THROUGH THE LABYRINTH OF MURDER
	
	
	It was the morning of the 30th of August 1918. 
	
	 
	
	A cyclist turned up in 
	Petrograd's Palace Square at around nine o'clock. He stopped at house number 
	6, the headquarters of the Commune Commissariat for Internal Affairs and the 
	Extra-Ordinary Commission, the Cheka. This terror organization had been 
	founded on December 7th, 1917, but officially it did not exist. Only on the 
	18th December 1927 did Pravda publish the decree officially establishing the 
	Cheka. The cyclist was a young man wearing a leather jacket and an officer's 
	cap. He left his bicycle by the door and entered.
	
	
	It was reception day at the Commissariat for Internal Affairs. The visitors 
	were waiting in the hall and did not notice the young man who sat down near 
	the outer door.
	
	
	Moisei Uritsky (actually Boretsky) arrived in his car at around ten o'clock. 
	He was the chairman of the Petrograd Cheka. Uritsky became infamous as the 
	"Butcher of Petrograd". He threatened to kill all Russians who spoke their 
	native language well. He claimed there was no greater pleasure than watching 
	monarchists die, according to Igor Bunich ("The Party's Gold", St. 
	Petersburg, 1992) and Oleg Platonov ("The History of the Russian People in 
	the Twentieth Century", Moscow, 1997, p. 613). 
	
	 
	
	Uritsky had executed 5000 
	officers with his own hands. Now he quickly walked towards the lift door. 
	Suddenly several shots were heard. It was the young man in the leather 
	jacket who had approached Uritsky and shot him in his head and body. Uritsky 
	collapsed. The murderer ran out into the street, jumped on his bicycle and 
	began pedaling as fast as he could. When they began to chase him by car, he 
	threw away his bicycle and ran into the British Representation. He left the 
	representation after having donned a longcoat. When he saw Red Guards, he 
	opened fire but was quickly overpowered.
	
	
	This was the official description of Moisei Uritsky's murder. The suspect 
	was a 22-year-old Jewish student of technology, Leonid Kannegisser. 
	
	 
	
	This cock-and-bull story was published in 1975 in the book "The 
	Elimination of the Anti-Soviet Subversive Movement" by D. Golinkov, who used 
	to investigate especially important cases at the office of the Public 
	Prosecutor of the Soviet Union.
	
	
	The doctor of history, P. Sofinov, described the same event in a very 
	different manner in 1960, in his book about the history of the Cheka. On the 
	morning of the 30th of August, the Social Revolutionary Kennigisser, who was 
	the freemason Savinkov's agent as well as a spy for the British and the 
	French, murdered the chief of the Cheka in Petrograd, Moisei Uritsky, in his 
	office. Felix Dzerzhinsky (actually Rufin) gave orders to search the British 
	Embassy on the 31st of August.
	
	
	The Social Revolutionary Kennigisser had become the student Kanne-gisser in 
	the meantime, and now he had murdered Uritsky in the hallway of the Cheka 
	instead of in Uritsky's office. Sofinov's version probably seemed too 
	contrived to be credible.
	
	
	Grigori Nilov's (Alexander Kravtsov's) book "The Grammar of Leninism" was 
	published in London in 1990. In this book the author gave neither theory 
	credibility. Instead he claimed that the Bolshevik party and the central 
	organisation of the Cheka with Lenin and Dzerzhinsky at the head were behind 
	Uritsky's murder.
	The book "The Parly's Gold" by the historian Igor Bunich was published in 
	St. Petersburg in 1992. 
	
	 
	
	Igor Bunich reveals that the murder of Uritsky was 
	organized by Dzerzhinsky's protege Gleb Boky who later became Dzerzhinsky's 
	successor. The Jewish Chekist, Boky, used to feed the flesh of the executed 
	to the animals in the zoo. Igor Bunich demonstrated that Lenin personally 
	gave the order to murder Uritsky and also to stage an attempt on his own 
	life to give himself a reason to immediately begin the mass terror against 
	the Russian population. 
	
	 
	
	The murder was also Uritsky's punishment for 
	stealing some of the confiscated riches from behind Lenin's back, together 
	with V. Volodarsky (actually Moisei Goldstein) and the freemason Andronnikov 
	(who was chief of the Cheka in Kronstadt). Everything was sold via certain 
	Scandinavian banks - but more about that later.
	
	
	The murder of Sergei Kirov (actually Kostrikov) on December 1, 1934 was in 
	many ways similar to Uritsky's murder. Kirov was officially murdered by 
	Leonid Nikolaiev. Both of those high party functionaries had been murdered 
	professionally and without obstacles. Both were warned in advance. Both murderers could freely gain entrance to the respective 
	buildings.
	
	
	It is clear today that Stalin was behind the murder of Kirov, despite the 
	fact that there are no documents about this. There is no lack of evidence 
	and logical arguments. Kirov's bodyguard was prevented from accompanying 
	him, so that the real murderer could shoot the Leningrad Party Secretary at 
	exactly 4:30 in the afternoon. 
	
	 
	
	That event provided a good reason for Stalin 
	to begin his campaign of mass terror. At least 7 million people were killed 
	during that campaign and 18 million were imprisoned. 97 per cent of the 
	participants at the 1934 Party Congress were liquidated. Kravtsov presented 
	some suspect circumstances in connection with the murder of Uritsky, who was 
	also a member of the Central Committee. No analysis was made of 
	Kannegisser's revolver and ammunition. 
	
	 
	
	The Cheka did not seem to want the 
	truth to come out. Kannegisser was never taken to trial, but was illegally 
	killed. If Kannegisser had really been a Social Revolutionary, then a trial 
	would have been a propaganda triumph for the regime. It would have been 
	publicly announced who planned the murder. But not even the motive for 
	Uritsky's murder was ever revealed. In contrast, it is known now that Lenin 
	became furious when he received reports from Alexander Parvus in Berlin in 
	which it was revealed that someone in Petrograd had stolen from Lenin. 
	
	 
	
	Just 
	before Dzerzhinsky had traveled to Switzerland to investigate the 
	situation. It turned out that not all the cargoes had reached Berlin; not 
	all the money had ended up in the Swiss bank accounts of Lenin and his 
	approved comrades. Some cargoes of "nationalized" goods had been sent to 
	Sweden, including many valuable icons (some of these are still on display in 
	the National Museum in Stockholm), the money had gone into the hands of 
	other people than Trotsky and Lenin.
	
	
	Stalin transferred Lenin's foreign money deposits to Moscow in the 1930s. In 
	1998, an account was found in Switzerland, which belonged to Vladimir 
	Ulyanov. No one had touched it since 1945. There was slightly less than one 
	hundred Swiss francs left (50 USD).
	
	
	The guilty parties were soon found, in June 1918. The main suspects were 
	Uritsky, Volodarsky and Andronnikov (the chief of the Cheka in Kronstadt). 
	They had stolen whole cargoes and sold everything through different 
	Scandinavian banks. 78 million rubles in gold had vanished in this way. 
	(Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 41.) 
	
	
	The thieves (others were also involved) had stolen goods worth a total of 
	2.5 billion rubles in gold. At various auctions in Stockholm in the autumn 
	of 1995, Russia began buying back valuable antique furniture, which had been 
	illicitly transported to Sweden.
	
	
	This came as an unpleasant surprise for Parvus, since Uritsky and 
	Volo-darsky had been his favourite disciples. Parvus had founded a Yiddish 
	newspaper, Arbaiter Stimme (Worker's Voice) for Uritsky in Copenhagen, on 
	which Grigori Chudnovsky and Nikolai Gordon (Leiba Alie Hael Gordon) had 
	also worked. The latter was a Latvian Jew and a close collaborator with 
	Grigori Zinoviev (Ovsei Radomyslsky).
	
	
	In Moscow, Lenin promised to solve the problem. And indeed, Volo-darsky was 
	murdered in the same month. Uritsky led the investigation and learned the 
	truth, upon which he also was murdered.
	
	
	Kannegisser declared that he had acted alone. The Social Revolutionaries 
	denied all knowledge of Kannegisser. He had never been a member of their 
	party.
	Even the circumstance that Kannegisser was wearing an officer's cap was 
	peculiar when others had hidden their caps to avoid being executed. It seems 
	he wanted to draw attention to himself. The fact that he ran into the 
	British Embassy to change was also surprising. He only took off his leather 
	jacket and put on a longcoat. Why, then, did he run away from the site of 
	the murder at all?
	
	
	It was also very odd that he managed to approach Uritsky unhindered and that 
	he was able to escape with the same ease after shooting him. It was 
	impossible to enter without a special permit, since there were armed guards 
	at the door. Unknown persons could not even speak to Uritsky on the 
	telephone. Mikhail Aldanov has confirmed this. 
	
	 
	
	Why did no one react? They 
	saw and heard everything!
	
