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      Click on this text to read "RUSSIA and the JEWS - 200 YEARS TOGETHER" by A. I. Solzhenitsyn (PDF format - RENEGADE TRIBUNE
               website) 
      . .  
      Click on this text to watch the Zionist Jew Butchers Behind Communism 
        1983
         Book by Jewish Historians Celebrates Jewish Role in Mass Murder of Russians Under Bolshevism...              Two Hundred Years Together          was written
         by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the  famous Russian  dissident who won a Nobel Prize for          Literature.
         It is  about the time of the Russians and  the Jews inside the empire.  He wrote           in
         Russian of course but various publishers decided  they were not going  to put out an English 
                 version because they were Jews or frightened of  them.    The together of the
         title          refers to Russians and Jews. The first  volume was Russian-Jewish  History 1795-1916.
         The second          was called The  Jews in the Soviet Union.  So it is clear enough why the Jews
         were never  going          to like what he had to say.    Alex knew them close up and
         personal. Alex tells the          truth about Jews  so they hate him  and his book. Oddly it has
         been put out in German and  French.          One might think the  Germans would not be allowed
         access to the  truth about the shysters marketing          the  Holocaust® story. Perhaps
         they  have been brain washed into acceptance.     This
                  book is so Feared by World Zionist Jewry, that they have  refused  to translate it into
         English          to this very day, the World Over.     This shows you how much of the
         World Media that          ‘They’ control.     It’s been translated
         into German and French only,          from the original Russian.     A group of Professors
         and Translators, so fed up with          this  Ultra  World Censorship of an Acclaimed near masterpiece,
          and          trying to keep  information away from American’s, have begun  Translating it on their own           at their own expense, and are  making it ‘Freely
         Available’ to all.         
      
      Click on this text to read RUSSIA and the JEWS - 200 YEARS TOGETHER... by A. I. Solzhenitsyn 
      .   
      Click on this text to watch Voices from the Gulag 
      .       
      
      Click on this text to watch Gulag: Many Days Many Lives (parts 1-5 of 10) 
      .   
      Click on this text to watch a discussion regarding Aleksandr Solzhenitsyns The Jews in the Soviet Union Pt. 1 
        
 Some History   If one follows the presentation of J. D. Bruzkus, respected Jewish  author of
         the mid  20th century, a certain part of the Jews from Persia  moved across the Derbent Pass  to the lower Volga where Atil [west coast  of Caspian on Volga delta], the capital city of  the
         Khazarian Khanate  rose up starting 724 AD. The tribal princes of the Turkish Khazars,  at  the
         time still idol-worshippers, did not want to accept either the  Muslim faith – lest they 
         should be subordinated to the caliph of Baghdad  – nor to Christianity – lest they come under  vassalage to the Byzantine  emperor; and so the clan went over to the Jewish faith in 732.    But  there was also a Jewish colony in the Bosporan Kingdom [on the Taman  Peninsula 
         at east end of the Crimea, separating the Black Sea from the  Sea of Azov] to which Hadrian  had
         Jewish captives brought in 137, after  the victory over Bar-Kokhba. Later a Jewish  settlement
         sustained itself  without break under the Goths and Huns in the Crimea;  especially Kaffa  (Feodosia)
         remained Jewish. In 933 Prince Igor [912-945, Grand Prince  of  Kiev, successor of Oleg, regent
         after death of Riurik founder of the  Kiev Kingdom in 862]  temporarily possessed Kerch, and his
         son Sviatoslav  [Grand Prince 960-972] [G14] wrested  the Don region from the Khazars.  The Kiev
         Rus already ruled the entire Volga region  including Atil in  909, and Russian ships appeared
         at Samander [south of Atil on the west   coast of the Caspian]. Descendents of the Khazars were
         the Kumyks in the  Caucasus.    In the Crimea, on the other hand, they combined with
         the  Polovtsy [nomadic Turkish  branch from central Asia, in the northern  Black Sea area and
         the Caucasus since the  10th century; called Cuman by  western historians; see second map, below]
         to form the  Crimean Tatars.  (But the Karaim [a jewish sect that does not follow the Talmud]
         and   Jewish residents of the Crimean did not go over to the Muslim Faith.)  The Khazars were  finally conquered [much later] by Tamerlane [or Timur,  the 14th century conqueror].    A few researchers however hypothesize (exact proof is absent) that  the Hebrews had wandered  to some extent through the south Russian region  in west and northwest direction. Thus 
         the Orientalist and Semitist  Abraham Harkavy for example writes that the Jewish congregation 
         in the  future Russia “emerged from Jews that came from the Black Sea coast and  from  the
         Caucasus, where their ancestors had lived since the Assyrian  and Babylonian captivity.”    J. D. Bruzkus also leans to this perspective.  (Another opinion suggests it is the remnant o  the Ten Lost Tribes of  Israel.) This migration presumably ended after the conquest of   Tmutarakans
         [eastern shore of the Kerch straits, overlooking the eastern  end of the  Crimean Peninsula; the
         eastern flank of the old Bosporan  Kingdom] (1097) by the Polovtsy.    According to
         Harkavy’s opinion the  vernacular of these Jews at least since the ninth  century was Slavic,
         and only in the 17th century, when the Ukrainian Jews fled from the   pogroms of Chmelnitzki [Bogdan
         Chmelnitzki, Ukrainian Cossack,  1593-1657, led the  successful Cossack rebellion against Poland
         with help  from the Crimean Tatars], did  Yiddish become the language of Jews in  Poland.   
         [G15] In various manners the Jews also came to Kiev and settled  there. Already under  Igor, the lower part of the city was called  “Kosary”; in 933 Igor brought Jews that had  been taken captive in Kerch.  Then in 965 Jews taken captive in the Crimea were brought 
         there; in 969  Kosaren from Atil and Samander, in 989 from Cherson and in 1017 from   Tmutarakan.
         In Kiev western Jews also emerged.: in connection with the  caravan traffic  from west to east,
         and starting at the end of the  eleventh century, maybe on account of the  persecution in Europe
         during  the first Crusade.    Later researchers confirm likewise that in the 11th century,
         the  “Jewish element” in Kiev  is to be derived from the Khazars. Still  earlier,
         at the turn of the 10th century the presence  of a “khazar force  and a khazar garrison,”
         was chronicled in Kiev. And already “in the  first  half of the 11th century the jewish-khazar
         element in Kiev played  “a significant  roll.” In the 9th and 10th century, Kiev was
         multinational and tolerant.    At the end of the 10th century, in the time when Prince
         Vladimir  [Vladimir I. Svyatoslavich  980-1015, the Saint, Grand Prince of Kiev]  was choosing
         a new faith for the Russians,  there were not a few Jews in  Kiev, and among them were found educated
         men that  suggested taking on  the Jewish faith. The choice fell out otherwise than it had 250
         hears   earlier in the Khazar Kingdom. Karamsin [1766-1826, Russian historian]  relates it like
         this:    “After he (Vladimir) had listened to the Jews, he  asked where their
         homeland was.  ‘In Jerusalem,’ answered the delegates,  ‘but God has chased
         us in his anger and  sent us into a foreign land.’  ‘And you, whom God has punished,
         dare to teach others?’  said Vladimir.  ‘We do not want to lose our fatherland like
         you have.’” After the  Christianization  of the Rus, according to Bruzkus, a portion
         of the  Khazar Jews in Kiev also went over to  Christianity and afterwards in  Novgorod perhaps
         one of them – Luka Zhidyata – was even one  of the first  bishops and spiritual writers.   
         Christianity and Judaism being side-by-side in Kiev inevitably led to  the learned zealously  contrasting them. From that emerged the work  significant to Russian literature, “Sermon  on Law and Grace” ([by  Hilarion, first Russian Metropolitan] middle 11th century), which   contributed to the settling of a Christian consciousness for the  Russians that lasted for  centuries. [G16] “The polemic here is as fresh  and lively as in the letters of the apostles.”    In any case, it was the  first century of Christianity in Russia. For the Russian neophytes  of
         that time, the Jews were interesting, especially in connection to their  religious presentation,  and
         even in Kiev there were opportunities for  contact with them. The interest was  greater than later
         in the 18th  century, when they again were physically close.    Then, for more than
         a century, the Jews took part in the expanded  commerce of Kiev.  “In the new city wall
         (completed in 1037) there was  the Jews’ Gate, which closed in the  Jewish quarter.”
         The Kiev Jews were  not subjected to any limitations, and the princes  did not handle  themselves
         hostilely, but rather indeed vouchsafed to them protection,   especially Sviatopolk Iziaslavich
         [Prince of Novgorod 1078-1087, Grand  Prince of Kiev  1093-1113], since the trade and enterprising
         spirit of  the Jews brought the princes  financial advantage.    In 1113, Vladimir (later called “Monomakh”), out of qualms of  conscience, even  after
         the death of Sviatopolk, hesitated to ascend the  Kiev Throne prior to one of the  Svyatoslavich’s,
         and “exploiting the  anarchy, rioters plundered the house of the regimental  commander Putiata
         and all Jews that had stood under the special protection of the greedy   Sviatopolk in the capital
         city. … One reason for the Kiev revolt was  apparently the usury  of the Jews: probably,
         exploiting the shortage of  money of the time, they enslaved the  debtors with exorbitant interest.”
         (For example there are indications in the “Statute” of  Vladimir Monomakh  that Kiev
         money-lenders received interest up to 50% per annum.)     Karamsin therein appeals
         to the Chronicles and an extrapolation by Basil  Tatistcheff  [1686-1750; student of Peter the
         Great, first Russian  historian]. In Tatistcheff we find moreover:  “Afterwards they clubbed
         down many Jews and plundered their houses, because they had  brought  about many sicknesses to
         Christians and commerce with them had brought  about  great damage. Many of them, who had gathered
         in their synagogue  seeking protection,  defended themselves, as well as they could, and  redeemed
         time until Vladimir would arrive.”  But when he had come, “the  Kievites pleaded with
         him for retribution toward the [G17] Jews,  because  they had taken all the trades from Christians
         and under Sviatopolk had  had  much freedom and power…. They had also brought many over
         to their  faith.”    According to M. N. Pokrovski, the Kiev Pogrom of 1113 had
         social and  not national character.  (However the leaning of this “class-conscious”
         historian toward social interpretations is well-known.)    After he ascended to the
         Kiev throne, Vladimir answered the  complainants, “Since  many [Jews] everywhere have received
         access to the  various princely courts and have  migrated there, it is not appropriate  for me,
         without the advice of the princes, and moreover  contrary to  right, to permit killing and plundering
         them. Hence I will without delay  call  the princes to assemble, to give counsel.” In the
         Council a law  limiting the interest was  established, which Vladimir attached to  Yaroslav’s
         “Statute.” Karamsin reports, appealing  to Tatistcheff, that  Vladimir “banned
         all Jews” upon the conclusion of the Council, “and  from  that time forth there were
         none left in our fatherland.” But at the  same time he  qualifies: “in the Chronicles
         in contrast it says that in  1124 the Jews in Kiev died [in a  great fire]; consequently, they
         had not  been banned.” (Bruzkus explains, that it “was a  whole Quarter in the  best
         part of the city… at the Jew’s Gate next to the Golden Gate.”)    At
         least one Jew enjoyed the trust of Andrei Bogoliubskii [or Andrey  Bogolyubsky] in  Vladimir.
         “Among the confidants of Andrei was a certain  Ephraim Moisich, whose  patronymic Moisich
         or Moisievich indicates his  jewish derivation,” and who according  to the words of the
         Chronicle was  among the instigators of the treason by which Andrei  was murdered.  However there
         is also a notation that says that under Andrei  Bogoliubskii  “many Bulgarians and Jews
         from the Volga territory came and  had themselves baptized”  and that after the murder of
         Andrei his son  Georgi fled to a jewish Prince in Dagestan.    In any case the information
         on the Jews in the time of the  Suzdal Rus is scanty, as their numbers were obviously small.   
         [G18] The “Jewish Encyclopedia” notes that in the Russian heroic  songs (Bylinen) the  “Jewish Czar” – e.g. the warrior Shidowin in the old  Bylina about Ilya and Dobrin’a –
         is  “a favorite general moniker for an  enemy of the Christian faith.” At the same
         time it could  also be a trace  of memories of the struggle against the Khazars. Here, the religious
          basis  of this hostility and exclusion is made clear. On this basis, the  Jews were not permitted
          to settle in the Muscovy Rus.    The invasion of the Tatars
         portended the end of the lively commerce  of the Kiev Rus,  and many Jews apparently went to Poland.
         (Also the  jewish colonization into Volhynia  and Galicia continued, where they had  scarcely
         suffered from the Tatar invasion.) The  Encyclopedia explains:  “During the invasion of
         the Tatars (1239) which destroyed Kiev,  the Jews  also suffered, but in the second half of the
         13th century they were  invited by  the Grand Princes to resettle in Kiev, which found itself
          under the domination of  the Tatars. On account of the special rights,  which were also granted
         the Jews in other  possessions of the Tatars,  envy was stirred up in the town residents against
         the Kiev Jews.”     Similar happened not only in Kiev, but also in the cities
         of North  Russia, which “under the  Tatar rule, were accessible for many [Moslem?  see note
         1] merchants from Khoresm or  Khiva, who were long since  experienced in trade and the tricks
         of profit-seeking.    These people  bought from the Tatars the principality’s
         right to levy Tribute, they  demanded  excessive interest from poor people and, in case of their
          failure to pay, declared the  debtors to be their slaves, and took away  their freedom. The residents
         of Vladimir,  Suzdal, and Rostov finally  lost their patience and rose up together at the pealing
          of the Bells  against these usurers; a few were killed and the rest chased off.” A  punitive
          expedition of the Khan against the mutineers was threatened,  which however was hindered  via the mediation of Alexander Nevsky. “In  the documents of the 15th century,  Kievite
         [G19] jewish tax-leasers are  mentioned, who possessed a significant fortune.”      
          Comment to Two Hundred Years Together:  From the Beginnings in Khazaria   
         We have all heard of the Khazars, and how the majority of Ashkenazi  jews probably descend  from them, but it is fascinating to see that  history given a time and place, and fleshed out.   Harkavy’s thesis that the caspian jews were from the ten lost tribes or  the remnant of the
  not-lost two tribes seems either implausible or  self-defeating to me. (1) Why would those  people
         have lost their  collective memory of who they were? If it is claimed that they did   remember,
         then why did they not write it down (genealogies, etc.)? (2)  On the other hand,  if they were
         descended from exiled Israel, but lost  all continuity with the same, in what  sense should they
         be regarded as  jews? That is racism in the only form that the term  makes any sense, but  which
         still celebrates an absurdity: namely, thinking that mere  blood,  without any inherited culture,
         character, or accomplishment, grants one  solidarity.    It is also interesting to
         see how in relatively recent history (yes I  know, I must be weird  to think of 1000 AD as “recent”)
         we can observe  the formation of brand-new ethnic  groups from a combination of migration  and
         marriage, the turkish Cuman tribe  for example becoming the  partially european yet distinct tribe
         of Crimean Tatars.    In this regard, it is also fascinating to see that the majority
          of modern-day jews are essentially a branch of the Turks.    
      
