Litwin
Platinum Member
- Thread starter
- #61
yeh, maybe i missed your point , its way too late for me . have a good dayMany Poles were Nazis, or at least antisemites. Poles didn't like the Jews before WWII. Ever hear of Ghetto Benches? They had segregation in Poland against Jews. Presumably Stalin killed Polish antisemites, and Nazis in the Katyn forest."Stalin, who started WWII as an ally of Hitler." once again it was my answer too
ps do you know that koba´s NKVD send Jews to Gestapo ?Germany, and its ally Poland really started WWII when they signed a pact and had invaded the Sudetenland, and Cieszyn Silesia together as allies. Soon Polish Nazis cheered on German Nazis in Poland as they killed Jews in the Holocaust.
The poles fought valiantly vs the Nazis and the Soviets.
A few collaborators does not negate that.
Stalin killed Poles------he also killed jews and germans. There may have been some anti-semites in the mix but that is pure coincidence
you are wrong,
Stalin began a new purge with repressing his wartime allies, the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee. In January 1948, Solomon Mikhoels was assassinated on Stalin's personal orders in Minsk. His murder was disguised as a hit-and-run car accident. Mikhoels was taken to MGB dacha and killed, along with his non-Jewish colleague Golubov-Potapov, under supervision of Stalin's Deputy Minister of State Security Sergei Ogoltsov. Their bodies were then dumped on a road-side in Minsk.[30][31]
The Night of the Murdered Poets (Russian: romanized: Delo Yevreyskogo antifashistskogo komiteta, lit. 'Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee affair'; Yiddish: , romanized: Harugey malkus funem Ratnfarband, lit. 'Soviet Union Martyrs') was the execution of thirteen Soviet Jews in the Lubyanka Prison in Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union on 12 August 1952.[1] The arrests were first made in September 1948 and June 1949. All defendants were accused of espionage and treason as well as many other crimes. After their arrests, they were tortured, beaten, and isolated for three years before being formally charged. There were five Yiddish writers among these defendants, all of whom were part of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee.
Doctors' plot
On 13 January 1953, the Soviet Union's TASS information agency announced the unmasking of a conspiracy of so-called "doctors-poisoners" who had covertly attempted to decapitate the Soviet leadership. The accused doctors were all senior physicians—most of them Jewish—who had allegedly confessed to planning and successfully carrying out heinous assassinations, including the covert murders of such high-profile Soviet citizens as writer Alexander Shcherbakov (died 1945) and politician Andrey Zhdanov (died 1948). The alleged conspirators were accused of acting on behalf of both the American and British intelligence services and an anti-Soviet international Jewish bourgeois-nationalist organization.[42]
As Western press accused the Soviet Union of antisemitism, the Central Committee of Communist Party decided to organise a propagandistic trick, a collective letter by Jewish public figures, condemning with fervour "the murderers in white overalls" and the agents of imperialism and Zionism, and to assure there was no antisemitism in the USSR. The letter was signed by well-known scientists and culture figures, who had been forced to do so by the NKVD.[15] However, the letter, initially planned to be published in February 1953, remained unpublished. Instead of the letter, a vehement feuilleton "The Simple-minded and the Swindlers" was published in Pravda, featuring numerous characters with Jewish names, all of them swindlers, villains, saboteurs, whom the naïve Russian people trust, having lost vigilance. What followed was a new wave of antisemitic hysteria, and a plan by Stalin to send all of the Jews to Siberia,[43][44] similar to other ethnic groups. Only Stalin's death the same year relieved the fear.[15]
Similar purges against Jews were organised in Eastern Bloc countries (see Prague Trials).
During this time Soviet Jews were dubbed as persons of Jewish ethnicity. A dean of Marxism-Leninism department at one of Soviet Universities explained the policy to his students:[45]
One of you asked if our current political campaign can be regarded as antisemitic. Comrade Stalin said: "We hate Nazi not because they are Germans, but because they brought enormous suffering to our land". Same can be said about the Jews.
It has been claimed that: "At the time of [Stalin's] death, no Jew in Russia could feel safe."[46] However, throughout this time, the Soviet media avoided overt antisemitism and continued to report the punishment of officials for antisemitic behavior.[47]
none of your information demonstrates that I am wrong. -----in fact you
demonstrated that I am right