	
	Mikhail Aldanov demonstrated in his study that Kannegisser could not shoot. 
	Aldanov knew both him and his family well. How then, could Kannegisser hit 
	Uritsky in his head like a sharpshooter when the latter was walking quickly 
	towards the lift? It appears that Kannegisser was used as a shadow-man, just 
	as Leonid Nikolaiev was later used in Kirov's murder. Moreover, Lenin, on 
	the afternoon of the 30th of August 1918, sent Dzerzhinsky a short letter, 
	where two people who had shot Uritsky were named. Why has nothing been 
	mentioned about these two later? Who were they? 
	
	
	The fact that Kannegisser admitted to the crime is irrelevant, since the 
	Chekist torturers could make anyone admit to anything. In this case, the 
	opportunity was taken to accuse the right wing of the Social 
	Revolutionaries of the murder.
	
	
	It has now been confirmed that the central organization of the Cheka, headed 
	by the freemason Gleb Boky, was behind Uritsky's murder. (Igor Bunich, "The 
	Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 47.)
	
	
	So the motive was to exact revenge on Uritsky for his thefts. The main 
	purpose was to be given a reason to begin the mass terror. The murder of 
	Kirov had the same motive. But was there not also another reason to dispose 
	of Uritsky now that he had solved the mystery of another murder? 
	
	 
	
	V. Volodarsky (Moisei Goldstein) had been murdered under puzzling circumstances 
	on June 20, 1918. 
	
	 
	
	He was the people's commissary for press, propaganda and 
	agitation. His murderer was at once stamped as a right wing Social 
	Revolutionary, despite the fact that he was never caught. 
	
	 
	
	The Bolshevik 
	leadership in Moscow wanted to begin the massacre immediately. Moisei 
	Uritsky, who investigated the murder of Volodarsky, refused to agree to 
	this. He suspected the hand of the central leadership behind this murder. 
	That was why it was impossible to use this murder as a pretext. Lenin was 
	beside himself with rage. This is clear from Lenin's angry telegrams, sent 
	on the 26th of June 1918 to Grigori Zinoviev, the chairman of the Petrograd 
	Party Committee. 
	
	 
	
	Lenin wrote, among other things: 
	
		
		"We in the Central 
	Committee heard today that Piter's workers want to respond to Volodarsky's 
	murder with terror but you (not you personally, but Piter's civil servants) 
	held back. I protest strongly!"
	
	
	The only one who could ignore the demands to begin the terror was 
	Petrograd's 45-year-old chief Chekist, Moisei Uritsky. According to 
	Alexander Kravtsov, this telegram clearly shows that the murder of 
	Volo-darsky was planned and organised by the Cheka under orders from Lenin. 
	The historian Igor Bunich confirmed this.
	
	
	Volodarsky and Uritsky belonged to the 275 Menshevik conspirators who, 
	together with Trotsky, had boarded the Kristianiafjord in New York harbour 
	on March 27, 1917 to travel to Petrograd, where they all joined with the 
	Bolshevik leader, Lenin. Volodarsky had lived in the United States since 
	1913.
	
	
	Several strange circumstances put Uritsky on the track of Volodarsky's 
	murderers. The car in which Volodarsky had been traveling had suddenly stopped in a street in Petrograd on the 20th of June 1918. Out of 
	petrol, it was claimed. Volodarsky stepped out of the car together with 
	three comrades to walk to the District Soviet, which was nearby. 
	
	 
	
	Suddenly a 
	terrorist appeared and shot him three times at close range before escaping. Volodarsky died immediately: one of the bullets hit his heart. The terrorist 
	threw a bomb to halt his pursuers. There is no information as to whether or 
	not the bomb exploded.
	
	
	Uritsky was most surprised by the fact that Lenin, on the following day, 
	accused the right wing of the Social Revolutionaries. And abracadabra! 
	During the terror of 1922, a Social Revolutionary, Sergeiev, admitted to 
	Volodarsky's murder.
	
	
	Uritsky knew it was no accident that the car had stopped at the exact spot 
	where the terrorist was waiting. You don't carry bombs around with you just 
	for self-protection! How could the murderer have known that the petrol would 
	run out in this very street? Uritsky could draw only one logical conclusion 
	- the murder had been organized by the Moscow Cheka and could only have been 
	approved by Lenin. 
	
	 
	
	Lenin and Dzerzhinsky of course knew that Uritsky had 
	worked out the truth about the murder, since he sabotaged the demands for 
	mass terror. 
	
	

	
	V. Volodarsky and Moisei Uritsky.
	
	 
	
	No other functionary was able to counter such a demand. 
	
	 
	
	That was another 
	reason why he was regarded as an especially suitable victim, who was later 
	presented as an innocent martyr. That happened with Volodarsky and also with 
	Kirov, Frunze and many others. It was the best way to get rid of undesirable 
	comrades.
	
	
	Lenin had another devilish plan in reserve. He had chosen the same day - the 
	30th of August 1918. Through this plan Lenin wanted to be certain to 
	legalise the mass terror, which had already begun in the Penza district, and 
	to spread it to other areas as well.
	
	
	Thus on the 30th of August, at about ten in the evening, Lenin spoke at an 
	agitation rally at Michelson's factory in Moscow. After the meeting, the 
	Communist leader went out into the yard where he began to converse with the 
	workers by his car. Suddenly three pistol shots were heard, upon which the 
	workers jumped back and Lenin fell to the ground. Two bullets had wounded 
	him. The third slightly wounded the matron M. Popova from the Petropavlovsk 
	hospital. 
	
	 
	
	Lenin's Jewish chauffeur, Stepan Gil, who was sitting in the car, 
	claimed that a woman with a handgun was standing just three paces away from 
	Lenin. Gil rushed out of the car, but the woman threw the pistol at his feet 
	and vanished into the crowd. The wounded Lenin was helped into the car and 
	was driven to the hospital. S. Batulin, vice commissar of the fifth infantry 
	division in Moscow, was also present at the meeting. He immediately chased 
	after the woman.
	
	
	In Serpukhovka, he noticed a strange woman who was carrying a document 
	briefcase and an umbrella. She looked like she was seeking to avoid the 
	pursuers. Batulin asked why she was standing under the tree. 
	
	 
	
	The woman 
	answered: 
	
		
		"Why do you want to know?" 
		
	
	
	Batulin searched her pockets, took her 
	briefcase and umbrella and ordered her to follow him. On the way, Batulin 
	asked why she had tried to shoot Lenin. The woman again answered: 
	
		
		"Why do 
	you want to know?" 
	
	
	Then Batulin asked her directly: 
	
		
		"Was it you who tried to 
	shoot Lenin?" 
	
	
	She replied in the affirmative.
	
	
	The chairman of the factory committee, Ivanov, recognized the woman. He had 
	seen her before Lenin's arrival. She was then handed over to the organ of 
	preliminary investigatory.
	
	
	The vice-chairman of the Cheka, Yakov Peters, who was also the chairman of 
	the Revolutionary Tribunal, and D. Kursky, the people's commissary for 
	judicial affairs, the Estonian Viktor Kingissepp and other
	Chekists were among the investigators of the attempt (Stalin had the Latvian 
	Jew Yakov Peters executed in 1942).
	
	
	The 28-year-old Fanny Kaplan (actually Feiga Roydman) supposedly explained 
	that her attempt on Lenin's life was a personal political action, but the 
	doctor of history P. Sofinov has described the chain of events quite 
	differently in his book about the history of the Cheka (published in 1960). 
	I shall give a brief outline of his version.
	
	
	After the meeting at Michelson's factory, Lenin left the shell workshop 
	together with the workers and walked towards the car. Suddenly a shot was 
	fired, then another and also a third. Lenin was wounded by two bullets and 
	collapsed just a few paces away from the car. The bullets were poisoned. The 
	female terrorist did not manage to escape, since some children who had been 
	standing nearby pointed out Fanny Kaplan to some workers who apprehended her 
	and took her to the Cheka. 
	
	 
	
	Fanny Kaplan was a Social Revolutionary who 
	organized terrorist actions against the Bolsheviks and the Soviet leadership 
	under orders from the British-French imperialists. Despite the fact that 
	Lenin was badly wounded, his iron physique managed to survive both the 
	wounds and the poison. That was the way in which the "historian" P. Sofinov 
	described the attempt in 1960.
	
	
	In 1924, Dr Weisbrod confirmed in Yaroslavsky's book that Lenin recovered 
	quickly. Did the poison have no effect at all then? It was officially 
	explained that the poison of the Social Revolutionaries was of inferior 
	quality and had no effect. Dr Weisbrod never mentioned any poison. This 
	story was invented later.
	 
	
	In 1938 the Stalinist propaganda asserted that it was Nikolai Bukharin 
	(Dolgolevsky), member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, also 
	called the "party's darling", who had organized the attempt on Lenin 
	together with the Social Revolutionaries. 
	