      
    
   
                 
   
   
      
      
       wetheonepeople.com/...torture-methods-of-the-bolshevik...   In Soviet overrun the Bolshevik
                  methods          of torture and the inflicting ritualistic  murder
           was openly encouraged.          Several sources          tell how Chekists in Kharkov 
  placed  their
         victims in a row. Then, having nailed their hands to a           table their torturers  cut around
         their wrists with a knife. Boiling water was poured over the skin          was peeled off.  
      alphahistory.com/.../torture-methods-cheka-1924  Torture methods used by the CHEKA (1924) In 1924, Russian
                           writer Sergei Melgunov  published a detailed account of violence and torture
         during the Bolshevik                   Red Terror.  In this grim extract, he outlines some of
         the extreme torture methods employed          by 
  CHEKA          agents (here referred to
         as “Excommers”). 
    www.renegadetribune.com/...jewish-bolshevik-bestial-tortures   In
                            effect, the horrors of WWI, WWII, disabilities,  deformities  and  mutations caused  by the Jewish radioactive
         weapons,          including          DU, are  part of this extermination by 
    www.darkmoon.me/2011/crimes-of-the-bolsheviks   The
                           orgy of murder, torture and pillage which followed the Jewish triumph
         in Russia 
   [after the          Bolshevik  Revolution of 1917] has never been equaled in the history of
         the 
   world….The          Jews were          free to indulge their most fervent fantasies of  mass murder  of helpless victims.
         Christians          were dragged          from their beds, tortured and killed.  
    www.doomedsoldiers.com/torture-methods-of-ub.html   The
                           last named method causes the skin on one’s hands to burst and the blood  to          flow from        
          underneath one’s fingernails. The torture is applied passionlessly in 
  a premeditated          manner. Those
                  who faint are revived with a morphine shot. Before  the torture session [ensue] some          receive
         booster          shots  [Pol. zastrzyki wzmacniające].          
         
