BOLSHEVIKS RUSSIA

There is a reason why Stalin was sacrificed to yaweh on purim 1953.

TIMES OF ISRAEL

KHOROSHEVO, Russia (AP) — A bust of Josef Stalin stands on the front lawn of a house-turned-museum in this small village, where the Soviet leader is said to have stayed the night on his only visit to the front during World War II.

Inside, the museum director, a sturdy woman armed with a wooden pointer, takes a group of pre-teen students around the two-room house where Stalin strategized with his generals in August 1943 as the Red Army battled to drive out the Nazi troops.

As Russia faces isolation abroad and deepening economic troubles at home, retelling an abridged account of triumphs past has become increasingly fashionable. President Vladimir Putin frequently cites the Soviet victory in World War II — Stalin’s most touted achievement — in vowing to stand up to the West and defend Russia’s interests.

“Of course, we have started to look at Stalin in a more favorable light,” said Sergei Zaborovsky, a tour operator with the Military Historical Society. “Why now? Maybe it’s because the situation in the world isn’t the best. We need strength. We need something to unite us.”

After the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, Stalin’s legacy was kept alive by the Communist Party, whose members carried his portrait to rallies, extolled his modernization policies and faithfully celebrated his birthday on Dec. 21. His real birthdate is now believed to be Dec. 18, but the Communists will still wait until Monday to place flowers at his grave on Red Square. After Stalin’s death in 1953, his body was placed in the Lenin Mausoleum, but in 1961 it was moved to a graveyard behind it after his successor denounced Stalin’s cult of personality.

While the aging Communists are photogenic but largely ignored, their airbrushed version of Stalin has gone from fringe to increasingly mainstream. The number of Russians who say they have a negative view of Stalin has steadily declined, from 43 percent in 2001 to 20 percent today; a growing majority reports that they cannot properly judge the leader’s time in office.

Museums and busts honoring Stalin have been sprouting up around Russia with an increasing regularity, especially this year as the nation commemorates the 70th anniversary of victory in what Russians call the Great Patriotic War.

The museum in Khoroshevo, about a three-hour drive from Moscow, is among those opened this year in the Tver region by the Military Historical Society, which is under the direction of Russia’s culture minister. It is part of a “Path to Victory” tour, which also includes war monuments and a burned-out building destroyed during the war.

The museum focuses on Stalin’s military and economic triumphs. It does not mention any military shortcomings or any other negative aspect of the war or Stalin’s three decades in power.

The director of the Khoroshevo museum, Lydia Kozlova, responds curtly to the idea that the museum gives a one-sided impression to visitors. She is equally terse when discussing “Western” historical interpretations that write off Stalin as a dictator. “This is not a Stalin Museum,” she repeats throughout trip arrangements and throughout the tour.

“Stalin wasn’t an angel — far from it — but he looked after the safety of his citizens,” said Kozlova, surrounded by placards with the leader’s picture and glowing reviews of his military prowess. “The point of this museum is to guard our history, to protect the facts.”

Recasting Stalin as a great leader who made Machiavellian calculations is worrying at best, says Memorial, a Russian human rights organization that has gathered historical records about Soviet political repressions and works to perpetuate the memory of the victims.

Scholars estimate that under Stalin more than 1 million people were executed in political purges. Millions more died of harsh labor and cruel treatment in the vast gulag prison camp system, mass starvation in Ukraine and southern Russia and deportations of ethnic minorities.

Memorial has called for Stalin’s image to be banned. “Of course we don’t like that this museum was opened,” said Yelena Zhemkova, a historian with the organization.

While the Kremlin has shied away from either categorically condemning or condoning Stalin, there has been a crescendo in efforts to muzzle individuals, museums and non-government organizations that do not “properly” interpret history and to bring the historical narrative under government control.

Memorial this year was declared a “foreign agent,” a label that brings stigma and slows the group’s work. The respected Perm-36 gulag museum was also labeled a foreign agent earlier this year and was forced to close under pressure from local authorities who claimed the museum did not adequately show the flourishing cultural life in the labor camps. A new museum later reopened under the same Perm-36 name and with exhibits described as more “historically accurate.”

A large, state-run gulag museum opened in the center of Moscow on the eve of the Oct. 30 day of remembrance of the victims of political repressions. While Memorial takes this as a positive sign, “it is still government owned,” cautions Zhemkova. The museum exhibits avoid a critique of the Soviet system, but provide an accurate depiction of the gulag system.

A far-reaching de-Stalinization campaign is unlikely to take place anytime soon, says Lev Gudkov, the director of the independent Levada Center, who has conducted extensive polling on public perception of Stalin. Acknowledging that the Soviet system was criminal and that the entire Soviet system was criminal would lead to a “complete collapse of identity” for many Russians, Gudkov said. “They don’t deny what Stalin did, but they prefer to look at him as the majestic sovereign, rather than the controversial ruler.”