	 
	
	Kaplan had been his minion. He was 
	also accused of organizing the murder of Kirov and was supposed to have made 
	plans to murder Joseph Stalin too. Bukharin was also accused of the murders 
	of Menzhinsky, Kuibyshev and Gorky. Finally, he was supposed to have tried 
	to poison Yezhov, chief of the secret police. There is actually another 
	version, from the 30th of August 1918. That was an open message written by 
	Yakov Sverdlov (actually Yankel-Aaron Movshevich Solomon). 
	
	 
	
	He maintained 
	that two people were arrested for this attempt. Sverdlov claimed that they 
	were definitely right wing Social
	Revolutionaries acting for the British and the French. This document was 
	even displayed in the Lenin Museum. It was said that Protopopov, one of the 
	most violent enemies of the Soviet Union, had worked together with Kaplan 
	and also helped her escape. 
	
	 
	
	Protopopov had been executed immediately, it was 
	claimed. This version was never again mentioned after the 3rd of December 
	1918. Neither did the history professor Sofinov appear to know anything 
	about it. But Lenin's first question after he had been hit was: "Did you 
	catch him?" So it was a man who fired the shots! Professor A. Litvinov later 
	managed to prove that it was the Chekist Protopopov who fired the shots at 
	Lenin. 
	
	 
	
	The agent was arrested and killed on the same, or the following, day. 
	Kaplan did not know what had happened and stubbornly kept to her version. 
	(Dmitry Volkogonov, "Lenin", Moscow, 1994,1, p. 397.)
	
	
	A long-coat and blazer, which the Bolshevik leader had been wearing at the 
	time of the attempt, were also exhibited in the Lenin Museum in Moscow. Four 
	holes had been marked - two red ones, to show which bullets had hit the 
	body, and two white ones where the bullets had passed through without 
	damaging Lenin. All four shots had been fired at his back. The official 
	version claims that only three shots were fired. The bullet, which wounded 
	Popova appears to have been one of those which passed through Lenin's 
	clothes.
	
	
	Yakov (Yankel) Yurovsky, who had earlier organized the murder of the Tsar 
	and his family, was only allowed to search the site of the attempt some 
	three days later. He found four (!) cartridges. But only three shots had 
	been fired! (Ibid, p. 398.)
	
	
	There were also some other inexplicable factors involved. If the party 
	leadership had not planned Uritsky's murder, Lenin would surely have 
	cancelled his meeting on the same evening or at least taken certain 
	precautions. This is the opinion of Grigori Nilov (Alexander Kravtsov) in 
	his book "The Grammar of Leninism". He pointed out the following ambiguities 
	in the official description.
	
	
	Was Fanny Kaplan really holding a briefcase and an umbrella in her hands 
	while firing the shots? Did she really remain under the tree and wait for 
	her pursuers to see the briefcase and umbrella? Why did she only throw away 
	the gun and not the briefcase and umbrella? Alexander Kravtsov was of the 
	opinion that such political terrorists usually do not flee, but remain by 
	their victims. It is especially puzzling that, in the official version, the workers allowed her to escape. 
	
	 
	
	And where were the 
	bodyguards? The chauffeur Gil wrote in his memoirs that Lenin did not have a 
	single bodyguard with him. Neither did the party committee of the factory 
	receive him!
	
	
	It was most peculiar that Lenin did not have any bodyguards with him on this 
	particular occasion. The Bolsheviks took particular care to protect 
	themselves against all possible enemies just after the seizure of power. In 
	the beginning they used only Chinese and German bodyguards. When the Soviet 
	government moved from Petrograd to Moscow on 1012 March 1918, extraordinary 
	precautionary measures were taken and masquerade tricks were used to confuse 
	the "enemies of the people". At this point, the Bolsheviks were close to 
	being overthrown. 
	
	 
	
	The train which was to bring the Bolshevik leaders and 
	their "government" (Sovnarkom) from Petrograd to Moscow was stopped by 
	around 600 Russian sailors and soldiers who attacked with the war-cry: 
	"Destroy the Jewish government that has sold Russia to the Germans!" An even 
	stronger force of bodyguards who had accompanied the train unfortunately 
	fought the crowd back. (Platonov, "The History of the Russian People in the 
	20th Century", part I, Moscow, 1997, p. 536.)
	
	
	It appears from the information in Ryabchikov's book "Behind the Horizon 
	Lies a Horizon" that Lenin was guarded by sailors armed with machine guns 
	and armoured vehicles in March 1918.
	
	
	Lenin usually had bodyguards with him at all times, according to the Chekist 
	Alexander Orlov. There was only one officer at Michelson's factory on the 
	30th of August 1918 - Batulin. Lenin and Krupskaya were photographed 
	together with bodyguards on August 28th, just two days before the attempt. 
	Why did Lenin not wish to have any bodyguards with him on August 30th?
	
	
	There was never any explanation why no investigation was made of the pistol, 
	which was found at the feet of the chauffeur, Gil. Did the assassin really 
	use the weapon, which was found? Another revolver was found later. During 
	the investigation, no one was interested in how Kaplan held the revolver, 
	briefcase and umbrella. 
	
	 
	
	This is why there is reason to believe that another 
	weapon was used in the "attempt on Lenin's life". Now the most puzzling 
	circumstance of all: Fanny Kaplan was actually half-blind. It was dark at 
	around eleven o'clock on the evening of August 30th when the attack took 
	place. She could hardly see anything at all in semi-darkness. 
	
	 
	
	Her acquaintances explained that she usually looked 
	frightened and confused on such occasions. Her eyesight had been damaged in 
	a bomb explosion. In Tsarist times, she was sentenced to death as a Social 
	Revolutionary terrorist, but since she was under-age at the time, the 
	sentence was changed on the 8th of January 1907 to penal servitude for life. 
	
	
	 
	
	She was periodically completely blind and suffered from headaches. She was 
	released in connection with the Bolsheviks' take-over. So it was quite 
	impossible for this half-blind woman to have shot Lenin in semi-darkness. It 
	must be presumed that the other person, whom Yakov Sverdlov mentioned, had a 
	steady hand and good eyesight in order not to kill Lenin but just to wound 
	him slightly. Only the Chekist Protopopov could have done this.
	
	
	It would have been simple to murder Lenin in the factory yard if this had 
	been the "assassin's" intention. There were no bodyguards there. For this 
	reason, Russia's Ministry of Security decided to begin an investigation into 
	the affair on the 19th of June 1992. The case was later taken over by the 
	Russian Office of the Public Prosecutor. 
	
	 
	
	That was a sensible decision, since 
	they found information suggesting that Fanny Kaplan had not been at the 
	Michelson factory at all that particular evening (Istochnik, No. 2, 1993). 
	The new investigation could not certify that either of the two bullets was 
	fired from the Browning Kaplan was supposed to have used. It is known that a 
	factory worker turned up three days later with a Browning pistol. It was 
	never clarified then whether this was the same weapon or not.
	
	
	Stalin was earlier suspected of this shooting, but the historian Igor Bunich 
	has now reached the conclusion that Lenin organized the "assassination 
	attempt" himself. Even if the head of the Cheka, Dzerzhinsky, gave orders 
	for Lenin's bodyguards to leave his side on the 30th of August, Lenin 
	himself would never have agreed to this, coward that he was.
	
	
	This means that Lenin did not want any bodyguards with him on that day, 
	since he had planned the attempt personally. Otherwise he would never again 
	have showed his face in public after what had happened in Petrograd on that 
	morning. Dzerzhinsky helped to conceal the truth, so that it would be 
	impossible to reveal who was really responsible for the shooting. He carried 
	that secret with him to his grave. 
	
	 
	
	The Polish Jew Dzerzhinsky, who was an 
	infamous drug-addict and sadist, died suddenly 260 under mysterious 
	circumstances on the 20th of July 1926 when he began to express his desire 
	to have as much power as Stalin. Stalin was also interested in "inheriting" 
	the money Dzerzhinsky had put into foreign bank accounts.
	
	
	That was typical of Stalin who, for example, gave orders on the 31st of 
	October 1925 to murder the military commander Mikhail Frunze on the 
	operation table. A myth was later created which turned Frunze into a 
	national hero.
	
	
	The "attempt" on Lenin was immediately exploited by the party leadership, 
	who stated that it was the right-wing Social Revolutionaries who had 
	committed the terror action and that the deed had been directed at the whole 
	working class. On the 2nd of September, Yakov Sverdlov officially demanded 
	the beginning of a red terror campaign. He was the chairman of the Central 
	Executive Committee (head of state) and the secretary of the Central 
	Committee.
	
	
	According to official reports, the commandant of the Kremlin, Pavel Malkov, 
	killed Fanny Kaplan illegally (without trial) on September 4, 1918. She 
	stuck to her version that she had acted of her own accord. A political 
	prisoner, Vasili Novikov, claimed that he had met Fanny Kaplan in the prison 
	of Sverdlovsk in July 1932. 
	
	 
	
	This was officially denied just a few years ago. 
	The prosecutor's group in Moscow did not wish to ignore this version, 
	according to which Fanny Kaplan was pardoned at the last moment and sent to 
	prison in Sverdlovsk in the Ural (Dagens Nyheter, 17th of March 1994). 
	