      
                   Background:
         This is the booklet accompanying a 1942        exhibition on the Soviet Union, organized by the Nazi Party’s       
         propaganda office. The brochure is 48 pages with numerous black        and white photographs of the exhibition. I translate
         only a part        of it here, and include five of the photographs. The Nazis put        out a “documentary film”
         with the same title that supplemented        the exhibition. A version of that film with English subtitles        is available
         from International        Historic Films.             The source: Das Sowjet-Paradies.
         Ausstellung der Reichspropagandaleitung          der NSDAP. Ein Bericht in Wort und Bild. Berlin: Zentralverlag der 
                 NSDAP., 1942. The German original is available here. The Soviet Paradise         
                                           An Exhibition of
         the Nazi              Party Central Propaganda OfficeAs early as 1934 the Reichspropagandaleitung
         of the NSDAP organized          an exhibition from the available written and visual material. Its goal          was to inform
         the German people about the dreadful conditions in the Soviet          Union.        
             The exhibition’s organizers often had the feeling that          their portrayal of conditions
         in the Soviet Union was far from accurate.          This feeling has since been confirmed — but in an entirely different
                  manner than expected. Everything that had been said about Bolshevism before          the outbreak of the war with
         the Soviet Union has been thrown into the          shadows by reality. Words and pictures are not enough to make the tragedy
                  of Bolshevist reality believable to Europeans. This agrees with what our          soldiers repeatedly say. It is
         impossible to portray conditions in the          Soviet Union without oneself having seen and experienced them.             The idea therefore was to provide German citizens with an        exhibition based
         on everyday life under Bolshevism in order to        show them the misery of life there. A number of expeditions to      
          areas held by our troops were made to gather the necessary original        material for the exhibition.             Millions of visitors have received an accurate picture of        the misery of
         life under Bolshevism through the numerous original        items. Experts, above all our soldiers, still agree that even 
               this exhibition does not give a full picture of the misery and        hopelessness of the lives of farmers and workers
         in the “Soviet        Paradise.”             “The
         Riches of the East.”           [This
         section discusses the Soviet        Union’s natural resources.]           The Germanic Settlement in the East.           [This section discusses German migrations        to the east.]  
                 Marxism and Bolshevism — The Invention of Jewry. Early on,       
           Jewry recognized unlimited possibilities for the Bolshevist nonsense in          the East. This is supported by two facts:             1. The inventor of Marxism was the Jew Marx-Mordochai;             2. The present Soviet state is nothing other than the realization        of that
         Jewish invention. The Bolshevist revolution itself stands        between these two facts. The Jews exterminated the best elements
                of the East to make themselves the absolute rulers of an area        from which they hoped to establish world domination.
         According        to the GPU’s figures, nearly two million people were executed        during the years 1917 to 1921.
         A direct result of the revolution        was the terrible famine that demanded 19 million victims between        1917 and
         1934. Over 21 million people lost their lives though        this Jew-incited revolution and its consequences.             The Facade of Bolshevism   
                  The bloody attacks of Bolshevism into Europe were always accompanied        by wild agitation
         that claimed that the Soviet Union was the        “paradise of farmers and workers.” In reality this        was
         propaganda, and all the cultural, social and technical advances        that Bolshevism claimed were nothing but a deceptive
         facade that        concealed the gray misery of daily life under Bolshevism. This        is illustrated in the next room of
         the exhibition. In its center,        there is an original Bolshevist monument mass produced from plaster        on a wood
         frame. One was found in every city. Because of their        poor quality they quickly began crumbling, a true example of 
               Bolshevist culture. Such monuments intensify the dirty and miserable        atmosphere that all Soviet cities share,
         interrupted only by        a few prestige buildings that display technical weaknesses. They        are built for propaganda
         purposes, and to deceive travelers from        abroad.             These
         facades, built only for propaganda reasons, are the mark of all          Bolshevist cities. Model streets in the American
         style are filled with          huge buildings with a thousand deficiencies, which mock the miserable          workers who
         are forced          even after 25 years of Bolshevist culture to live gray and joyless lives.             The contrast between government buildings and the general        wretched housing
         is the same as the difference between military        production and those things that are necessary for daily life.     
           The enormous military expenditures dwarf those of all other nations,        but everyday goods are of wretched quality.
         The war is not responsible        for the population’s lack of cups and saucers, furniture and        beds, the most
         basic decorative items such as curtains or inexpensive        carpets, not to mention the most necessary items of clothing.
                Such things are just as expensive as foodstuffs. A generous estimate        of the weekly average wage of a worker
         is 100-125 rubles. Here        are the costs:             1400
         rubles for a suit          360 rubles for a pair of shoes          24 rubles for a kilo of butter          22 rubles for a kilo of meat    
                       Those were the peacetime prices in the USSR, which
         does not        however mean that such things could actually be bought. Bad bread        and potatoes were the almost exclusive
         diet of the miserable        population during the Bolshevist system’s 20 years of peace.             The glaring contrast between the between the splendid weaponry        and the
         deep poverty of the people is clear from the living conditions in Moscow, which by the way are neither        better nor worse
         than those in other Bolshevist cities. Conditions        were not particularly good even before the war in 1913. But by  
              1928 four people lived in the average room, and six by 1939,        independent of whether or not they were related.
         All usable rooms        are jammed full. Normal dwellings of the kind we are used to        in Germany are unknown. Each room
         is a kitchen, living room, and        bedroom for its inhabitants. If one looks for those responsible        for these miserable
         conditions, one always finds Jews. Is it        not interesting that the word “anti-Semite” is the        worst
         thing one can be accused of in the Soviet state, for which        one all too easily is sentenced to forced labor or death?
         A look        at the statistics on the Jewdification of high offices in the        Soviet Union makes everything clear.             Nearly all the ministries, which the Bolshevists call “people’s  
              commissions,” are controlled by the Jews.             Further
         proof that the Soviet state belongs to the Jews is        the fact that the people are ruthlessly sacrificed for the goals
                of the Jewish world revolution. Besides the notorious Stachanov        system, women are systematically degraded to
         labor slaves. Even        during peace, women increasingly worked even in the hardest jobs        such as coal mining and
         the smelting industry.             A further fact makes clear
         to the expert that the Jews are behind Soviet          industrial structure: The Woroschilov factory in Minsk was supposed
         to          produce 650 machines tools with a value of 81 million rubles annually.          Given the nature of Jewish thinking,
         the decisive thing was the total          value of the production. Because of a lack of experts, tools, and parts        
          the factory produced only 480 machine tools with a value of 59.2 million          rubles. To fulfill the plan, the factory
         managers secretly built a boiler-maker          in the back, which produced goods sold at black market prices. This made 
                 up for the difference of 22 million rubles. The plan was thus met with          production of 81 million rubles, even
         though 170 too few machines were          produced.             The
         Soviet Army — A Terrible Threat to Europe.             Ever since the murder of the Tsar, the Jewish-Bolshevist ruling        clique in Moscow has planned the annihilation
         of Europe. All        raw materials and the whole labor force were exploited ruthlessly        to meet this goal. Foreign
         specialists and engineers were brought        in to make up for the domestic failings. Production figures that        astonished
         the entire world resulted. This became evident in        the Wehrmacht’s figures on captured war booty.             180,000,000 people had to work under        the most brutal and primitive conditions
         solely for armaments        production. That is the explanation for the unimaginable amount        of Bolshevist weaponry,
         most of which has been destroyed or captured        in the great battles of annihilation of the Eastern campaign.             This vast armory was intended to help Jewry overrun Europe.        In preparation,
         Bolshevism had prepared its positions in Finland,        the Baltic, Poland, and Bessarabia. These were the bases from   
             which the decisive blows would be struck against the West.             The vast extent of this weaponry, some of which still exists,        is perhaps best shown by the booty of the great
         encirclement        battles of 1941 and the winter battles: 25,000 tanks, 32,000        heavy guns, and 16,000 airplanes were
         captured or destroyed, and        over 4,000,000 prisoners were taken.             Classes in a Classless State             Bolshevism
         preached that there would of course be no classes        in its paradise, since only the proletariat would remain after  
              the elimination of the former ruling class. The emptiness of        the claim is obvious to any unprejudiced observer,
         who can see        the degrees of slavery among the population. The Jewish ruling        class and its lackeys are at the
         top, then the masses of factory        workers in the cities. A deep chasm separates them from the totally        impoverished
         collective farmers. Bolshevism intentionally created        these great differences for two reasons:             1. To lure the masses to the cities to support the Bolshevist        armaments
         program;             2. To give the workers the impression that
         they are better        off than the farmers and to deceive them into believing that        their primitive and miserable life
         is wonderful in comparison        to that of the collective farmers. The workers do not and cannot        know that by our
         standards their existence is wretched, since        they are hermetically sealed off from the rest of the world.        Beside
         the workers and the collective farmers, there are two        classes without any rights at all: the members of the former
                intelligentsia and the middle class, who are not of proletarian        descent. There are also forced laborers, who
         are used as cheap        and defenseless slaves in the vast uncultivated regions. Millions        of them die as the result
         of bad food, poor accommodations and        hard work.             The
         GPU — The Terror Instrument of Jewish Bolshevism             The brutal terror Bolshevism exercises through the GPU is        perhaps the best answer to the frequent question
         of why the Bolshevists        fight so bitterly at the front. 25 years of terror have produced        a gray and broken mass
         who silently follow orders because that        is their only way to remain alive. Resistance means death, often        the
         death of the entire family. The bestial terror regime of        the Jewish GPU is best seen in the sadistic methods of torture
                used against supposed “enemies.”             The
         exhibition includes an execution cell from a GPU dungeon.        According to a captured commissar, nearly 5,000 people were
         shot        by the GPU in five years behind its iron bars.             The cell is tiled. The condemned were brought to the cell        and shot in the back of the neck. The corpses were
         moved to the        side and sprayed with a hose to wash away the blood. A fan provided        fresh air so that the next
         victim would not faint from the blood,        because he was to remain conscious until the last moment.             Another narrow cell was used to secure confessions. Prisoners        were forced
         to kneel for hours. If they stood up they hit the        ceiling and set off an alarm, and a spotlight was aimed toward  
              them. If they sat on the small seat they got an electric shock        that forced them off. A wooden prong on the door
         pressed against        their stomachs.             The worst
         of all terror institutes of the GPU are the forced labor camps          in which millions of innocent victims die every year.
         Only rarely do they          know why they were taken from their families and jobs to work in the icy          wastes of Workuta
         or any of the numerous other labor camps. Most of them          are there only because free labor was needed somewhere in
         the wilderness.          No one cared about them. They were shipped there under the principle:          “People? We
         have enough of such trash.”             The unhappy victims,
         condemned with or without cause, follow        a miserable path from which death is the only real escape.             It begins with a spy, often a member of one’s own family.        One night
         the GPU knocks on the door and takes its victim. Put        in narrow cells, worn out by endless interrogations. and finally
                forced to confess by the usual methods of torture, with or without        a verdict, they are transported to forced
         labor camps with inadequate        food, often in the bitter cold. Many die on the way. In the forced        labor camps themselves,
         they are stuffed into small barracks.        The pitiful food ration depends on the amount of work done. It        is never
         enough, and the hard work soon leads to exhaustion.        The smallest offense is punished severely by a spell in an ice
                cell. Continual overwork, bad food, and the lack of sanitary facilities        soon lead to serious illness. The sick
         forced laborers are put        on starvation rations to speed their deaths, for the GPU has        no interest in weak workers.
         They must be disposed of as quickly        as possible.             Very
         few forced laborers return to freedom. Kajetan Klug was        one of them. He was a leader of the Marxist Defense League
         in        Linz. After the unsuccessful insurrection of February 1934, he        had to flee the revenge of the Dolfuß
         regime. His route        led him through Czechoslovakia to the land of his dreams, the        “Paradise of Farmers and
         Workers.” In Moscow he took        over the leadership of the Austrian emigrants and became a party        member. But
         he soon learned the misery of the workers and farmers.        When he openly criticized these conditions, he was accused of
                espionage. He was arrested, tortured, acquitted, and finally        condemned with no proof to 5 years of forced labor
         in Central        Asia. The wintry wasteland of Workuta finally opened his eyes        to the real nature of the “Paradise
         of Farmers and Workers.”        A few days before the beginning of the war with the Soviet Union,        he succeeded
         in escaping to the German embassy. Along with the        embassy personnel, he was able to reach Germany.             The Misery of the Collective Farmers 
                  [This section discusses life on collective farms.]             The Life of the Worker in the Soviet Paradise             Wherever one looks there is poverty, misery, decay, and hunger.        This true
         both of the countryside and the cities. The atmosphere        of Bolshevist cities, too, is grim and depressing.             The exhibition here, all the experts agree, is particularly        genuine. It
         always astonishes, for the simple reason that the        terrible things it makes visible are real. Here is a Bolshevist 
               culture park, with its mass produced sculptures that cannot endure        the weather because of their poor quality.
         They add to the atmosphere        of general atmosphere of decay that all cities in the land of        the Bolshevists share.
         There, just as it was originally, is a        collapsing barracks, a so-called home for students, standing        in the shadow
         of a university built on the American model. Its        wretched inhabitants at least have a good view of the prestige   
             buildings. From a distance, one cannot see that the quality of        every aspect of the buildings is wretched.             The interior of the dormitory corresponds to its exterior.        Broken chairs,
         a damaged bed with torn coverings, a shabby ceiling,        a few propaganda posters and books, an old curtain: That is the
                room of the dormitory leader. As many as eleven less fortunate        inhabitants are packed into the other rooms.
         A washroom for 63        students, without running water, is next to the dormitory leader’s        room.             Look into any side street. A dark hole of a shop with the most primitive     
             things: paper clothing (in peace time!), bread, a few cans and bottles.          A modest supply of everyday items. It
         is a government shop. It is governmental          because there are no shopkeepers in the Soviet “paradise,” at
                  least in our sense. Nor are there any craftsmen or independent merchants,          since private property has been
         abolished. Next door there is the workshop          of a private cobbler, an exception to the usual ban on private property,
                  since he works on his own and is not a member of the normal collective.          Still, high taxes take a large part
         of his modest income, which is hardly          enough to provide for himself and his family.             Hidden behind a pile of garbage in a courtyard in the center        of Minsk is
         a restaurant, also a state enterprise. It is miserably        equipped. The guests need to bring their own eating utensils.
                Such items are rare enough so that they would otherwise be stolen.        And this is not a place for the poor. It
         is frequented by managers        and government officials. The manager has a special room for        his favored guests with
         several shabby upholstered chairs. The        food itself comes from a factory and is always the same, which        led to
         constant complaints in the comment book. And that in peace        time!             Alongside the prestige buildings of the university, there        are numerous wretched workers’ dwellings.
         One of them was removed        to be part of the exhibition along with all its furnishings.        Six families lived here.
         Each had a single room that served as        bedroom, kitchen, and storage room. There was no running water,        and the
         women all agreed that things were so crowded they could        never get things in order. Still, they thought these were good
                rooms since at least they were dry and warm. Many of their comrades        lived in wet basements, in caves, or had
         no roof over their head        at all, since the city government did not worry about the many        homeless. Everywhere
         there was desolation and apathy.             Even worse than
         all this misery is the complete disruption        of family life, indeed the beginning of its complete elimination.      
          The exhibition includes one of those offices where marriages        are performed for a charge of 50 rubles, without any
         need for        documents. There are countless cases in which men and women have        been married numerous times, without
         ever getting divorced from        their previous spouses. The reason is that papers are rarely        checked carefully.             The result of such terrible disruption of marriages and families        must inevitably
         lead to complete misery and decay of the youth.        The exhibition shows this by the example of the Besprisornys.     
           These gangs of boys from 4 to 15 rob and steal to support themselves.        They live in collapsing buildings and caves.
         According to people        in Minsk, a city of 300,000, there are 3,000 such orphaned children.        These deserted children
         say that they never knew their fathers        or mothers, and have no names. They do not know how old they        are. One
         such Besprisornys gang was captured and put in a German        orphanage. Their clothing is on mannequins that give a realistic
                picture of how these unfortunate children lived in complete misery        in the “Soviet Paradise.”             Many displays give a picture of everyday life in the Soviet Paradise.        
          A doctor’s office deserves special notice. It gives the lie to all the          Bolshevist propaganda about the “exemplary
         social condition”          in the Soviet Union. As a result of the abolition of private property,          the doctor
         is a poorly paid state employee earning 400 rubles a month.          She has three rooms, one of which she lives in, one a
         waiting room, and          one the treatment room. The medicines and equipment, the operating table          and everything
         else are unbelievably primitive and do not meet even the          minimum hygienic standards. This doctor had 30,000 people
         to care for,          many of whom lived more than a day’s travel from her office.   
                  “Europe Enters”           Poverty, misery, decay, hunger, and need wherever          one looks: That is the Soviet paradise that our soldiers
         experience every          day, and that millions of exhibition visitors encountered in many original          displays that
         give them a genuine picture of the so loudly praised social          accomplishments of the Jewish-Soviet state. He who has
         seen the exhibition          understands the historic conflict in which we are now engaged, a conflict          in which there
         can be no compromise. There are only two possible outcomes:          Either the German people will win and ensure the survival
         of the world          and its culture, or it will perish and all the peoples of the world will          fall into the barbarism
         of the Soviet state that has reduced millions          to powerless starving slaves.   
                  To stop that from happening, the best elements of Europe are        fighting under German
         leadership at the side of our soldiers        to destroy the fateful threat to the life and culture of Europe.        Our
         battle is to free the East, along with its vast and inexhaustible        riches and agricultural resources, and to save Europe
         from the        nightmare that has threatened it for millennia. In the words        of the Führer:                      “In defeating this enemy, we remove a danger from the         
         German Reich and all of Europe more severe than any it has faced          since the Mongol hordes swarmed across the continent.”      wetheonepeople.com/...torture-methods-of-the-bolshevik...   In Soviet overrun the Bolshevik
         methods          of torture and the inflicting ritualistic murder  was openly encouraged.
         Several sources          tell how Chekists in Kharkov  placed their victims in a row. Then, having nailed their hands to a
          table their torturers          cut around their wrists with a knife. Boiling water was poured over the skin
         was peeled off.  
  alphahistory.com/.../torture-methods-cheka-1924  Torture methods used by the CHEKA (1924) In 1924, Russian
                  writer Sergei Melgunov published a detailed account of violence and torture during the Bolshevik
                  Red Terror. In this grim extract, he outlines some of the extreme torture methods employed
         by CHEKA          agents (here referred to as “Excommers”). 
  www.renegadetribune.com/...jewish-bolshevik-bestial-tortures   In
                   effect, the horrors of WWI, WWII, disabilities, deformities  and  mutations caused by the Jewish radioactive weapons,
         including          DU, are  part of this extermination by slow torture already, as are the weaponized medical
         practices          to ‘treat’ cancer, the radiotherapy and chemotherapy that are surely slow
         means of torture when          the non-intrusive, harmless and 100% …  
  www.darkmoon.me/2011/crimes-of-the-bolsheviks   The
                  orgy of murder, torture and pillage which followed the Jewish triumph in Russia
         [after the          Bolshevik  Revolution of 1917] has never been equaled in the history of the  world….The
         Jews were          free to indulge their most fervent fantasies of  mass murder of helpless victims. Christians
         were dragged          from their beds, tortured and killed.  
  www.doomedsoldiers.com/torture-methods-of-ub.html   The
                  last named method causes the skin on one’s hands to burst and the blood to
         flow from          underneath one’s fingernails. The torture is applied passionlessly in a premeditated
         manner. Those          who faint are revived with a morphine shot. Before the torture session [ensue] some
         receive booster          shots [Pol. zastrzyki wzmacniające]. 
         
