jacob Kirchstein, according to the defected GRU general, Valter Krivitsky (actually Schmelka Ginsberg).
Lenin gave 50 million roubles to Comintern in November 1919 to finance subversive action abroad, according to a secret report, which has now been released.
The fact that the Bolshevik criminals gained a stable base in Russia meant bad news for the rest of the world, since it worsened the quality of life everywhere. The Communists' goal was to use mass terror to scare all their subjects into total submission. How the mass terror began is more closely described in the next chapter.
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