	 
	
	She 
	came out in May in 1945 and died in 1947. Lenin knew that the Chekists had 
	sabotaged the investigation of the "attempt" by distorting the real 
	circumstances of such an important "crime" against the Bolshevik regime. He 
	would never have accepted such a procedure unless he himself was behind the 
	attempt.
	
	
	The first thing to be done after the attempt was the execution of 900 
	undesirable persons in Moscow. Tens of thousands were killed afterwards. 
	
	 
	
	On 
	the 21st of November 1917, Lenin had said: 
	
		
		"We organize the violence in the 
	name of the workers!"
	
	
	The Council of People's Commissaries proclaimed the red terror as an 
	official policy on the 5th of September 1918. This policy was never called 
	off. A similar campaign of terror was begun after the murder of Kirov. It 
	became one huge grisly celebration for those Jewish criminal gangs who had 
	come into power with German and American aid and ruled the people with their lies and unnatural doctrines. 
	
	 
	
	Those who were impossible to 
	control were liquidated. Lists of such people were compiled immediately 
	after the seizure of power but the execution machine rolled forward 
	indiscriminately over Russia. 
	
	 
	
	For instance, 20 doctors were executed in Kronstadt simply because they had become too popular with the workers. That 
	was reason enough. Death sentences were delivered for the least offence. The 
	Chekists only needed a pretext. They wanted to murder as many people as was 
	practically possible. Immediately after the seizure of power, Lenin had 
	threatened his henchmen with execution if they did not follow his 
	instructions to the letter.
	
	
	The abnormal circumstances in Soviet Russia brought mentally deranged people 
	- mass murderers - to the fore. Communism became a kind of mental rabies. 
	Even the good people shared a part of the responsibility for this process of 
	destruction, since they did nothing to hinder the advance of that political 
	and criminal Mafia. 
	
	 
	
	The Communists based their wealth and privileges on 
	robbery. And evil was victorious. 
	
	 
	
	The Jewish Bolsheviks, meanwhile, declared 
	demagogically that the Dictatorship of the Proletariat was the highest form 
	of democracy. The West immediately began to defend those criminals, saying 
	that blood is always spilled for good causes... Only idiots could have been 
	ignorant of the fact that such "revolutions" always involve long-term and 
	senseless destruction. No wise and responsible person could therefore be 
	sympathetic towards revolutions.
	
	
	The Jewish extremists' coups in Russia in 1917 became the greatest social 
	catastrophe in the history of humanity. The new power-mongers stole 
	everything from the Russian people, even their history. But the truth always 
	comes to light in the end; mass murders cannot be concealed forever. We now 
	know in almost every detail what happened and who the guilty parties were.
	
	
	Here follows a list of members of the leadership of the Cheka when the mass 
	terror began in 1918: 
	
		
			- 
			
			Felix Dzerzhinsky (chairman) 
- 
			
			Yakov Peters 
	(Vice-Chairman and chief of the Revolutionary Tribunals) 
- 
			
			Viktor Shklovsky 
- 
			
			Kneifis 
- 
			
			Zeistin 
- 
			
			Krenberg 
- 
			
			Maria Khaikina 
- 
			
			Sachs 
- 
			
			Stepan Shaumyan 
- 
			
			Seizyan 
- 
			
			Delafabr 
- 
			
			Blumkin 
- 
			
			Alexandrovich 
- 
			
			Zitkin 
- 
			
			Zalman Ryvkin 
- 
			
			Reintenberg 
- 
			
			Fines 
- 
			
			Yakov Goldin 
- 
			
			Golperstein 
- 
			
			Knigessen 
- 
			
			Deibkin 
- 
			
			Schillenckus 
- 
			
			Yelena Rozmirovich 
- 
			
			G. Sverdlov 
- 
			
			I. Model 
- 
			
			Deibol 
- 
			
			Zaks 
- 
			
			Yanson 
- 
			
			Leontievich 
- 
			
			Libert 
- 
			
			Antonov 
- 
			
			Yakov Agranov
	(Sorenson), who became especially feared.  
	
	All the Jews enumerated here 
	became notorious.
	
	
	Grigori Zinoviev led the terror in Petrograd. Zinoviev was Lenin's closest 
	comrade and secretary before the take-over, despite the fact that he was 
	regarded as unintelligent and unskilled. His secretary Richard Pickel aided 
	him. That he was not only a high freemason in the Grand Orient, but also a 
	devout Jew, is apparent from the following story.
	
	
	The former Chekist Alexander Orlov described in his book "The Secret History 
	of the Stalinist Crimes" how Zinoviev's last walk to his execution was 
	demonstrated before Stalin. 
	
	 
	
	On December 20, 1936, when Stalin celebrated the 
	anniversary of the Cheka, a grand gala was held, to which the chief of the 
	NKVD Nikolai Yezhov, Mikhail Frinovsky (deputy chief of the NKVD), Karl 
	Pauker (chief of the operative section) and other leading and infamous 
	Jewish Chekists had been invited. When all were happily feasting at the 
	table, the cruel joker Pauker decided to imitate Zinoviev's execution scene. 
	Pauker played Zinoviev. Two of his colleagues pulled him along with them 
	towards the cellar to be executed, "Zinoviev" begged for his life in a 
	heartbreaking voice and rolled his eyes. 
	
	 
	
	Suddenly he fell to his knees, took 
	hold of the warden's boot and shouted in a macabre voice: 
	
		
		"Dear comrade, in 
	God's name... call on Joseph Vissarionovich!"
	
	
	Stalin watched and roared with laughter. 
	
	 
	
	He said: 
	
		
		"For God's sake!" 
	
	
	The 
	guests, who saw that Stalin was enjoying the show, asked Pauker to repeat 
	his performance. Stalin could not stop laughing and clutched his stomach. 
	
	
	 
	
	Then Pauker came up with an extra scene, where "Zinoviev" threw up his hands 
	and shouted: 
	
		
		"Hear, Israel! The Lord our God is one Lord!" 
		
		
		(The Jewish 
	profession of faith, see Deuteronomy 6:4.) 
	
	
	Then Stalin was no longer able to 
	follow the show, since he fell to laughing so heavily that he was about to 
	choke. He waved to Pauker to end his performance. Karl Pauker was also 
	executed half a year later - the Hungarian Jew was accused of being a German 
	spy. The former barber had come from Budapest to make his career in the 
	terror-machine of Russia, despite being an uneducated and ignorant person. 
	But Stalin had allowed himself to be shaved by him - which shows how much he 
	trusted him.
	
	
	It was not always necessary to be a (preferably Jewish) Communist to become 
	an important functionary within the Soviet apparatus. 
	
	 
	
	It was enough to be a 
	Jew and also rich. Yakov Sverdlov's younger brother
	Venyamin had emigrated to the United States, where he had become a 
	successful banker. Yakov, as the head of state, invited his brother to 
	Russia soon after the take-over where he became, with Lenin's agreement, 
	people's commissary for communications, despite the fact that he was not 
	even a Party member. He could not cope with the demands of the job, however, 
	and later became a leading functionary within the Soviet of the National 
	Economy, instead (1923-25).
	
	
	Yakov's and Venyamin's older brother Zinovi wanted to have nothing to do 
	with the extremists' revolutionary movement and broke away from them. His 
	father, therefore, showered curses on him and threw him out of his home. The 
	author Maxim Gorky (actually Alexei Peshkov) adopted Zinovi, who later 
	emigrated to France where he became a mercenary in the Foreign Legion. His 
	father was overjoyed to hear that Zinovi had lost his right arm in a battle. 
	
	
	 
	
	In Judaism, the cursed son always loses his right arm. Everything according 
	to the Russian researcher Gregory Klimov. Matvei Maravnik admitted on 
	Swedish television that he should really have become a rabbi but chose to 
	work as a Bolshevik functionary instead. Isaac Babel fought for the red 
	regime in Budyonny's cavalry. He took the opportunity to steal as many 
	diamonds as he could. He was later praised for his authorship.
	
	
	Jewish "revolutionaries" believed that, by all those repulsive and terrible 
	mass murders, they were sacrificing goy victims to please Yahweh. In the 
	Hebrew word for 'to take prey' lies the meaning 'to plunder'. And that was 
	precisely what they did in Russia. 
	
	 
	
	That was why the Jewish poet and author 
	Heinrich Heine wrote: 
	
		
		"Die Judische Religion ist uberhaupt keine Religion, 
	sie ist ein Ungluck. " (The Jewish religion is not a religion at all, it is 
	a calamity.) 
	
	
	He also confirmed in his "Confessions" that: 
	
		
		"The deeds of the 
	Jews are as little known to the world as their true nature." 
		
	
	
	Of course, he 
	meant the deeds of the extremists.
	