          
      
                                           
                                           Notable
         Russian Jews    The Russian Empire  at one time hosted the largest population of Jews in the world. Within  these territories the Jewish  community flourished and developed many of  modern Judaism's most distinctive theological and cultural traditions.     Jews have been
         present in contemporary Armenia and Georgia since the  Babylonian captivity. Records exist from the  4th century showing that  there were Armenian cities possessing Jewish populations ranging from  10,000 to 30,000
          along with substantial Jewish settlements in the  Crimea.     The presence of Jews in the territories corresponding
         to modern  Belarus, Ukraine, and the European part of Russia can  be traced back
         to  the 7th-14th centuries CE.     Under the influence of the Caucasian Jewish communities Bulan, the  Khagan Bek of the Khazars, and the ruling classes  of Khazaria (located  in what is now Ukraine, southern Russia and Kazakhstan), adopted Judaism
          at some point in the   mid-to-late 8th or early 9th centuries.   Documentary evidence
         as to the presence of Jews in Muscovite Russia is  first  found in the chronicles
         of 1471.      The
         following is a list of Jews born in the territory of the former  Russian Empire or its successor the Soviet Union. It is  geographically  defined, so it also includes people born before the places were included  in
         the Russian Empire / Soviet  Union, or after the dissolution of the  Russian Empire
         in 1918-1922 and the Soviet Union in 1991, even if the   people never were Russian
         subject or Soviet Citizen.                           
                                                                                  
                                                     ----------------------------------- 
                                                                                    
                                                               Names in "Bold" are Geni profiles.   Names in  "Light Blue"  are Wikipedia links awaiting
         a volunteer to build transfer as a Geni  profile to the World Tree.       
                                    
                                                                                  List of Russian Jews                     
                                                                       
                Rabbis - 	•	Aharon of Karlin (II)
 - 	•	Joseph Chayyim ben Isaac Selig Caro
 - 	•	Naphtali Cohen
 - 	•	Yisrael ben Eliezer (The Baal Shem Tov) הבעש"ט, Rabbi, founder of Hasidic Judaism
 - 	•	Shlomo Ganzfried
 - 	•	Aharon Gurevich
 - 	•	Yitzhak Isaac Halevy Rabinowitz  Rabbi founder Agudath Israel
 - 	•	Chaim Mordechai Aizik Hodakov
 - 	•	Yitzchok
         Isaac Krasilschikov
 - 	•	Berel Lazar
 - 	•	Joseph Lookstein , Geni
 - 	•	Meir Leibush Weiser - Malbim
 - 	•	Shmarya Yehuda Leib Medalia
 - •	Shmuel Leib Medalia
 - 	•	Zalman Moishe HaYitzchaki
 - 	•	Hillel Paritcher
 - 	•	Eliezer
         Zusia Portugal
 - 	•	Baruch Poupko
 - 	•	Yitzchak Yaacov Reines
 - 	•	Zvi Yosef Resnick
 - 	•	Mnachem Risikoff
 - 	•	Mörderhai Scheiner
 - 	•	Isaac
         Schneersohn
 - 	•	Schneour Zalman Schneersohn
 - 	•	Aryeh Leib Schochet
 - 	•	Shneur Zalman of Liadi שניאור זלמן מליאדי
             Founder and First Admor of CHABAD
 - 	•	Dovber Schneuri, The Mitteker Rebbe  דב-בער שניאורי,
            האדמו"ר האמצעי  Second Admor 
 - 	•	Menachem Mendel Schneerson, Hatzemach Tzedek מנחם מנדל שניאורסון,
            הצמח צדק, Third Admor 
 - •  	Shmuel Schneerson, MaHaRash - שמואל שניאורסון,
            מהר"ש Fourth Admor 
 - 	•	Shalom Dovber Schneersohn, RaShab - שלום דב-בער שניאורסון,
            רשא"ב Fifth Admor 
 - 	•	Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson, Rayatz - יוסף יצחק שניאורסון,
            רייא"ץ Sixth Admor 
 - 	•	Ahron Soloveichik
 - 	•	Moshe Soloveichik
 - 	•	Chaim Soloveitchik חיים סולובייצ'יק
 - 	•	Dov Sudak, Rabbi of Krijopol before the war
 - •  
             Menachem Nachum Twersky, 1st Chernobyler
 - 	•	Yehuda Leib Tsirelson
 - 	•	Shlomo
         Yosef Zevin
    Source  Religious Scholars and Educators (not Rabbis or mostly known not as Rabbis) - 	•	Eliyahu Ben Shlomo Zalman, The "Gaon of Vilna" (1720-1797), Talmudic scholar and mathematician
 - 	•	Chaim of Volozhin (1749-1821), Talmudic educator
   Scientists Natural scientists - 	•	Anatole Abragam, physicist 
 - 	•	Alexei Alexeyevich Abrikosov, physicist, Nobel Prize (2003) 
 - 	•	Zhores Alferov, physicist, Nobel Prize (2000) 
 - 	•	Lev Artsimovich, physicist
 - 	•	Nikolai Bernstein (1896-1966), physiologist
 - 	•	Gersh Budker, nuclear physicist 
 - 	•	Ilya Frank, physicist, Nobel Prize (1958) 
 - 	•	Yakov Frenkel, physicist 
 - 	•	Vitaly Ginzburg, physicist, Nobel Prize (2003) 
 - 	•	Vladimir Gribov, physicist 
 - 	•	Waldemar Haffkine, biologist, vaccine against colera and plague 
 - 	•	Boris Hessen, physicist 
 - 	•	Abram Ioffe (1880-1960), physicist
 - 	•	Vladimir Keilis-Borok, physicist 
 - 	•	Yuli
         Khariton, physicist 
 - 	•	Lev Landau, physicist, Nobel Prize (1962) 
 - 	•	Veniamin Levich, electrochemist 
 - 	•	Alexander Vilenkin, cosmologist 
 - 	•	Selman Waksman, biochemist, Nobel Prize (1952) 
 - 	•	Yakov Zel'dovich (1914-1987), physicist 
 - 	•	Anatoliy Kravets, microbiologist, Head of the Laboratory of
         Genetics of Microorganisms (KRIEID) (his notability is extremely questionable: cannot find him in Google )
   Mathematicians - 	•	Georgy
         Adelson-Velsky, mathematician
 - 	•	Vladimir Arnold (1937-2010), mathematician
 - 	•	Grigory Barenblatt, mathematical mechanics (fluids and solid)
 - 	•	Joseph Bernstein, mathematician
 - 	•	Sergey Bernstein (1880-1968), mathematician
 - 	•	Alexander Brudno, mathematician
 - 	•	Chudnovsky
         brothers, amateur mathematicians
 - 	•	Vladimir Drinfeld, mathematician, Fields Medal (1990)
 - 	•	Eugene Dynkin, mathematician
 - 	•	Paul Sophus Epstein, mathematician
 - 	•	Israel Gelfand, mathematician,
 - 	•	Alexander Gelfond, mathematician
 - 	•	Mikhail Gromov (b 1943), mathematician,  Abel Prize (2009)
 - 	•	Semyon Aranovich Gershgorin, mathematician
 - 	•	Victor Kac, mathematician
 - 	•	Veniamin Kagan (1869-1953), mathematician
 - 	•	David Kazhdan, mathematician
 - 	•	Leonid Kantorovich (1912-1986), mathematician and economist, Nobel Prize (1975) 
 - 	•	Aleksandr Khinchin, mathematician
 - 	•	Mark Krasnoselsky, mathematician
 - 	•	Mark Krein, mathematician,
 - 	•	Alexander Kronrod, mathematician
 - 	•	Yevgeniy Landis, mathematician
 - 	•	Solomon Lefschetz, mathematician
 - 	•	Vladimir Levenshtein, mathematician
 - 	•	Leonid Levin, mathematician, computational complexity theory
 - 	•	Jacob
         Levitzki, Ukrainian-Israeli mathematician
 - 	•	Grigory Margulis, mathematician, Fields Medal (1978), Wolf Prize (2005)
 - 	•	David Milman, mathematician
 - 	•	Hermann Minkowski, mathematician
 - 	•	Mark Naimark, mathematician
 - 	•	Grigori Perelman, mathematician
 - 	•	Anatol Rapoport (1911-2007), mathematical biologist, mathematical psychologist, game theorist
 - 	•	Vladimir Rokhlin Sr., mathematician, professor of Leningrad University
 - 	•	Vladimir Rokhlin Jr., applied mathematician,
         professor of Yale University
 - 	•	Jakob Rosanes, mathematician
 - 	•	Lev Schnirelmann, mathematician
 - 	•	Zvi
         Hermann Schapira, mathematician
 - 	•	Moses Schönfinkel, logician
 - 	•	Samuil Shatunovsky, mathematician
 - 	•	Yakov Sinai, mathematician, Abel Prize (2014)
 - 	•	Pavel Urysohn, mathematician
 - 	•	Boris Weisfeiler, mathematician
 - 	•	Victor Zalgaller, mathematician
 - 	•	Oscar Zariski, mathematician
 - 	•	Efim Zelmanov, mathematician, Fields Medal
         (1994)
    Economists  - 	•	Alexander Gerschenkron, economic historian
 - 	•	Naum Krasner, economist
 - 	•	Leonid Hurwicz, economist, Nobel Prize (2007)
 - 	•	Leonid Kantorovich (1912-1986), mathematician and economist, Nobel Prize (1975) 
 - 	•	Simon Kuznets, economist,
         Nobel Prize (1971)
 - •	Jacob Marschak, economist
 - 	•	Alexander
         Nove, economist
   Social Scientists, other than Economists, Legal Scholars, or Religious Scholars - 	•	Urie Bronfenbrenner, developmental psychologist
 - 	•	Solomon Buber, Hebraist
 - 	•	Ariel Durant, historian,
 - 	•	Boris Eichenbaum, historian
 - 	•	Mikhail Epstein, literary theorist
 - 	•	Moshe Feldenkrais, inventor of the
         Feldenkrais method
 - 	•	Jean Gottmann, geographer
 - 	•	Lazar
         Gulkowitsch, Jewish Studies scholar
 - 	•	Abraham Harkavy, historian
 - 	•	Zellig Harris, linguist
 - 	•	Roman Jakobson, Russian/American linguist
 - 	•	Yuri Lotman, prominent linguist and historian of culture
 - 	•	Seymour Lubetzky,
         cataloging theorist
 - 	•	Alexander Luria, neuropsychologist
 - 	•	Jacob
         Rabinow, inventor
 - 	•	Ayn Rand, philosopher
 - 	•	Dietmar
         Rosenthal, linguist
 - 	•	Leonid Roshal, pediatrician, negotiator
 - 	•	Isaak
         Russman, historian
 - 	•	Max Seligsohn, Orientalist
 - 	•	Lev
         Shestov, philosopher
    Writers and poets
         - 	•	Grigory Adamov, writer
 - 	•	M. Ageyev, novelist
 - 	•	David Aizman, writer and playwright
 - 	•	Vasily Aksyonov, writer (Jewish
         mother)
 - 	•	Sholom Aleichem, Yiddish-language writer
 - 	•	Isaac Asimov, science fiction writer
 - 	•	Isaac Babel, writer
 - 	•	Eduard
         Bagritsky, poet
 - 	•	Grigory Baklanov, novelist
 - 	•	Agniya
         Barto, novelist
 - 	•	Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, Hebrew-language writer
 - 	•	Isaac Dov Berkowitz, writer
 - 	•	Chaim Nachman Bialik, poet
 - 	•	Rachel Bluwstein, poet
 - 	•	Yosef Haim Brenner, Hebrew-language writer
 - 	•	Osip Brik, author
 - 	•	Joseph Brodsky, Russian-language poet, Nobel Prize (1987)
 - 	•	Sasha Cherny, poet
 - 	•	Vladimir Galperin, journalist and writer, literature professor
 - 	•	Aleksandr
         Gelman, playwright
 - 	•	Yuli Daniel, writer
 - 	•	Michael
         Dorfman, journalist and esseyst
 - 	•	David Edelstadt, Yiddish-language anarchist poet
 - 	•	Ilya Ehrenburg, writer
 - 	•	Natan Eidelman, writer
 - 	•	Alter Esselin,
         poet, carpenter
 - 	•	Alexander Galich, playwright poet
 - 	•	Asher
         Hirsch Ginsberg (Ahad Ha'Am), Hebrew-language writer
 - 	•	Lydia Ginzburg, writer
 - 	•	Yevgenia Ginzburg, writer
 - 	•	Jacob Gordin, American playwright
 - 	•	Leon Gordon, writer
 - 	•	Grigori Gorin, playwright and writer
 - 	•	Vasily Grossman, writer
 - 	•	Igor Guberman, writer
 - 	•	Peretz Hirshbein, playwright
 - 	•	Ilya Faynzilberg (Ilf), writer
 - 	•	Vera Inber, poet
 - 	•	Lev Kassil, writer
 - 	•	Veniamin
         Kaverin, writer (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Arkady Khait, satirist and playwright (ru:Хайт,
         Аркадий Иосифович)
 - 	•	A.M. Klein, poet
 - 	•	Pavel Kogan, poet
 - 	•	Lev
         Kopelev, author and dissident