Leonid Kavtza, a history teacher at Gymnasium 1543 in Moscow, says Russians still harbor ideas of imperial greatness.

“They’re harkening back on something great that can never be recreated. Even when I was a young child under (Soviet leader Leonid) Brezhnev, I remember hearing ‘If only Stalin was here.’ If the director of the shop sold spoiled produce ‘If only Stalin was here,’ If there was a line at the clinic, ‘If only Stalin was here,’” Kavtza said. “But there was no such person who did this. They’re thinking of a mythical Stalin.”

And thus far, the federal history curriculum has done nothing to counter these assumptions of Stalin’s greatness. In the wake of the Kremlin’s hands-off approach toward Stalin and exaltation of World War II, a growing group of people have filled the silence with measured praise.

“It’s important not to forget those who helped create the peaceful environment we live in today,” Irina Mikhailova, who teaches at a school in Khoroshevo. “The Stalin museum is very important to us. We’re proud to have it here.”

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press.

4 thoughts on “Russia opens new Stalin museums”
  1. Joseph Stalin was described by Adolf Hitler as ,” half beast ,and half giant “.
    ” He is obviously the world’s greatest statesmen ” the German Fuhrer mused as the war turned against the Axis
    Stalin was a tool ,and hero of the International Jews before ,and during WW 2. They endured his exile and ordered hit on Jew Leon Trotzky in 194O because they needed him,and he needed them .
    He was surrounded by Jews ,as his senior advisors and the Jews in the West lauded him ,and heartly supported the Soviet Unions war effort against Germany ,and later even drew him /then into Asia.
    Churchill ,And FDR fell all over themselves to prod ,and flatter him .
    The former even tried to outflank the latter at Yalta to divide up ” British and Subject interests ,in post ear Eastern Europe “. ( known as naughty document ).
    Stalin spys where at the highest echelons of the Wests governments… They included Harry Hopkins ,and VP Henry Wallace …( why he was dropped from Democrat ticket in 1944).
    The Jew Rosenbergs gave him the atomic bomb secrets.
    The ” Big Three ” day gleefully with him ….FDR death added Truman in Pottsdam .
    The killer of millions was a ” hero of democracy ” ,and had the world at his feet .
    He even recognized Israel brfore the US did ,and supplied them with weapons .
    Golda Meir was the Zionist states Ambassador to Moscow !
    What happened ?
    Stalin said ” Noooooooo ” ,to the International Bankers ( Rothschild’s) ,and began the purge of the Jews ( Trotskyites ) ,and he was going to call for a united neutral Germany !
    He swung Soviet foreign policy toward the Arab world too !
    Kicked out , senile old drunk Churchill was propped up the declare the ,” Cold War “.
    The great ” Uncle Joe ” of WW 2 became the new ” monster “.
    The Communist State was morphing into a Nationalist one !
    The Jews had to stop this. Stalin their former hero ,had to go !
    See Imperium by Francis Parker Yockey .
    Dreamer Of The Day ,Kevin Coogan.

  2. At least Stalin’s crimes have been talked about and most people in the world know he was a criminal. Very few people know about the criminality and lying of Churchill and FDR. I know more about the crimes of these two because David Irving has exposed them. With the USSR, according to our western media every crime in the Soviet Union was Stalin’s crime, giving the impression the criminal Jews that founded and dominated the Soviet Union were innocent. The mass murderers and war mongers Churchill and FDR have had their crimes ignored. Germany should erect a statue to Hitler since the British and Americans continue to lie about their roles in the war.

  3. Very true Peter.
    Creators of the Churchill mythology have tried to seperate Churchill ” the Conservative ” from FDR on Stalin adoration
    Not so !
    Churchill supported with enthusiasm ,the Wests alliance with Stalin ,and gdve him everything he wanted.
    The records prove this.
    Churchills role his entire sorry ,and destructive career was to serve the International Jews .
    He hated Germany with the passion of a jealous fiend .
    ” We care not if Germany is run by Hitler’s or priests ,we want them destroyed “.
    WC.
    The old senile drunk ,and corrupt occultist ran after the mass killer Stalin to help him achieve this.
    See Churchills War ,David Irving Action Report .Com.
    Churchill & The Jews ,Gilbert.
    Human Smoke ,Nicholson Baker.
    Hellstorm Over Germany , MT Goodrich.

  4. Who killed more communists, Hitler or Stalin?… Stalin!
    Who killed more Russians, Hitler or Stalin?… Stalin!
    Who killed more Jews, Hitler or Stalin?… Also Stalin?…
    Quite possible! In the Third Reich, only about two or
    three hundred thousand Jews were executed at the
    Eastern front under the Commissar Order. Comrade
    Stalin exterminated communist vermin by the millions,
    as he knew them so much better than Mr Hitler ever did.
    And, of course, at the time, a grossly disproportionate
    number of the ‘Russian’ communists were the ‘Children
    of I$rael’… Oi Vey!

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