	
	Those criminals also worshipped Yahweh who, according to the French author 
	Anatole France, was a mighty demon. ("Queen Goose-Foot", 1899.) So those 
	Hasidic Jews had their God's blessing to enjoy the suffering and degradation 
	of other people (Psalm 37:34). 
	
	 
	
	Unfortunately these people represented the 
	worst elements of Jewry. In Europe, the Jew eventually became synonymous 
	with the deceiver or the confidence man, according to the British Encyclopaedia. The political bandits who ravaged Russia were totally 
	merciless and inhuman. That was the reason why
	Chiang Kai-shek confirmed that the greatest fault of Communism was 
	inhumanness.
	
	
	The Russian people remember with horror their Jewish executioners, all of 
	whom had their own methods for getting rid of their enemies. Ashikin in 
	Simferopol made his victims march stark naked before him whereupon he hacked 
	off their arms and ears with his sword before he personally pressed out 
	their eyes and cut off their heads. 
	
	 
	
	The chief executioner in Nikolaiev, 
	Bogbender, had his victims walled in alive. Deutsch and Wichman worked in 
	Odessa. They claimed to have no appetite until they had killed several 
	hundred goys. The Chekists in Voronezh committed ritual murders. Among other 
	things, they used to boil their victims alive. That was a common method of 
	getting rid of goys and Jewish renegades. Nearly all the inhabitants of 
	Pyatigorsk were exterminated. All this information was published in the 
	Russian newspaper Russkoye Vosskresenye, No. 3, 1991.
	
	
	In Vologda, Mikhail Kedrov (Zederbaum) and Alexander Eiduk liquidated all 
	the intellectuals, for whom they felt a particular hatred. In the winter of 
	1920 a 20-year-old Jew was named chief of the Cheka in Vologda. His perverse 
	methods of execution were described by the historian Sergei Melgunov in his 
	book "The Red Terror in Russia", (Moscow, 1990, p. 122). 
	
	 
	
	The youngster used 
	to sit on a chair by the river. Then he had a pile of sacks and many 
	prisoners brought to him there. The prisoners were forced into those bags 
	and thrown down through a crack in the ice where they drowned. He was soon 
	called to Moscow, where he was accused of being unnatural. Of course he was 
	- after all, he had not thrown his victims into boiling water, had he?
	
	
	Some Jewish executioners and torturers became especially infamous, among 
	them Roza Schulz. Arkadi Rosengoltz was especially feared among seamen and 
	railwaymen. Among the Chekists of Kharkov, Yakimovich, Lyubarsky, the 
	18-year-old youth Yesel Mankin, Feldman, Portugeis and Sayenko were 
	particularly feared.
	
	
	The reserves of extremist Jews were not enough. That was why they hired a 
	large number of Russian criminals, murderers and violent Chinese to continue 
	the killing day and night. Jews as usual, led this mob. Many criminals had 
	successful careers as Chekists. There were also plenty of bandits in the 
	official Soviet organizations. Officially it was something to he proud of. 
	
	
	 
	
	Mikhail Vinnitsky published an article in Kommunist in May
	1919, in which he said that he had worked, in his capacity as a robber, for 
	the ideal of Communism, since he only robbed rich members of the 
	bourgeoisie. In 1919 he worked as a secretary in the Cheka. Later, under the 
	name Mishka Yaponchik, he built up a regiment entirely composed of thieves 
	and robbers. The political leader of that regiment was the Jew Feldman. 
	
	
	 
	
	Odessa's infamous robber Kotovsky was named leader of a Communist regiment. 
	In Tsaritsyn, even soviet organs were led by (Jewish) criminals. (Sergei 
	Melgunov, "The Red Terror in Russia", Moscow, 1990, pp. 178-179.)
	
	
	Jews usually led the Russian Chekists. Yelena Stasova and Varvara Yakovleva 
	worked especially brutally in Petrograd. Revekka Plastina (Maizell) became 
	infamous in Arkhangelsk, Yevgenia Bosh in Penza, and the Hungarian Jewess 
	Remover in Odessa. The Jewess Maria Khaikina, who committed terrible 
	atrocities, headed the Revolutionary Tribunal in Kiev.
	
	
	An American negro, Johnston, was sent to Odessa where he proved to
	be a very savage butcher. 
	
	 
	
	His main task was to flay victims alive (Ibid., p.
	139). 
	
	
	
	Felix Dzerzhinsky (Rutin), 
	
	
	chief of the political police in Soviet-Russia. 
	
	
	This sadistic drug-addict 
	was called "Iron Felix".
	 
	
	It is impossible, for lack of space, to describe all the butchers and their 
	crimes. I shall just mention some numbers. 
	
	 
	
	During a single year in power, 
	the Bolsheviks exterminated 320 000 clergymen (Molodaya Gvardiya, No. 6, 
	1989). A total of 10 180 000 "class enemies" were murdered between 1918 and 
	1920. Another 15 million people died during the civil war. During the famine 
	of 1921-22, another 5 053 000 people perished. The Bolsheviks, headed by 
	Lenin, managed to destroy over 30 million people during their first four 
	years in power.
	
	
	In 1917, 143.5 million people lived in the part of Imperial Russia, which 
	later became Soviet Russia. Russia had lost more than 20 per cent of her 
	population by 1922. Only 131 million lived there in 1923. It has been 
	calculated that Russia's population, under normal circumstances, should have 
	increased to 343 million by the middle of the 1950s, that is, if the 
	development had continued as it had begun in the Tsarist era. 165 million 
	people disappeared. Who in the West mourns for them? There were 178 million 
	left.
	
	
	The most brutal Jewish mass murderers were Roza Zemlyachka (actually Rozalia 
	Zalkind) and Bela Kun (Aaron Kohn). The latter came from Hungary. Roza 
	Zemlyachka was called the "fury of the Communist terror". Roza was born on 
	the 1st of April 1876 and died on the 21st of January 1947. She eventually 
	became the party secretary of the Kremlin and, in 1939, vice-chairman of the 
	Council of People's Commissaries (that is: deputy prime minister). 
	
	 
	
	She was 
	an utterly merciless and power-crazy Jewess who worked as a Chekist in the 
	Crimea together with two other Jews, Bela Kun and Boris Feldman. Her methods 
	of execution were so atrocious that I will spare the reader the details, 
	which were too nasty even for Dzerzhinsky in Moscow. Bela Kun and Roza 
	Zemlyachka were particularly greedy when they went out on their forays. 
	
	
	 
	
	They managed to grab an unusually large amount of gold in Sevastopol. 
	
	 
	
	This 
	was largely the basis of their enormous wealth. At the same time, they took 
	the opportunity to murder as many people as they could. It was an integrand 
	part of Mela Kun's cruelty that he raped his female victims. This pair 
	managed to murder 8364 people in Sevastopol during the first week of 
	November 1920. 50 000 "enemies of the people" were killed in the Crimea, 
	according to official sources (12 000 in Simferopol, 9 000 in Sevastopol, 5 
	000 in Yalta). 
	
	 
	
	The author Shmelev, however, states that at least 120 000 
	people were murdered in the Crimea.
	
	
	
	The mass murderess Roza Zemlyachka 
	
	
	(Rozalia Zalkind).
	 
	
	Bela Kun used to lend a hand at mowing people down with machine guns. He 
	became infamous as "the Commissary for Death". Dzerzhinzky called him a 
	lunatic. Trotsky personally gave him orders to shoot 40 000 captured 
	officers in the Crimea (Dagens Nyheter, 22nd of November
	1993).
	
	
	The freemason Bela Kun led the Communist terror regime in Hungary. He was a 
	Master of the Johannes Lodge in Debrecen. He was also a member of B'nai 
	B'rith. The Masonic socialists handed the power over to him on the 20th of 
	March 1919. There was no coup. It is worth pointing out that 90 per cent of 
	the Hungarian freemasons were Jews. Their Council of People's Commissaries 
	was comprised of 26 members, of which 18 were Jews.
	
	
	The eight Hungarians were just puppets. Bela Kun was a cunning swindler, 
	extraordinarily greedy and cruel. He had earlier been the secretary of the 
	Workers' Union in Kolozsvar, but was fired for embezzlement of public funds.
	
	
	With this in mind, it is easy to understand that his most important work 
	consisted in hunting down goys who owned gold. Amazing amounts were 
	transferred from Hungary to foreign banks.
	 
	
	The Hungarian Red Army began to spread Communism to Slovakia, which was 
	eventually occupied. On June 16, 1919, the Soviet Republic of Slovakia was 
	proclaimed and the plundering began there too. The Czech troops crushed that 
	hellish government as early as the 7th of July and managed to frighten those 
	greedy Jewish gangsters away. 
	
	 
	
	Bela Kun's and his Jewish comrades' incredibly 
	cruel terror regime infested Hungary for 133 days. Bela Kun's Jewish 
	commissar Isidor Bergfeld admitted that he had personally burned 60 Magyars 
	alive in ovens and murdered another 100 with his own hands. A total of at 
	least 560 victims were claimed. The Communist terror, which was led by the 
	Jew Otto Korvin (actually Klein), chief of the political police, cost the 
	country 28 billion forints in material damages and a further 14 billion in 
	debts. 
	