 - 	•	Arkady Kotz, poet
 - 	•	Lazar
         Lagin, writer
 - 	•	Vladimir Lantsberg, writer
 - 	•	H. Leivick,
         dramatist
 - 	•	Benedikt Livshits, writer
 - 	•	Nadezhda Mandelstam,
         writer
 - 	•	Osip Mandelstam, poet
 - 	•	Samuil Marshak, poet
 - 	•	Yunna Morits, poet
 - 	•	Semen Nadson, poet (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Yeremey Parnov, writer
 - 	•	Boris Pasternak, writer, Nobel Prize (1958)
 - 	•	Yakov Perelman, writer
 - 	•	Elizaveta
         Polonskaya, translator, poet
 - 	•	Vladimir Posner, writer
 - 	•	David
         Pinski, writer
 - 	•	Lev Razgon, writer, gulag inmate for 17 years
 - 	•	Yevgeny
         Rein, poet
 - 	•	Ayn Rand, writer (born Alisa Rosenbaum)
 - 	•	Anatoli Rybakov, writer
 - 	•	David
         Samoylov, poet
 - 	•	Genrikh Sapgir, poet
 - 	•	Natalya Sats,
         playwright (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Mendele Mocher Sforim, founder of modern Yiddish and modern
         Hebrew literature
 - 	•	Viktor Shklovsky, writer and critic (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Ilia Shtemler, writer
 - 	•	Gary Shteyngart (Steinhart), writer
 - 	•	Yulian Semyonov, writer
 - 	•	Boris Slutsky, war-time poet
 - 	•	Mikhail Slonimsky, writer (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Boris and Arkady Strugatsky,
         science fiction writers (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Mikhail Svetlov, poet
 - 	•	Shaul
         Tchernichovsky, poet and translator
 - 	•	Yuri Tynyanov, writer
 - 	•	Mikhail
         Zhvanetsky, writer and comedian
 - 	•	Efim Bershin, poet, essayist, novelist (Born Efim Berenshtein)
   Musicians - 	•	Joseph Achron, composer
 - 	•	Lera Auerbach,
         composer/pianist
 - 	•	Vladimir Ashkenazi, pianist (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Yefim
         Bronfman, pianist
 - 	•	Simon Barere, pianist
 - 	•	Rudolf
         Barshai, conductor
 - 	•	Dimitri Bashkirow, pianist
 - 	•	Yuri
         Bashmet, violist
 - 	•	Irving Berlin composer and lyricist
 - 	•	Lazar Berman, pianist
 - 	•	Matvei
         Blanter, composer, Katyusha
 - 	•	Felix Blumenfeld, pianist
 - 	•	Shura
         Cherkassky, pianist
 - 	•	Bella Davidovich, pianist
 - 	•	Issay
         Dobrowen, pianist and composer
 - 	•	Isaak Dunayevsky, composer
 - 	•	Mischa
         Elman, violinist
 - 	•	Mark Ermler, conductor
 - 	•	Anthony
         Fedorov, singer, American Idol finalist
 - 	•	Samuil Feinberg, composer
 - 	•	Vladimir Feltsman, pianist
 - 	•	Veniamin Fleishman, composer
 - 	•	Yakov Flier, pianist
 - 	•	Grigory Frid, songwriter
 - 	•	Artur Friedheim, composer
 - 	•	Kirill Gerstein, pianist
 - 	•	Josef Gingold (1909–1995) violinist
 - 	•	Grigory Ginsburg, pianist
 - 	•	Emil Gilels, pianist
 - 	•	Grigory Ginzburg, conductor
 - •      Michail-Ivanovič-Glinka , composer (Author  of famous "Jewish Song", but there is no data that he had Jewish  ancestors, and given
         who were his parents, it is extremely questionable). 
 - 	•	Mark Gorenstein, conductor
 - 	•	Riva Gorohovskaya, pianist
 - 	•	Maria Grinberg, pianist
 - 	•	Natalia Gutman, cellist
 - 	•	Jascha Heifetz, violinist
 - 	•	Mordechai Hershman, chazzan
 - 	•	Jascha
         Horenstein, conductor
 - 	•	Vladimir Horowitz, pianist
 - 	•	Oleg
         Kagan, violinist
 - 	•	Ilya Kaler, violinist
 - 	•	Tina Karol,
         singer
 - 	•	Boris Khaykin, conductor
 - 	•	Evgeny Kissin,
         pianist
 - 	•	Alexander Knaifel, composer
 - 	•	Leonid Kogan,
         violinist
 - 	•	Mikhail Kopelman, violinist
 - 	•	Yakov Kreizberg,
         conductor
 - 	•	Josef Lhévinne, pianist
 - 	•	Alexander
         Lokshin, composer (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Arthur Lourié, composer
 - 	•	Oleg Maisenberg, pianist
 - 	•	Samuel Maykapar, composer/pianist
 - 	•	Nathan Milstein, violinist
 - 	•	Shlomo Mintz, violinist
 - 	•	Boris Moiseev, dancer, showmaker
 - 	•	Benno Moiseiwitsch, pianist
 - 	•	David Oistrakh, violinist
 - 	•	Igor Oistrakh, violinist (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Leo Ornstein, composer
 - 	•	Gregor Piatigorsky, cellist
 - 	•	Pokrass brothers, composers
 - 	•	Alexander Rosenbaum, singer/songwriter
 - 	•	Anton Rubinstein, pianist/composer
 - 	•	Nikolai Rubinstein, pianist/composer
 - 	•	Samuil Samosud, conductor
 - 	•	Alfred Schnittke, composer (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Joseph Schillinger, composer, music theorist, and composition teacher
 - 	•	Daniil
         Shafran, cellist
 - 	•	Leo Sirota, pianist
 - 	•	Regina Spektor,
         singer-songwriter and pianist
 - 	•	Isaac Stern, violinist
 - 	•	Mark
         Taimanov, pianist. Also an outstanding chess grandmaster. (According to Wikipedia, had a Jewish paternal grandfather). 
 - 	•	Sophie Tucker, singer
 - 	•	Efrem Zimbalist, Russian-born American violinist
 - 	•	Maxim Vengerov, prominent violinist
 - 	•	Alexander Veprik, composer
 - 	•	Maria Yudina, pianist
 - 	•	Yakov Zak, pianist
 - 	•	Mikhael
         Rauchverger, pianist and composer
 - 	•	Aleksey Igudesman, violinist
   Fine artists - 	•	Eugene
         Abeshaus, painter
 - 	•	Meer Akselrod, painter
 - 	•	Benish
         Mininberg, painter
 - 	•	Nathan Altman, painter and stage designer from Vinnytsia
 - 	•	Boris Anisfeld, painter, theatre
 - 	•	Boris Aronson, painter & designer
 - 	•	Mordechai Avniel, painter
 - 	•	Léon Bakst, painter & costume
         designer
 - 	•	Abraham Berline, painter
 - 	•	Eugène
         Berman, painter
 - 	•	Leonid Berman, painter
 - 	•	Mikhail
         Bernshtein, painter
 - 	•	Isaak Brodskiy, painter
 - 	•	Marc Chagall, painter from Vitebsk
 - 	•	Bella Chagall, the wife of Marc Chagall
 - 	•	Joseph Chaikov, sculptor
 - 	•	Ilya Chashnik, painter
 - 	•	Nudie Cohn, fashion designer
 - 	•	Sonia Delaunay, painter
 - 	•	Boris Efimov, cartoonist
 - 	•	Robert Falk, painter
 - 	•	Naum Gabo, sculptor
 - 	•	Michail Grobman, painter
 - 	•	Boris
         Iofan, architect
 - 	•	Roman Abelevich Kachanov, animator
 - 	•	Ilya
         Kabakov, conceptual artist (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Yevgeny Khaldei, photographer
 - 	•	Michel Kikoine, painter
 - 	•	Komar and Melamid, art-duo
 - 	•	Jacob Kramer, painter
 - 	•	Pinchus Kremegne, painter
 - 	•	Morris Lapidus, architect
 - 	•	Felix Lembersky painter
 - 	•	Isaac Levitan, painter
 - •       Jacques Lipchitz, sculptor from Druskininkai
 - 	•       El Lissitzky designer
 - 	•	Abram Manevich, painter
 - 	•	Louise Nevelson,
         sculptor
 - 	•	Ernst Neizvestny, sculptor
 - 	•	Solomon Nikritin,
         painter
 - 	•	Yuri Norstein, animator
 - 	•	Jules Olitski,
         painter
 - 	•	Leonid Pasternak, painter
 - 	•	Antoine Pevsner,
         sculptor
 - 	•	Semion Rotnitsky, painter
 - 	•	Issachar Rybak,
         painter from Yelizavetgrad
 - 	•	David Shterenberg, painter from Zhitomir
 - 	•	Chaim Soutine, painter from Minsk
 - 	•	Raphael Soyer, American painter
 - 	•	Genndy Tartakovsky, Russian-born American animation director
 - 	•	Joseph
         Tepper, painter
 - 	•	Israel Tsvaygenbaum, Russian-American artist
 - 	•	Lazar
         Yazgur, painter
 - 	•	Valentin Yudashkin, fashion designer
 - 	•	Ossip
         Zadkine, sculptor (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Saveliy Moiseyevich Zeydenberg, painter
    - 	•	Jacob Adler, actor
 - 	•	Milana Aleksandrovna Vayntrub
 - 	•	Michael Aronov
 - 	•	Elina Bystritskaya, actress
 - 	•	Alexander Alov, actor
 - 	•	Lev Arnshtam, film director
 - 	•	Leonid Bronevoy, actor
 - 	•	Grigori Chukhrai, film director and screenwriter,[126] father of Pavel Chukhrai
 - 	•	Pavel
         Chukhrai, film director and screenwriter, son of Grigori Chukhrai
 - 	•	Maya Deren, filmmaker
 - 	•	Mark Donskoi, film director
 - 	•	Fridrikh Ermler, film director, actor,
         and screenwriter
 - 	•	Aleksandr Faintsimmer, cinematographer
 - 	•	Valentin
         Gaft, actor
 - 	•	Zinovy Gerdt, actor
 - 	•	Aleksei German,
         cinematographer
 - 	•	Moisei Ginzburg, architect
 - 	•	Vitaliy
         Ginzburg, director
 - 	•	Alexander Goldstein, director
 - 	•	Abraham
         Goldfaden (1840–1908), playwright and theatre director
 - 	•	Yuli Gusman, director
 - 	•	Alexander Gutman, director
 - 	•	Aleksei Kapler, film artist
 - 	•	Roman Karmen, documentary filmmaker
 - 	•	Roman Kartsev, actor
 - 	•	Boris Kaufman, cinematographer
 - 	•	Mikhail Kaufman, cinematographer
 - 	•	Gennady Khazanov, comedian
 - 	•	Iosif Kheifits, film director
 - 	•	Yefim Kopelyan, actor
 - 	•	Mikhail Kozakov, actor
 - 	•	Grigori
         Kozintsev, theater and film director
 - 	•	Mila Kunis, television actress
 - 	•	Anatole Litvak, director
 - 	•	Solomon Mikhoels, actor & director
 - 	•	Lew Milinder, actor
 - 	•	Alexander Mitta, film director
 - 	•	Alla Nazimova, actress
 - 	•	Vladimir Naumov, director
 - 	•	Maya Plisetskaya, ballerina
 - 	•	Iosif Prut, playwright
 - 	•	Yuli Raizman, film director and screenwriter
 - 	•	Elena Ralph, model
 - 	•	Faina Ranevskaya, actress
 - 	•	Arkady Raikin, comedian
 - 	•	Mikhail Romm, film director, scriptwriter, and educator (Jewish father)
 - 	•	Abram
         Room, film director
 - 	•	Grigori Roshal, film director and screenwriter
 - 	•	Hanna Rovina, actress
 - 	•	Ida Rubinstein, dancer
 - 	•	Alexander
         Schirwindt, actor, director and screenwriter
 - 	•	Mikhail Schweitzer, screenwriter
 - 	•	Yefim Shifrin, comedian
 - 	•	Viktor Shenderovich, humorist
 - 	•	Esfir Shub, editor, director, and writer of documentary films
 - 	•	Yakov
         Smirnoff, American comedian
 - 	•	Lee Strasberg, acting teacher
 - 	•	Leonid
         Trauberg, film director, scriptwriter, and educator
 - 	•	Dziga Vertov, documentary film director
         and film theoretician
 - 	•	Anton Yelchin, Russian-born American film/television actor
 - 	•	Sergei Yursky, actor
 - 	•	Sergei Yutkevich, film director and screenwriter
 - 	•	Mark Zakharov, theater and film director and playwright
    - 	•	Michael Dorfman,
         Russian-Israeli essayist and human rights activist 
   Politicians Pre-Revolution Politicians and Revolutionaries - 	•	Osip Aptekman, revolutionary
 - 	•	Pavel Axelrod,
         Menshevik, Marxist revolutionary
 - 	•	Yevno Azef, government agent / provocateur and revolutionary
 - 	•	Dmitri Bogrov, assassin of Russian reformist Prime Minister Stolypin
 - 	•	Fedor
         Dan, revolutionary
 - 	•	Leo Deutsch, revolutionary
 - 	•	Gesya
         Gelfman, revolutionary
 - 	•	Grigory Gershuni, revolutionary
 - 	•	Grigory
         Goldenberg, revolutionary
 - 	•	Julius Martov, Menshevik leader 
 - 	•	Mark
         Natanson, revolutionary
 - 	•	Alexander Parvus, revolutionary
 - 	•	Pinhas
         Rutenberg, Zionist, Social revolutionary
 - 	•	Israel and Manya Shochat, founders of the Hashomer
         movement
   Soviet Politicians - 	•	Georgy Arbatov, Soviet politician, academic & political advisor 
 - 	•	Adolph Joffe, Bolshevik diplomat 
 - 	•	Lazar Kaganovich, Soviet politician
         
 - 	•	Lev Kamenev, Bolshevik leader (Jewish father) 
 - 	•	Olga
         Kameneva, Russian Bolshevik revolutionary and a Soviet politician (sister of Leon Trotsky)
 - 	•	Maxim
         Litvinov, Soviet ambassador and Minister of Foreign Affairs 
 - 	•	Karl Radek, Soviet politician
         
 - 	•	Grigory Sokolnikov, Bolshevik politician 
 - 	•	Yakov
         Sverdlov, Bolshevik leader, the first head of state of the Russian SFSR 
 - 	•	Leon Trotsky, Bolshevik politician, the founder of the Red Army 
 - 	•	Moisei Uritsky, Soviet politician
         and communist revolutionary, head of secret police in Petrograd, assassinated.
 - 	•	V. Volodarsky,
         Soviet politician and communist revolutionary, editor of Bolshevik journal and censor, assassinated
 - 	•	Genrikh
         Yagoda, head of Secret Police in the Stalin era (1934–1936) 
 - 	•	Grigory Zinoviev,
         Soviet politician 
   Post-Soviet Politicians - 	•	Anatoly Chubais, Russian Deputy Prime Minister, now Chairman of UES 
 - 	•	Mikhail Fradkov, Russian Prime Minister
 - 	•	Boris Nemtsov, Russian Deputy
         Prime Minister 
 - 	•	Vladimir Zhirinovsky - a Russian politician, leader of the  Liberal
         Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR), Vice-Chairman of the State  Duma, and a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
         of  Europe."
   Israeli politicians - 	•	Menachem Begin מנחם בגין, Israel 6th Prime Minister (1977–1983), Nobel Peace Prize (1978)
 - 	•	Yitzhak Ben-Zvi יצחק בן-צבי, second President of Israel (1952–63)
 - 	•    Shmuel Dayan שמואל דיין, Zionist activist, Israeli politician
 - 	•	Levi Eshkol לוי אשכול, Israel 3rd Prime Minister (1963–69)
 - 	•	Ephraim Katzir אפרים קציר, fourth President of Israel (1973–78)
 - 	•	Avigdor Lieberman, Israeli Government 
         Minister (2001–02; 2003–04; 2006–08; 2009–12; 2013– ) 
 - 	•	Golda Meir גולדה מאיר, Israel 4th Prime Minister (1969–74)
 - 	•	Shimon Peres שמעון פרס, Ninth President of Israel (2007–2014}; Israel 8th Prime Minister (1984–86; 1995–96), Nobel Peace Prize
         (1994)
 - 	•	Pinhas Rutenberg, Zionist, Social revolutionary
 - 	•	Yitzhak Shamir יצחק שמיר, Israel 7th Prime Minister (1983–84; 1986–92)
 - 	•	Natan Sharansky, Israeli politician
 - 	•	Moshe Sharett משה שרת, Israel 2nd Prime Minister (1954–55)
 - 	•	Zalman Shazar זלמן שז"ר, third President of Israel (1963–73)
 - 	•	Israel and Manya Shochat, founders of the
         Hashomer movement
 - 	•	Chaim Weizmann חיים ויצמן, first President of Israel (1949–52)
   Politicians and Revolutionaries, other countries - 	•	Raya
         Dunayevskaya, founder of Marxist humanism in the U.S.
 - 	•	David Dubinsky, American labor
         leader 
 - 	•	Theodore Rothstein, Russian-British communist
  
         Military persons: Solders, Officers, Generals... Russian, Soviet, post-Soviet Military
         Persons - 	•	Tuvie Bielski, Belarusian partisan
 - 	•	Yakov Blumkin, Soviet spy
 - 	•	Ivan Chernyakhovsky, Soviet Front Commander,
         WWII
 - 	•	David Dragunsky, Soviet tank brigade commander, WWII
 - 	•	Moshe
         Gildenman, known as Dyadya ("Uncle") Misha, partisan commander[57]
 - 	•	Walter
         Krivitsky, Soviet spy
 - 	•	Semyon Krivoshein, Soviet mechanized corps commander, WWII
 - 	•	Rodion Malinovsky, Soviet front commander, WWII, Minister of Defence[ (Jewish origin is disputed)
 - 	•	Iona Yakir, Red Army commander and one of the world's major military reformers between World War I and World
         War II
 - 	•	Mikhail Pavlotsky, lieutenant colonel, Hero of the Soviet Union
   Israeli military persons - 	•	General Yaakov Dori רב-אלוף יעקב דורי, the first Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) (1948–1949)
 - 	•	Ze'ev Jabotinsky זאב ז'בוטינסקי, founder of British Jewish Legion
 - 	•	General Chaim Laskov רב-אלוף חיים לסקוב, the fifth Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces (1958–1961)
 - 	•	Yitzhak Sadeh יצחק שדה, Palmach commander and one of the IDF founders.
 - 	•	Joseph Trumpeldor יוסף טרומפלדור, founder of British Jewish Legion and early pioneer-settler in Israel (born in Pyatigorsk)
 - 	•	General Tzvi Tzur, the sixth Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces (1961–1964)
   Military Persons of other Countries - 	•	Sidney Reilly,(Born
         Shlomo Rosenblum) a Ukrainian-born adventurer and Secret Intelligence Service agent
   Business Persons and Famous Managers Pre-revolution Business Persons Soviet Time Famous Managers Post-Soviet Business Persons - 	•	Roman Abramovich, businessman,
         owner of Chelsea F.C., Russia
 - 	•	Pyotr Aven, businessman, banking, Russia
 - 	•	Mikhail Fridman, businessman, banking and telecommunications, Russia
 - 	•	Vladimir
         Gusinsky, exile, former media tycoon
 - 	•	Boris Khait, businessman, banking and insurance,
         in 1990-th vice-president of the Russian Jewish Congress
 - 	•	Alexander Mashkevich, businessman,
         mining, Kazakhstan
 - 	•	Leonid Nevzlin, exile, former top manager and businessman
 - 	•	Grigory Surkis, businessman, Ukraine, former chairman of the Football (Soccer) Federation of Ukraine
   Emigrant Business Persons - 	•	Leon Bagrit, pioneer of automation
 - 	•	Bernhard Baron, cigarette maker
         and philanthropist
 - 	•	Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google
 - 	•	Zino
         Davidoff, cigar / tobacco merchant
 - 	•	Bernard Delfont, impresario
 - 	•	Arcadi Gaydamak, owner of Portsmouth F.C., AJ Auxerre, and Bnei Sakhnin F.C.
 - 	•	Leslie
         Grade, executive (should be removed because he was not born in Russia)
 - 	•	Lew
         Grade, impresario, Chairman of ATV from 1962
 - 	•	Max Levchin, co-founder of PayPal
 - 	•	Morris Markin, founder of Checker Cab
 - 	•	Michael Marks, co-founder of
         Marks & Spencer
 - 	•	Louis B. Mayer, co-founder MGM
 - 	•	Ida
         Rosenthal, founder of Maidenform Brassieres
 - 	•	David Sarnoff, head of RCA
   Sport Persons Intellectual Sports Chess - 	•	Lev Alburt
 - 	•	Yuri Averbakh
 - 	•	Alexander
         Beliavsky
 - 	•	Ossip Bernstein
 - 	•	Benjamin Blumenfeld
 - 	•	Isaac Boleslavsky
 - 	•	Mikhail Botvinnik, World Champion
 - 	•	David Bronstein, World Championship
         challenger
 - 	•	Maxim Dlugy
 - 	•	Iossif Dorfman
 - 	•	Mark Dvoretsky
 - 	•	Louis Eisenberg
 - 	•	Yakov
         Estrin
 - 	•	Alexander Evensohn
 - 	•	Salo Flohr
 - 	•	Semen Furman
 - 	•	Boris Gelfand
 - 	•	Efim
         Geller
 - 	•	Eduard Gufeld
 - 	•	Boris Gulko
 - 	•	Dmitry Gurevich
 - 	•	Ilya Gurevich
 - 	•	Mikhail
         Gurevich
 - 	•	Nicolai Jasnogrodsky
 - 	•	Gregory Kaidanov
 - 	•	Ilya Kan
 - 	•	Garry Kasparov, World Champion
 - 	•	Alexander
         Khalifman, FIDE World Champion
 - 	•	Alexander Konstantinopolsky
 - 	•	Viktor
         Korchnoi, World Championship challenger
 - 	•	Ljuba Kristol
 - 	•	Alla
         Kushnir, Women's World Championship challenger
 - 	•	Anatoly Lein
 - 	•	Konstantin
         Lerner
 - 	•	Grigory Yakovlevich Levenfish
 - 	•	Irina Levitina
 - 	•	Vladimir Liberzon
 - 	•	Andor Lilienthal
 - 	•	Moishe Lowtzky
 - 	•	Vladimir
         Malaniuk
 - 	•	Sam Palatnik
 - 	•	Ernest Pogosyants
 - 	•	Iosif Pogrebyssky
 - 	•	Lev Polugaevsky
 - 	•	Lev
         Psakhis
 - 	•	Abram Rabinovich
 - 	•	Ilya Rabinovich
 - 	•	Leonid Shamkovich
 - 	•	Ilya Smirin
 - 	•	Gennadi
         Sosonko
 - 	•	Leonid Stein
 - 	•	Peter Svidler
 - 	•	Mark Taimanov. Also an outstanding pianist. (According to Wikipedia, had a Jewish paternal grandfather).
         