	 
	
	It was later discovered that the "revolutionary" government had also 
	stolen 900 million forints in foreign currency from the "people's domestic 
	fund". (A. Melsky, "Bela Kun and the Bolshevik Revolution in Hungary",
	Stockholm, 1940, pp. 25-26, 46.)
	
	
	Rumanian troops deposed Bela Kun and his fellow criminals on the 6th of 
	August 1919. Bela Kun escaped to Austria, where he was detained, but the 
	Jewish freemason, murderer and Social Democrat Friedrich Adler secured Bela 
	Kun's release. Bela Kun then went to Soviet Russia, where he continued with 
	his banditry. 
	
	 
	
	After Adler had murdered the Austrian prime minister, Count 
	Karl Stiirgkh, on the 22nd of October 1916, because the latter had tried to 
	prevent the activity of the left wing radicals, Adler said before the court: 
	
	
		
		"It is not only the right, but the duty, of every citizen to use violence." 
		
	
	
	Adler was sentenced but was pardoned soon afterwards and later became the 
	leader of the Communist Party in Austria. (In February 1934, the Social 
	Democrats in Austria tried to seize power by force.) 
	
	 
	
	Several of Bela Kun's 
	partners in crime escaped to the USA, for example Alexander Goldberger, and 
	Joseph Pogany. Pogany was active in thc American Workers' Party under the 
	pseudonym John Pepper. (Nesta Webster, "The Socialist Network", London 1926, 
	p. 59.)
	
	
	Jewish Communists led by Eugene Levine and Kurt Rosenfeld also held power in 
	Munich for two weeks (from 13th of April to 1st of May 1919). They had 
	proclaimed the Soviet Republic of Bavaria. All its leaders were Jews who 
	belonged to the secret Masonic lodge Number Eleven, located at 51 
	Brennerstrasse in Munich. Eugene Levine (actually Nissen Berg) and Max 
	Levien also murdered their hostages, and were after as many gold items and gems as they could possibly grab hold of. 
	
	 
	
	Eugene Levine was 
	executed for all his crimes immediately after the fall of the Soviet 
	Republic of Bavaria. The mass murderer Max Levien managed to escape to 
	Soviet Russia, where he became a member of the Central Executive Committee.
	
	
	The Bolshevik bandits could ravage only those areas of Russia, which the 
	Germans had captured for them, according to the historian Igor Bunich.
	
	
	The Germans were totally amazed - they had never seen anything like the 
	cruelty they now witnessed. They could easily have put down the Bolsheviks 
	but held back since a deal was a deal.
	
	
	Lieutenant Balk, the chairman of the German Commission in the province of 
	Yaroslavl, had demanded as early as the 21st of July 1918 that the voluntary 
	army of peasants that was fighting the Bolsheviks should capitulate to him. 
	The 428 naive peasants did just that, following which they were handed over 
	to the Bolsheviks who immediately executed all of them, to the Germans' 
	horror. (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 22.)
	
	
	The Bolsheviks were also given the Germans' lists of the opponents of 
	Communism and on the basis of these lists they executed a further 50,247 
	people between March and November 1918, according to Igor Bunich.
	
	
	
	Chairman of the Soviet Republic of Bavaria, Eugene Levine, 
	
	
	was born in St. 
	Petersburg as Nissen Berg in
	1883.
	
	
	Anti-Semitism of course flared up like never before among the Russians. 
	
	 
	
	In 
	all the areas, which the Whites re-conquered from the Germans, searches were 
	made for any Jewish commissars who had not managed to escape under the 
	Germans' protection. But there were not many left - the Whites only found a 
	few. This was immediately exploited by the Zionist propaganda in the West, 
	and as usual, the facts were distorted to ridiculous proportions. These 
	myths are still, regrettably, blindly believed.
	
	
	I will give just one example from among all those lies. It was claimed that 
	the Whites in the Ukrainian town of Proskurov had executed 60 000 Jews on 
	the 15th of February 1919. That little town then only had 15 000 
	inhabitants, however. The Jews of Proskurov were busy introducing the Soviet 
	regime in other areas. (Russky Kolokol, No. 7, 1929, Berlin.) There were 11 
	411 Jews in Proskurov in 1897 (50 per cent of the population). In 1926 there 
	were 13 408 Jews in Proskurov (42 per cent of the population). A remarkable 
	metamorphosis! Proskurov had 34 592 inhabitants in 1933. 
	
	 
	
	Encyclopaedia 
	Judaica from 1971 states that only 1500 Jews had been killed in 1919, a 
	figure based on Soviet propaganda. (Only nine Jewish victims can be seen on 
	a photograph from the archives of Jerusalem.) It was now claimed that 60 000 
	Jews had been killed in the whole of the Ukraine. It is for my readers to 
	decide whether they wish to believe this or not.
	
	
	The Zionists seem to have a weakness for big numbers connected with sixes; 
	the same number as the points on the Star of David. The Zionist propaganda 
	after the First World War claimed that six million Jews had died as a result 
	of famine, epidemics and holocaust. A propaganda article entitled "The 
	Crucifixion of Jews Must Stop!" was published in American Hebrew on the 31st 
	of October 1919. Everything was later revealed to have been war propaganda.
	
	
	The most atrocious murder was committed on the night before the 17th of July 
	1918, when the Jew Yankel Yurovsky and his butcher's menials executed the 
	Tsar and his family in Yekaterinburg, in the cellar of a house, which had 
	belonged to the merchant Nikolai Ipatiev. At half past two on a hot summer 
	night, twelve men began the murder of Tsar Nicholas II and the Tsaritsa 
	Alexandra and their five children Olga, Maria, Tatiana, Anastasia and 
	Alexei, and also three servants and the family doctor, Ycvgeni Botkin. 
	
	 
	
	One 
	of the executioners even beat the children's dog,
	Jimmy, to death with the butt of his rifle. The Soviet Union's first 
	delegation to the UN had 12 members, all Jews. The number 12 has always 
	played a central role in the Cabbala. This number corresponds to the 12 
	tribes of Israel - a symbol of the struggle for world dominion. The 
	40-year-old Jewish Chekist Yankel Yurovsky shot Tsar Nicholas II. 
	
	 
	
	The Crown 
	Prince, the sick (he suffered from haemophilia) 13-year-old boy Alexei, did 
	not die immediately, so Yurovsky fired several more bullets into him. 
	
	 
	
	He had 
	a Mauser pistol and a Colt. His grandfather was a rabbi, according to the 
	historian Oleg Platonov. Yurovsky's schooling finished after eighteen 
	months. He had told his brother Leiba that he dreamed of being rich. He 
	managed to fulfil his dream through his jewellery deals. The man who held 
	the Tsar's family imprisoned was Trotsky's favorite - Alexander 
	Beloborodov, one of the soviet leaders in Yekaterinburg. His real name was 
	Yankel Weisbart and he was the son of a rich Jewish fur-trader, Isidor 
	Weisbart. Weisbart was once caught red-handed in the act of stealing a large 
	amount of money but nothing happened to him.
	
	
	Yurovsky was one of the leading Chekists in Yekaterinburg. His assistant G. 
	Nikulin was his accomplice in the murders. The other members of the 
	execution squad were Piotr Yermakov, Piotr Medvedyev, S. Vaganov and seven 
	more international "revolutionaries", who were later presented as "Latvians" 
	(a common trick to camouflage the truth, as the reader will probably have 
	noticed). 
	
	 
	
	They were Andreas Vergasi, Laszlo Horvath, Victor Griinfeldt, Imre 
	Nagy, Emile Fekete, Anselm Fischer and Isidor Edelstein. All those men were 
	part of the special squad from the Kamyslov regiment. The entire operation 
	was called "Tvyordy Znak". When all this was made public in 1992, Erzsebet 
	Nagy, the daughter of Imre Nagy, who had led the Hungarian revolt against 
	the Soviet Union in the autumn of 1956, reacted strongly. 
	
	 
	
	She tried to 
	assert that her father had been in a prison camp at the time the Tsar and 
	his family were murdered. He was supposed to have written a postcard to her 
	from this camp. (Dagens Nyheter, 11th of September 1992.) It was hardly 
	likely that the executioners would have been allowed to tell anyone where 
	they were or what they were doing during a secret operation of this kind. 
	Any former Soviet subject can confirm the truth of this.
	
	
	It was the Jew Schinder, chief of the Cheka's execution squad in 
	Yekaterinburg, who selected the murderers of the Tsar and his family. 
	
	 
	
	The man who destroyed the bodies with sulphuric acid was officially called 
	Pinkus Voikov (actually Pinkhus Weiner). He was a 30-year-old Jewish 
	chemist, who had also taken part in the preparations for the murder. He 
	later stole a ruby ring from the finger of one of the corpses, wore it and 
	was very proud of it. He was murdered in 1927 in Warsaw. The highest party 
	chief of the Urals and Siberia, the 42-year-old Jew Shaya Goloshchokin, who 
	was a close friend of Yakov Sverdlov and had never previously worked in his 
	life, also took an active part in the planning of the murders. 
	