 - 	•	Boris Verlinsky
 - 	•	Yakov Vilner
 - 	•	Leonid Yudasin
   Physical Sports Boxing - 	•	Yuri Foreman,
         Belarusian-born Israeli US middleweight and World Boxing Association champion super welterweight
 - 	•	Louis
         Kaplan ("Kid Kaplan"), Russian-born US, world champion featherweight, Hall of Fame
 - 	•	Shamil
         Sabirov, Russia, Olympic champion light flyweight
   Canoeing - 	•	Leonid Geishtor, USSR (Belarus), sprint canoer, Olympic champion (Canadian
         pairs 1,000-meter)
 - 	•	Michael Kolganov, Soviet (Uzbek)-born Israeli, sprint canoer, world
         champion, Olympic bronze (K-1 500-meter)
 - 	•	Naum Prokupets, Moldovan-born Soviet, sprint
         canoer, Olympic  bronze (C-2 1,000-meter), gold (C-2 10,000-meter) at ICF Canoe Sprint  World Championships
   Fencing - 	•	Vadim Gutzeit,
         Ukraine (saber), Olympic champion
 - 	•	Grigory Kriss, Soviet (épée), Olympic
         champion, 2x silver
 - 	•	Maria Mazina, Russia (épée), Olympic champion, bronze
 - 	•	Mark Midler, Soviet (foil), 2x Olympic champion
 - 	•	Mark Rakita, Soviet
         (saber), 2x Olympic champion, 2x silver
 - 	•	Yakov Rylsky, Soviet (saber), Olympic champion
 - 	•	Sergey Sharikov, Russia (saber), 2x Olympic champion, silver, bronze
 - 	•	David
         Tyshler, Soviet (saber), Olympic bronze
 - 	•	Eduard Vinokurov, Russia (saber), 2x Olympic
         champion, silver
 - 	•	Iosif Vitebskiy, Soviet (épée), Olympic silver, 10x national
         championIrina Slutskaya
    - 	•	Ilya Averbukh, Russia, ice dancer, Olympic silver
 - 	•	Oksana
         Baiul, Ukraine, figure skater, Olympic gold, world champion
 - 	•	Alexei Beletski, Ukrainian-born
         Israeli, ice dancer, Olympian
 - 	•	Sasha Cohen, figure skater (U.S. National Champion and
         silver medalist at the 2006 Winter Olympics)
 - 	•	Aleksandr Gorelik, Soviet, pair skater,
         Olympic silver, World Championship 2x silver, bronze
 - 	•	Natalia Gudina, Ukrainian-born
         Israeli, figure skater, Olympian
 - 	•	Gennadi Karponossov, Russia, ice dancer & coach,
         Olympic gold, World Championship 2x gold, silver, 2x bronze
 - 	•	Michael Shmerkin, Soviet-born
         Israeli, figure skater
 - 	•	Irina Slutskaya, Russia, figure skater, Olympic silver, bronze,
         World Championship 2x gold, 3x silver, bronze
 - 	•	Maxim Staviski, Russian-born Bulgarian,
         ice dancer, World Championship gold, silver, bronze
 - 	•	Alexandra Zaretski, Belarusian-born
         Israeli, ice dancer, Olympian
 - 	•	Roman Zaretski, Belarusian-born Israeli, ice dancer, Olympian
   Football (American) - 	•	Joe
         Magidsohn, Russia, Halfback
 - 	•	Igor Olshansky, Ukraine, DL (Miami Dolphins)
   Gymnastics - 	•	Evgeny (or
         Yevgeny) Babich, Soviet, Olympic champion, world & European champion, 2x runner-up
 - 	•	Yanina
         Batyrchina, Russia, Olympic silver (rhythmic gymnastics)
 - 	•	Maria Gorokhovskaya, USSR,
         Olympic 2x champion (all-around  individual exercises, team combined exercises), 5x silver (vault,  asymmetrical bars, balance
         beam, floor exercises, team exercises with  portable apparatus)
 - 	•	Natalia Laschenova,
         USSR, Olympic champion (team)
 - 	•	Tatiana Lysenko, Soviet/Ukrainian, 2x Olympic champion
         (balance beam, team combined exercises), bronze (horse vault)
 - 	•	Mikhail Perelman, USSR,
         Olympic champion (team combined exercises)
 - 	•	Vladimir Portnoi, USSR, Olympic silver (team
         combined exercises) and bronze (long horse vault)
 - 	•	Yulia Raskina, Belarus, Olympic silver
         (rhythmic gymnastics)
 - 	•	Alexander Shatilov, Uzbekistan/Israel, world bronze (artistic
         gymnast; floor exercises)
 - 	•	Yelena Shushunova, USSR, Olympic 2x champion (all-around,
         team), silver (balance beam), bronze (uneven bars)
   Ice hockey - 	•	Max Birbraer, Russian from Kazakhstan; lived & played in Israel; 1st Israeli
         drafted by NHL team (New Jersey Devils)
 - 	•	Vitaly Davydov, Soviet, defenseman, 3x Olympic
         champion, world & European champion 1963–71, runner-up
 - 	•	Nikolay Epstein, Soviet
         hockey coach
 - 	•	Alfred Kuchevsky, Soviet, Olympic champion, bronze
 - 	•	Yuri Lyapkin, Soviet, defenceman, Olympic champion
 - 	•	Yuri Moiseev, Soviet,
         Olympic champion, world champion
 - 	•	Vladimir Myshkin, Soviet, goaltender, Olympic champion,
         silver
 - 	•	Ian Rubin, Ukraine/Australia, Russia national team
 - 	•	Yevgeni
         Zimin, Soviet, Olympic champion 1968–72, world & European champion 1968–69, 1971
 - 	•	Viktor
         Zinger, Soviet, Olympic champion; world champion 1965–69
   Judo - 	•	Ārons Bogoļubovs, USSR, Olympic bronze (lightweight)
   Rugby league - 	•	Ian Rubin,
         Ukraine/Australia, Russia national team
   Sailing - 	•	Valentyn Mankin, Soviet/Ukraine, only sailor in Olympic history  to win gold
         medals in three different classes (yachting: finn class,  tempest class, and star class), silver (yachting, tempest class)
   Shooting - 	•	Lev Vainshtein,
         USSR (Russia), 3x team world champion (25 m & 50 m pistol) and Olympic bronze medalist (300 m rifle)
   Soccer (association football) - 	•	Leonid
         Buryak, USSR/Ukraine, midfielder, Olympic bronze
 - 	•	Andriy Oberemko, Ukraine, midfielder
         (Illichivets & U21 national team)
 - 	•	Israel Olshanetsky, USSR, attacking midfielder
         Dynamo Lenningrad.
 - 	•	Boris Razinsky, USSR/Russia, goalkeeper/striker, Olympic champion,
         manager
 - 	•	Mordechai Spiegler, Soviet Union/Israel, striker (Israel national team), manager
   Speed skating - 	•	Rafayel
         Grach, USSR, Olympic silver (500-meter), bronze (500-meter)
   Swimming - 	•	Vadim Alexeev, Kazakhstan-born Israeli, breaststroke
 - 	•	Semyon Belits-Geiman, USSR, Olympic silver (400-m freestyle  relay) and bronze (800-m freestyle relay); world
         record in men's 800-m  freestyle
 - 	•	Lenny Krayzelburg, Ukrainian-born US, 4x Olympic champion
          (100-m backstroke, 200-m backstroke, twice 4x100-m medley relay); 3x  world champion (100-m and 200-m backstroke, 4×100-m
         medley) and 2x  silver (4×100-m medley, 50-m backstroke); 3 world records (50-, 100-,  and 200-m backstroke)
   Table tennis - 	•	Marina Kravchenko,
         Ukrainian-born Israeli, Soviet and Israel national teams
   Track and
         field - 	•	Aleksandr Averbukh, Russian-born Israeli, 2002 &
         2006 European champion (pole vault)
 - 	•	Maria Leontyavna Itkina, USSR, sprinter, world records
         (400-m & 220-yards, and 800-m relay)
 - 	•	Svetlana Krachevskaya, USSR, shot put, Olympic
         silver
 - 	•	Vera Krepkina, USSR, Olympic champion (long jump), world records (100-m dash
         and 4x100-m)
 - 	•	Faina Melnik, Ukrainian-born USSR, 11 world records; Olympic discus throw
         champion
 - 	•	Zhanna Pintusevich-Block, Ukraine, sprinter, world 100-m & 200-m champion
 - 	•	Irina Press, USSR, 2x Olympic champion (80-m hurdles & pentathlon)
 - 	•	Tamara
         Press, USSR, 6 world records (shot put & discus); 3x  Olympic champion (2x shot put & discus) and silver (discus)
   Volleyball - 	•	Nelly Abramova,
         USSR, Olympic silver
 - 	•	Larisa Bergen, USSR, Olympic silver
 - 	•	Yefim
         Chulak, USSR, Olympic silver, bronze
 - 	•	Nataliya Kushnir, USSR, Olympic silver
 - 	•	Yevgeny Lapinsky, USSR, Olympic champion, bronze
 - 	•	Georgy Mondzolevsky,
         USSR, 2x Olympic champion, 2x world champion
 - 	•	Vladimir Patkin, USSR, Olympic silver,
         bronze
 - 	•	Yuriy Venherovsky, USSR, Olympic champion
    Water polo - 	•	Boris Goikhman, USSR, goalkeeper, Olympic
         silver, bronze
 - 	•	Nikolai Melnikov, USSR, Olympic champion
  
         Weightlifting - 	•	Moisei Kas’ianik,
         Ukrainian-born USSR, world champion
 - 	•	Grigory Novak, Soviet, Olympic silver (middle-heavyweight);
         world champion
 - 	•	Rudolf Plyukfelder, Soviet, Olympic champion, 2x world champion (light
         heavyweight)
 - 	•	David Rigert, Kazakh-born USSR, Olympic champion, 5x world champion (light-heavyweight
         and heavyweight), 68 world records (According to Wikipedia, he is of German ancestry, not Jewish)
 - 	•	Igor Rybak, Ukrainian-born USSR, Olympic champion (lightweight)
 - 	•	Valery
         Shary, Byelorussian-born USSR, Olympic champion (light-heavyweight)
   Wrestling - 	•	Grigorii Gamarnik, USSR, world champion (Greco-Roman lightweight), world championship
         silver
 - 	•	Samuel Gerson, Ukrainian-born US, Olympic silver (freestyle featherweight)
 - 	•	Boris Maksovich Gurevich, Soviet, Olympic champion (Greco-Roman flyweight), 2x world champion
 - 	•	Boris Michail Gurevitsch, USSR, Olympic champion (freestyle middleweight), 2x world champion
 - 	•	Oleg Karavaev, USSR, Olympic champion (Greco-Roman bantamweight), 2x world champion
 - 	•	Yakov Punkin, Soviet, Olympic champion (Greco-Roman featherweight)
 - 	•	David
         Rudman, USSR, world championship bronze
 - 	•	Boris Gurevich won the 1968 Summer Olympic Games
         freestyle middleweight (191.5 lbs; 82 kilograms) gold medal in Mexico City
   Other sports - 	•	Nissim Cahn, twice Bronze Medal for
         Israel, curling
 - 	•	Alexander Gomelsky, Soviet basketball coach
  
         Professionals Engineers - 	•	Emanuel Goldberg (1881–1970), pioneered Microdots and microfilm retrieval technology 
 - 	•	Mikhail Gurevich, co-founder of the Mikoyan Gurevich (MiG) aircraft design bureau 
 - 	•	Semyon Kosberg (1903-1965), head of aircraft engines and rocket engines design bureau
 - 	•	Semyon Lavochkin (1900-1960), founder and head of aircraft and missiles design bureau
   Medical Doctors and similar - 	•	Alexander Bernstein (1870-1922), psychiatrist
   Lawyers,
         Jurists, Legal Scholars Other - 	•	Boris Volynov, Soviet Astronaut; the first Jew in space (Jewish mother) 
 - 	•	Natasha
         Epstein, beauty queen (and a graduate of Harvard University ) (is she really notable? Google does not show anything)
 
  ______________________________       
                                                         
      
         _________________________________________________________   How 
                 Jews Killed Jews In Order To Create The State Of Israel 
                          |                                                            
  |                                                                                 
                             
   Now,  when professor          of Jewish
         history at Brandeis University, Anthony  Polonsky  published  a monumental
         three volume work entitled “Jews          in  Poland and Russia,” and in Israel opinions  are divided  about the wisdom  of proposed nuclear bombing of Iran one          should also remember  the book of  Naeim Giladi and his  description how Jews killed Jews in order to  create the
         state  of  Israel.          Naeim Giladi, is the author of the book:  “Ben-Gurion’s
          Scandals: How The Haganah  and Mossad Eliminated Jews,”           (Dandelion
         Books, LLC, Tempe Arizona, 2nd expanded edition  2003).     Giladi wrote
         this book first in Hebrew and          then in Arabic upon arrival  to the US where he  confirmed as an  eye witness the facts concerning the  Zionist bombings in          Iraq, the rejection  by Israel of Arab peace  overtures and the  deadly violence inflicted by Jews on Jews in the
          cause  of          creating Israel. Then Stalin’s intended Israel to
         be a “bone of   contention” in the  Middle East in the Cold   
               War. Some observers mention  the possibility that Stalin also   hoped
         to create Isarel as a Marxist  state, part of the Soviet          postwar empire.      www.pogonowski.com        Stalin’s decision
         do use the Zionists in establishing          the state of  Israel after the Second  World War, was motivated  primarily by his intent  to oppose the United States in the          oil  rich Middle East. The temporary  Soviet support for the  Zionists materialized in the form  of allowing  711,000 Jews to          exit from countries behind the Iron Courtain, in  1945-1947
           supposedly in order to emigrate to Palestine.  
           The          Zionists advertised this migration under the code-name “Briha” -   
         Escape of Jews from  Europe. In reality the          vast majority of Jews
          preferred to go to the United States or  stay in  France. Of the 711,000 
         Jewish refugees, panicked by          some fifteen pogroms staged by  the NKVD
         in  1945-1947, with  some Zionist assistance, only 232,000 actually went to  Palestine.              Only the  Pogrom of Kielce of the 4th of July, 1946, was described          in the  world press, naturally
  in the Soviet version. Fifteen  other pogroms in  the satellite states, four of them in Budapest           alone, were never  reported in the world media or were reported  in such a way that
         they did   not survive in public memory.           The Zionists organized the
         groups of  Jewish refugees who left  Poland mainly through the cities of Szczecin
          and Klodzko.              The  Soviet terror apparatus in Kielce conducted
         show-trials of nine           Poles, who under tortures
  signed confessions
         and were  immediately  executed. Later their families provided evidence,  that
                  none of the  executed men, was present in Kielce on the 4th of  July, 1946. The Bishop   of Kielce, Czeslaw Kaczmarek was tortured          for forty hours and lost  nineteen teeth before Jewish security  officers were able to extract from  him an incriminating statement.       
           They acted  under the supervision of  colonel Jozef Rózanski  Goldberg,
         director of the ministry of national   security          (MBP), who wrote threatening
         note to Bishop Kaczmarek: “I have   smashed the  faces of the lawyers,
         and I warn you Bishop          Kaczmarek, not  to ever seek legal help.”    Dr. Roman Dzwonkowski,          SAC described these events in Nasz Dziennik of  May 20- 21, 2006, 
 Nr . 117m (2527) “War on the Catholic Church in the           Polish People’s Republic (PRL 1945-1989).”  These events happened during  the reign of terror of Jozef Berman,          Moscow’s
         representative  in Warsaw,  in Soviet controlled Poland.    According to Stefan Korbonski, (former head of the military and the  civil underground
         resistance
  in Poland), during ten          years after World  War II, “Poles
         and Jews in World War II.” Polish  people lived under  Jewish terror
         controlled          by Stalinist Russia. Stefan Korbonski published  a  number
         of books on wartime Poland, such as “The Polish Underground           State” (ISBN o-88254-517-5).  Stefan Korbonski received the Righteous  Gentile Award from Yad Vashem in Israel.    The Soviet terror apparatus organized the departure for Palestine of   Jewish war-veterans
         