	 
	
	The historian 
	V. Burtsev, who has investigated the revolutionary movement, described him 
	as a degenerate type and a cruel executioner. He later led the liquidation 
	campaign against the Kazakh people.
	
	
	It was he, according to the historian Oleg Platonov, who brought several 
	strange boxes to Moscow at the end of July 1918. Those boxes, according to a 
	discussion in Sovnarkom, contained the heads of the Tsar and his family 
	preserved in alcohol jars. 
	
	 
	
	After Lenin's death, a commission found the head 
	of Tsar Nicholas II preserved in alcohol in his filing cabinet. (Vladimir Soloukhin, "In the Light of Day", Moscow, 1992, p. 217.)
	
	
	
	The Tsar Nicholas II and his family.
	 
	
	There was also another Jewish functionary behind the murders - the 
	27-year-old Georgi Safarov (Woldin), a close comrade of Trotsky. He was 
	later made one of the leaders of Comintern.
	
	
	Cossacks and Czech troops captured Yekaterinburg on July 25th. Nikolai 
	Sokolov immediately began investigating the murder of the Tsar's family. He 
	had earlier worked as a preliminary investigator of especially important 
	affairs for the court in Omsk.
	
	
	A cellar room with a grating before the window was found in the basement of 
	the merchant Ipatiev's house. Traces of blood and bullet holes in the walls 
	were found, despite the murderers having cleaned up after their crime. It 
	was clear that the little cellar had been transformed into a real 
	slaughterhouse.
	 
	
	One of the investigators saw a quote by Heine written in German on one wall:
	
		
		"Belsatzar ward in selbiger Nacht von seinen Knechten umgebracht."
	
	
	That is - (Belsa) Tsar was murdered by his slaves on the same night. In the 
	original, the name was Belzazer. The Jewish "historian" Edvard Radzinsky 
	could only say that this German quote was "remarkable" and did not attempt 
	to interpret these lines.
	
	
	The model for Heine's text can be found in the Old Testament: 
	
		
		"In that night 
	was Belshazzar the King of the Chaldeans slain." 
		
		(Daniel 5:30.) 
	
	
	Certain 
	"historians" have tried to conceal that some cabbalistic signs were also 
	found on the same wall. These signs were impossible to simply explain away 
	and so Edvard Radzinsky kept quiet about them.
	
	The signs were eventually deciphered: "The Tsar was sacrificed here, by 
	order of the secret forces, to destroy the state. This is told to all 
	nations." {Komsomolskaya Pravda, No. 169, 1989, Vilnius.) This was confirmed 
	by the historian Sergei Naumov.
	
	
	This alone is evidence enough to prove that this had been a Jewish ritual 
	murder, since this cabalistic text also indicates the Old Testament (Daniel 
	5:25):
	
		
		"Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin!" (which, among other things means that 
	the kingdom has been divided or destroyed).
	
	
	By leafing through a little book published in Berlin just before the First 
	World War, it becomes evident that this victim had been on the list of 
	desiderata for a long time. The book was written by the Jew G. Fried-lander 
	and is called "The Romanov Dynasty in the Pillory of World History". 
	
	 
	
	I will 
	quote just one sentence: 
	
		
		"The Romanov dynasty must be annihilated!"
	
	
	The Jewish-Russian historian Natan Eidelman also confirms that it was the 
	Jews who murdered the Tsar and his family. (Dagens Nyheter, 10th of August 
	1988, p. 5.) The present archbishop of Yekaterinburg also believes that it 
	was a ritual murder committed by Hasidic Jews. (Expressen, 24th of November 
	1992.)
	 
	
	In March 1908, Lenin wrote very sympathetically about the murder of King 
	Carlos I, and Crown Prince Louis Philip of Portugal. The reader might have 
	guessed who were behind the murder. 
	
	 
	
	A bomb was thrown into the royal 
	carriage on the 1st of February 1908. Lenin believed this crime to be "a 
	step in the right direction towards social revolution in that country". He 
	regretted that it did not lead to a general terror of the kind that renews a 
	nation and had made the French Revolution so famous. (Lenin, "Works", 
	Moscow, Vol. 12, p. 151.) Indiscriminate terror was necessary, in Lenin's 
	opinion. But is not this what the freemasons had been working with the whole 
	time? 
	
	 
	
	The freemasons murdered king Umberto I in Monza (Italy) on Yahweh Day, 
	the 29th of July 1900. There are many other examples of similar terror 
	attacks. Already in the 1800s, when the terrorist Sergei Nechayev suggested 
	that the Tsar's family should be eliminated, Lenin immediately appreciated 
	his sentiment. American extremist Jews also supported the same idea. Guile 
	has also been used when necessary. The freemasons got rid of Manuel II, who 
	was Carlos' youngest son, by spreading false rumors. The freemasons wanted 
	to stop his reforms. 
	
	 
	
	King Manuel fled from a ball, which was held during the 
	state visit of the Brazilian president Hermes da Fonseca on October 3, 1910. 
	Fonseca was also a freemason. The King believed in the false rumors that a 
	revolution, which even threatened his own life, had broken out in his 
	country. The high-ranking freemasons Theophilo Braga and Affonso da Costa 
	were thereby able to proclaim the republic of Portugal on October 5, 1910. 
	
	 
	
	A 
	provisional government chiefly consisting of freemasons came into power. Theophilo Braga named 
	himself president. Affonso da Costa made sure that 
	Portugal joined the
	World War in 1916. The threat presented by the freemasons had long been 
	known in the neighboring state of Spain. That was why all the members of 
	different lodges were threatened with the death penalty in 1814. The Greater 
	Soviet Encyclopaedia confirmed this in 1938.
	
	
	The order to murder the Tsar and his family actually came from New York. 
	Lenin had hardly any say in the matter. The Bolsheviks had been forced to 
	flee from Yekaterinburg in such haste that they had no time to destroy all 
	the telegraph strips. Those strips were later found in the telegraph house. 
	Sokolov took care of them but could not decipher the telegrams. This was 
	done only in 1922 by a group of experts in Paris. Sokolov then discovered 
	that the strips were extremely revealing, since they dealt with the murder 
	of the Tsar and his family.
	
	
	The chairman of the Central Executive Committee, Yakov Sverdlov, sent a 
	message to Yakov Yurovsky where he relayed that after he had told Jacob 
	Schiff in New York about the approach of the White army, he had received 
	orders from Schiff to liquidate the Tsar and his entire family at once. This 
	order was delivered to Sverdlov by the American Representation, which then 
	lay in the town of Vologda.
	
	
	Sverdlov ordered Yurovsky to carry out this order. But on the following day, 
	Yurovsky wanted to check whether the order really applied to the whole 
	family or just to the head of the family, the Tsar. 
	
	 
	
	Sverdlov then told him 
	that the entire family was to be eliminated. Yurovsky was responsible for 
	the order being carried out.
	So Lenin did not decide any of this himself. The Jewish historian Edvard 
	Radzinsky has tried to assert that it was Lenin who gave the orders to 
	murder the Tsar and his family. But no such telegram has been found in the 
	archives. 
	
	 
	
	Radzinsky's explanation that Lenin had this telegram destroyed 
	does not hold water, since there is a vast amount of compromising material 
	about Lenin otherwise. Why should he have destroyed only this particular 
	telegram and no other equally incriminatory documents? In November 1924, 
	Sokolov told a close friend that his publisher was afraid to print these 
	sensitive facts in his book. They were censored out. Sokolov showed his 
	friend the original strips and the deciphered translations. Sokolov died 
	suddenly one month later. 
	
	 
	
	He was to have travelled to the United States to 
	give evidence in favour of Henry Ford in Kuhn, Loeb & Co's lawsuit against 
	the car magnate who had published his book "The International Jew".
	
	Sokolov's book "The Murder of the Tsar's Family" was published in Berlin in 
	1925 without the aforementioned information. These facts were made public 
	only in 1939, in the exile periodical Tsarsky Vestnik. Jacob Schiff s role 
	in those murders was described in Russia only in 1990. The Soviet 
	authorities did not dare to publicize the killing of the Tsar's entire 
	family in the beginning. 
	
	 
	
	They stated that only the Tsar had been executed. 
	Since the murder was so hastily arranged, Trotsky never got to play 
	prosecutor in the trial against the "tyrant" as he had planned. (P. Mykov, 
	"The Last Days of the Romanovs", Sverdlovsk, 1926.) 
	
	 
	
	He said: 
	
		
		"The execution 
	of the imperial family was necessary, not only to dispirit the enemy and rob 
	him of all hope, but also to shake up our people and show them that there is 
	no return."
	