          and provided them with weapons manufactured in  Czechoslovakia. 
         In March 1947, the  Soviet Union, represented by Andrei  Gromyko,         
         was the first member state of the United  Nations to demand the   partition
         of Palestine and creation there of the state of          Israel as a   new
         member of the UN. The UN authorized the  Partition of Palestine in   November
         1947 and on May 14, 1948 the          state of Israel was founded.   
          The Israeli armed forces were officially          established on May 28, 1948.  They were 
 composed of the Haganah  (the defense) and the Irgun Zwei Leumi  (National Military           Organization.) The armed forces of the new Israeli  state  included 60,000 soldiers and officers,  many of them veterans of           the Second World War. They occupied more land than they
         could   settle  with Jews present in Palestine where population of        
          million Arabs.  The  Israeli conquests  provoked an Arab rally  in defense
         of their homeland,  which was confiscated by the          Jewish  invaders
         from Europe, mostly Turkmen  Khazar converts to  Judaism. who did not have Semitic DNA>     Naeim Giladi, author of the book: “Ben-Gurion’s Scandals: How The   Haganah          and Mossad
  Eliminated Jews,” was 12 years old when on June 1,   1941 during the riots provoked by
         the  British colonial          forces, when  several hundred Iraqi Jews were
         killed. In 1921, a  British  puppet, Amir  Faisal, became king of Iraq.  He
         appointed          many Jews to important  government  positions, including
         that of  economics minister. At that time  “Zionism has sown          dissension  between Jews and Arabs” as a result of the  British  support for the “Balfour Declaration.”     In exchange for helping to bring the United States into the First World  War, the British
           proclaimed Palestine as a “Jewish Homeland.” This was  done in a letter
         of November 2,  1917 written by the foreign          secretary,  Arthur Balfour,
         to the chief Zionist in Gr. Britain,  Walter Rothschild  (see John Cornelius:
         “The Hidden          History of the Balfour Declaration.”)    The new bitterness, which          did not previously exist, developed between  Jews and Arabs.
   British support for the Zionists and the British  “tutelage”          of Iraq was deeply resented by
          the Iraqi Arabs, among whom   grew an anti-Zionist backlash. The British occupied
         Basra in  Iraq          on  April 12, 1941. They alleged that the local Jews
         pledged  allegiance to  them and  provoked riots that served as a pretext 
                 for intervention and  looting by the British army,  which  occupied
         Bagdad on May 30, 1941.  False rumor was spread that Jews          from Palestine 
         were fighting alongside  the British against the  Iraqi’s near the town of Felujah. By June 2,   looting          spread to the Jewish quarter in Bagdad damaging 1300 stores and   1000 homes.       The British Indian Gurkha
         units killed some 500 Jews in the           streets of Bagdad as a part  of
         the British pacification and  occupation  of Iraq. Then the Zionists underground was  set up          in Iraq.    The Zionist conquests in Palestine
         and massacres of Arabs,          such as in  the village of Deir 
 Yassin, strengthened
         the  anti-British movement in  Iraq.  In January 1948 riots broke out          in  Iraq
         against the British  domination. When Israel declared  its independence the Iraqis closed  the  oil pipeline connected          to the refinery in Haifa. As a Zionist, Naeim  Giladi was  imprisoned  in Abu-Gharib prison later used for torturing the  Iraki          prisoners by the CIA fifty
         years later as  described in “One   Woman's Army by: The Commanding General
         of the Abu-Gharib          Prison  ... -  Powell's Books Oct 12, 2005 –
         The “One Woman's  Army” by Janis Karpinski:  In an  outspoken 
                 memoir by Brigade General Janis Karpinski, who received  a  Bronze Star for  service in the Gulf War. The author Naeim Giladi           escaped from Abu-Gharib in September 1949.     Six month later on March          19, 1950, a bomb exploded in the American  Cultural
         Center 
 and  Library frequented by Jews in Bagdad. On April 8,  1950 a bomb
                  was thrown at the  Jews into El-Dar El-Bida Café, where Jews
           were celebrating the Passover and four of them  were injured.          Leaflets
          were distributed calling on Jews to leave Iraq  immediately. Very many   Jews
         who had no property jammed emigration          offices to renounce  their 
         citizenship and to apply for  permission to leave for Israel.    Jewish
         owned The Jewish owned Beit-Lawi Automobile Company building was   damaged
 
         by a grenade on May 10, 1950          without any causalities. On June 3,  1950 grenade exploded   harmlessly in the Jewish area El-Batawin and  Zionists sent telegrams          to Israel asking for  an increase of immigration  quotas for  Iraqi Jews. On June 5, another Jewish building was  damaged  without          killing anyone by a bomb explosion on El_Rasjid street. On   January
         14,  1951 a high-voltage cable damaged by a grenade killed          three 
         Jews outside  Masouda Shem-Tov Synagogue. By ten the  exodus reached  600-700
         Jews per day.    Contrary to the Zionist propaganda, Giladi writes: ”The
         terrible truth  is that the grenades
  that killed          and maimed Iraqi
         Jews and damaged their  property were thrown by Zionist Jews.”  The leaflets
         published by the  Zionist          underground in Iraq on March 16,  1950 and
         on April 8, 1950,  called on Jews to leave Iraq immediately.    Wilbur
         Crane Eveland, CIA agent stated in 1988 that: “In an attempt to   portray the Iraqis
  as anti-American          and to terrorize the Jews, the  Zionists planted bombs in the  U.S. Information  Service library and in  the synagogues. Soon          Leaflets began to appear urging Jews to
         flee  to  Israel.. The  Iraqi police later provided our embassy with evidence
         to  show          that the  synagogue and library bombings, as well as the
          anti-Jewish  and anti-American leaflet  campaigns, had been the work     
             of an  underground Zionist organization, most of the world   believed reports
          that Arab terrorism had motivated the flight          of the Iraqi Jews whom the   Zionists had “rescued” really just  in order to increase Israel’s Jewish  population.”  
                (Wilbur  Crane Eveland, “Ropes of Sand: America’s Failure
         in   the Middle East,: N.Y. Norton,  1980, pp 48-49).    Giladi writes that Israeli prime minister David Ben-Gurion (1886-1973)   needed “Oriental”  
                
 (Arab) Jews to farm the thousands of acres of land  left by the  Palestinians,
         who were  driven out by Israeli forces in 1948.           Israel Shamir describes
         the hatred of farm work and  farm  workers by the  European Jews (“Jewish
         History, Jewish Religion”).          Out of over one   million hectares
         owned by Jews in carist  Russia less than 10% was worked  by Jews themselves.    Giladi describes how Israel was using bacteriological methods and   deliberately infected
           many Palestinians with typhus and dysentery. He  quotes Israeli  daily, Hadashot of  August 13, 1993 in which Sara  Laybobis-Dar          reported interviews with Isarelis who had  knowledge of the  use  of bacteriological weapons in the 1948 war. Mileshtin said          that   bacteria was used to poison the wells of every village  emptied of its  Arab inhabitants and  Moshe Dayan, a division          commander at the time “gave  orders in 1948 to remove
         Arabs   from villages, bulldoze their homes, and  render water wells      
            unusable with typhus and  dysentery bacteria.”     The Arab town          of Acre was well defended and was situated on a creek  named  Capri. 
 The Haganah put typhus bacteria upstream into water flowing           to Acre, the defenders
         got  sick and Jewish forces were able to  occupy  that locality. Haganah sent
         Jews dressed as  Arabs          into Gaza, then  occupied by Egyptian soldiers,
         who caught them  putting  two cans of  bacteria, typhus and dysentery into
         the          drinking water supply.    Giladi started his political activity
         because          of contemptuous treatment  by eastern European,
  mostly Polish
          Jews of Jews from Islamic countries  who were treated like “Negroes.”          Among  Jews, who came from Poland there  were many descendents  of  mixed marriages  and their features differed  from Semitic          Jews in the Arab countries.   Giladi organized demonstrations in Ashkelon,          against Ben-Gurion’s racist  policies and 
 10,000 people participated. They protested being treated  as “second          class”
         citizens in Israel.  The cease-fire with Egypt in 1970  brought enough tranquility
         to enable the “second          class”  Israelis to  demand equal
         treatment.  They were called “Israel’s Black Panters” and  proudly  displayed posters of personalities such as Martin Luther King,  Malcom X, and Nelson Mandela.      Similar attitudes were common in Germany before WWI when the German  Jews  discriminated
  against the “Ost          Juden” who tried to migrate to Germany  from the East.
          According to  professor Israel Shahak at the end of the  “golden   
               decade” of Jewish colonization and  exploitation of Poland’s
           Ukrainian provinces in 1648 Khmelnytzky rebellion          broke out and 
         possibly  as many as 50,000 Jews were slaughtered Khmelnytzky’s Cossaks. At that  time  the Jewish leadership          became convinced, that Jews will be evicted  from Poland sooner  or  later, as they were evicted earlier from England,  France,          German states, and most
         recently  from Spain.   
          The flight of Jewish          money out of Poland to Berlin helped to finance in  1701 the  creation
  of the Kingdom of Prussia, the initiator of the  partitions          of Poland in 1762. When the international  crime of the   partitions of Poland was taking place, the Germans evicted from western            Poland masses of poor Jews called “Bettel Juden.” Germans  allowed only
          well-to-do Jews to  remain in the Kingdom          of Prussia.    The expressions “The Bettel Juden” as well          as “The Ost Juden”
         were used  as contemptuous
  terms by German Jews, and they were similar in
         intent to  the term“Jews from Islamic countries”  as it is used
         today in Israel.      When the Isareli authorities condoned          the massacres of Palestinians in  Lebanon at
         Sabra  and  Shatilla, Naeim Giladi moved to the United States,  revoked his
         Israeli          citizenship and  became an American citizen. In order  to
          publish his book translated into English, Giladi  spent $60,000 out      
             of pocket, or rather out of proceeds from the sale of his  house in  Israel. 
         He mentions that on Sept 12, 1990, the New York          State Supreme  Court issued a restraining  order, at the request  of the Israeli  government, to prevent the publication of          Victor Ostrovsky’s  book, “By  Way of Deception: The Making and  Unmaking of a Mossad Officer.”  (The New           York State Appeals Court lifted the ban the next day.)    Giladi now considers          the Zionst program to be criminal from the  beginning,
         because 
  Zionist leaders knew, that in order to establish a  Jewish      
            state, they had to expel the  indigenous Palestinians and import   hundreds
         of thousands Jews (first 232,00 from  Soviet satellite          states  and
         then 547,000 from the Arab states). Vladimir  Jabotinsky  (Włodzimierz
          Żabotyński) frankly admitted          that such a transfer of population could   only be brought by  force and terror.    To drive Jews out of
         their homes in countries such as Poland, Slovakia,   and Hungary
  pogroms were
         staged by the NKVD in          Kielce in the Soviet  occupied eastern Europe.  The
         best known  of these is the pogrom of Kielce  on the 4th of July, 1946.          There also occurred  two pogroms in Bratislava  and four pogroms  in Budapest in 1945-1947, etc. But the Pogrom  in  Poland received          most publicity, because it could “kill two birds with  one  stone,” so
         to speak:  persuade the Polish Jews to leave          for Israel,  and convince
         the western powers that only  a strong  Soviet hand could  keep “anti-Semitic”
         Poland          from “doing harm to Jews.”     Subsequently
         the Zionists organized,          with Soviet permission, the exit of  some 711,000
 
         Jews from  countries behind the “Iron Curtin.” The Zionists           also organized the terror in the  Arab states and caused the  flight of  Jews from Bagdad, Damscus, and other Arab cities  in          1950-1951, and  later.    
         In the early 1950s an Iraqi investigator published          in Arabic a book of  the1950-51 bombings
  in Bagdad. The book  was titled “Venom of the Zionist  Viper,” in which          the anti-hero is  Israeli emissary Mordechai Ben-Porat.  Mossad,  working through the US Embassy  in Bagdad, bought up all the           books about the “Zionist Viper” and destroyed
         them.    Giladi          writes about Zionist collaboration with the Nazis
         and states  that  Britain was able to 
 force the Arab governments to operate
                  under  pro-British leaders. And if, as in Iraq, these  leaders  were
         overthrown,  then the British would foment an anti-Jewish          riot or two in order  to use  the riots as useful pretexts to  invade the Arab capital and reinstate  the “right”        
          leaders.  In 1949, Israel sent the spy Mordechai Ben-Porat to   Iraq, to offer
         the government of el-Said  in Bagdad, large financial           incentives
         to enact a law that would take away the citizenship  from  the  Iraqi Jews
         so that they would be forced to migrate          to Israel. Uri  Avnery, writing in the  magazine Haolam Hazel,  accused Ben-Porat of the  Bagdad bombings.  Ben-
         Porat is still          called Morad Abu al-Knabel or  “Mordechai of the Bombs.”            Giladi asked Ben-Gurion: why, since Israel is a democracy with a   parliament, does it not 
 have a constitution? Ben-Gurion          answered: “Look  boy if we have a constitution,
         we have  to  write in it the border of our  country. And this is not our  
                border, my dear.” Asked: “Then  where is the  border?,”
          Ben-Gurion answered: “Wherever the Sahal (Isareli          army) will  
         come, this is the border.”    Thus, according to Naeim         
         Giladi “Jews killed Jews to create the state of  Israel. ” He  is the
 
         author of the book mentioned before: “Ben-Gurion’s           Scandals: How The Haganah and  Mossad Eliminated Jews.”  Ghiladi’s book  provides ample proof for that statement.          Thus,  in the process of  creating, enlarging and consolidating  the state of Israel more than  million  two hundred thousand          Jews were cruelly and brutally driven by  terror from their 
         homes in  Europe and in the Middle East. This was  planned and          done
         in order to create  a Jewish state in Palestine at the   expense of the Palestinian
         Arabs.  |  
     
      
    
   
                 
   
   
                 
   
   
                 
   
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