	
	Piotr Medvedyev, chief of the guards on watch outside, has later claimed 
	that he took no part in the murders. His wife related how he was shaking all 
	over when he came home. He never recovered from this experience.
	
	
	Yakov Sverdlov's end was also a terrible one. On the 16th of March l919, he 
	visited Morozov's factory in Moscow where a worker hit him in his head with 
	a heavy object at around four in the afternoon. (A. Paganuzzi, "The Truth 
	About the Murder of the Tsar's Family", USA, 1981, p. 133.) 
	
	 
	
	He officially 
	died of tuberculosis.
	
	
	Sverdlov had had a strong influence over the Bolsheviks in Yekaterinburg 
	since 1905, when the Party sent him there to organize "revolutionary" 
	activities (he organized robberies and murders to collect more money for the 
	Party). The real facts about Yakov Sverdlov's death remained a state secret 
	in the Soviet Union.
	
	 
	
	Sverdlov had also stolen other people's property. Genrikh Yagoda, the 
	people's commissary for internal affairs, had drawn up a secret document, 
	No. 56 568, on the 27th July 1935, which stated: 
	
		
		«Yakov Sverdlov's fireproof 
	safe was kept in the stores of the Kremlin. The keys were missing. On the 
	26th of June this year, we opened the safe and found: 
		
			
			"1. Gold coins from 
	the Tsarist era period amounting to 108 525 rubles. 2. Gold items, with 
	many gems - 705 items... loan papers for 750 000 rubles were also 
	found.".» 
			
			(Sovershenno Sekretno, No. 9, 1995, p. 16.) 
			
		
	
	
	Jacob Schiff died quite 
	suddenly in 1920. The murderer Yankel Yurovsky, however, died after long 
	and painful suffering from cancer. Most of those involved in the murder of 
	the Tsar were executed during the mass terror of the 1930s (Ohtuleht, 22nd of July 1993). 
	
	 
	
	The rest of the 
	execution squad fell victims to one sort of misadventure or another. The 
	house in which the Tsar's family, their servants and doctor were murdered, 
	was demolished by order of Boris Yeltsin in 1977. 
	
	 
	
	He was then chief of the 
	Party in Sverdlovsk (now once again Yekaterinburg). The Jew Markov in Perm 
	had already executed Russia's last Tsar, Mikhail II, on June 12, 1918. The 
	executioners who assisted him were Zhuzhgov, Myasnikov and Ivanchenko. 
	Mikhail Romanov's body was incinerated. Nicholas had abdicated in favor of 
	his brother, Mikhail. In this way, Russia was cleansed of all kinds of 
	"pests", which was what Lenin had demanded in a decree in January 1918. 
	
	
	 
	
	Winston Churchill confirmed on the 11th of April 1919: 
	
		
		"Of all the tyrannies 
	in history, the Bolshevik tyranny is the worst, the most destructive, the 
	most degrading." 
		
		(Paul Johnson, "Modern Times", Stockholm, 1987, p. 106.)
		
	
	
	This is true. Every castle in Russia was plundered, like the funds of larger 
	businesses, which were all confiscated at a later stage anyway. The 
	Bolsheviks tortured people to get at their jewels. They began ruling with 
	starvation as a weapon, just like the Cosa Nostra mafia in Sicily began 
	ruling by exploiting the drought.
	
	
	All kinds of goods were sent to Berlin. In 1918 alone, 841 wagons of timber, 
	1218 railway carriages of meat, two million pounds of flax, etc., were sent. 
	The "revolutionary" Jews were only interested in themselves. Gleb Boky 
	continued using Uritsky's old trick of demanding large amounts from 
	hostages, the money finding its way into his own pocket. The GPU discovered 
	in 1932 that Ganetsky had 60 million Swiss francs in a bank account in 
	Geneva. (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 42.)
	
	
	In October 1918, Jewish bankers in Berlin received 47 cases of gold from 
	Russia, containing 3125 kilos of gold, 191 bars. All of this had been 
	plundered from the Russian people, gold that later became infamous as the 
	Jewish gold. 
	
	 
	
	50 000 German marks and 300 000 Tsar-rubles were also handed 
	over. In the autumn of 1917, the Jewish banker Mendelssohn in Berlin 
	received 50 676 kilos of stolen Russian gold, 113 636 rubles (which was 
	equivalent to 48 819 kilos of gold). Mendelssohn's signature in the 
	Communist party archives is witness to the fact that he received these 
	riches: a serious case of receiving stolen goods. (Viktor Kuznetsov, "The 
	Secret of the October Coup", St. Petersburg, 2001, p. 51.) 
	
	
	The Communists burned millions of valuable books and rare manuscripts. 95 
	per cent of the cultural heritage sites were destroyed. As late as l970, a 
	Soviet functionary said openly to the director Yuri Lyubimov: 
	
		
		"We need 
	neither Bulgakov nor Dostoevsky... " 
		
		(Edasi, 2nd of August
	l988,p. 6.)
	
	
	Undesirable books have also been burned in Israel. 
	
	 
	
	On the 23rd of March 1980 
	hundreds of copies of the New Testament were publicly and ceremonially burnt 
	in Jerusalem under the auspices of Yad Le'akhim, a Jewish religious 
	organization subsidized by the Israeli Ministry of Religions. (Israel 
	Shahak, "Jewish History, Jewish Religion", London,
	1994, p. 21.)
	
	
	The Bolsheviks actually did everything they could to leave the remaining 
	Russians in the ethnic sewer Marx spoke of. They wanted to crush the 
	people's spirit and morals through total poverty and force them into crime 
	and alcoholism. So doing, they wanted to make the workers less dangerous. 
	They certainly succeeded. Everybody was afraid of the Communists. The 
	Jacobins had also struck terror into their subjects to make them easier to 
	rule.
	
	
	2500 years ago the Chinese philosopher Sun Tzu (490 B.C.) wrote his "The Art 
	of War ", where he described the most effective tactics against an enemy 
	country in a way which is just as relevant today: 
	
		
		"Everything which is 
	valuable in the enemy's country must be knocked town and destroyed... 
	Co-operate with the worst and vilest of creatures. Provoke fights and 
	conflicts between the citizens... Degrade the traditions of the enemy and 
	wipe out his history. Infiltrate society with spies." 
	
	
	International 
	Communism used a technique similar to this against the Russian society. They 
	began to eliminate traditions by re-naming 1200 Russian cities and towns and 
	changing millions of street names. During the new generation, the Communists 
	began to use the most efficient socialist means to arrest the spiritual and 
	psychological development of society - the paths of study were closed for 
	the talented and were only made available to the unintelligent.
	
	
	Had not Vladimir Lenin pointed out that they were to allow only those who 
	sought a diploma and no knowledge? The Swedish Socialists have also used 
	this method "successfully". The Communists and Socialists know that every 
	talented and intelligent person is against their social madness.
	
	The Jewish doctor and publicist Salomon Schulman admitted when describing 
	the Soviet people on September 25, 1994 in Svenska Dag-bladet, that a new 
	day was dawning; a new Jewish race had entered the world. He meant the 
	Soviet people. Is it possible to state the case more clearly?
	
	
	The international financial elite decided as early as 1814, at the Vienna 
	Congress, that Russia must be destroyed as a revenge on the Russian Tsar, 
	who was against the plans to create the European Social Community. The 
	Bolshevik executors believed they had justice on their side, since the God 
	of the Jews had given them the right to exterminate all undesirable races 
	(Deuteronomy 7:22-25). Their God has also given them the right to enslave 
	other peaceful races (Deuteronomy 20:10-11). 
	
	 
	
	Karl Radek proclaimed that it 
	was a bourgeois prejudice to act as if work led to freedom.
	
	
	The sensible Jewish author A.B. Jehoshua confirmed: 
	
		
		"For me, the 
	catastrophe in Judaism is the idea of being the chosen people... " 
		
		
		(Dagens 
	Nyheter, 3rd January 1988.) 
	
	
	But does not Zionism build its entire ideology 
	on the myth about "God's chosen people"? It is a racist ideology, even 
	though 
	the UN no longer considers it as such.
	
	
	The Bolsheviks began manipulating history precisely as it suited them in 
	order to hide their crimes. They presented their "history" precisely as they 
	wished the world to perceive it. That was why the greatest threat to 
	Communism, which was entirely based on lies and fear, were those who bravely 
	dared to speak the truth. Speaking the truth was regarded as anti-Soviet 
	agitation and punished accordingly. 
	
	 
	
	During the Glasnost period 1986-1991, 
	such truthfulness pierced the very "heart" of Communism and destroyed it.
	
	
	As the reader may have realized, Leninism was nothing but organized 
	political banditry, where various Jewish groups constantly fought for power 
	between themselves whilst other races suffered the terrible consequences of 
	their madness. That power struggle was officially camouflaged as "state 
	anti-Semitism". And a new myth was born.
	
	
	The leader of the powerful Jewish group, which defeated the others, was 
	Lazar Kaganovich, one of the worst mass-murderers in history.
	 
	
	
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