Source: https://www.renegadetribune.com/november-7th-1917-part-one-the-holodomors-horrors/
On this day, November 7th, 107 years ago, the October Revolution erupted. It was spearheaded by the Bolshevik Vladimir Ilych Ulyanov, known as Lenin (he was of JEWISH ancestry). The consequences of this Revolution were catastrophic for the entire world. A new totalitarian regime was established in Russia, which was renamed the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). This marked the beginning of a dark era. Millions of ethnic Russians were killed, and the government became infiltrated by individuals with Jewish backgrounds, with 28 out of 30 Party representatives being Jewish. COMMUNISM KILLS!!! Today, few dare to acknowledge its horrors, and the 100 million victims of the Gulag are largely forgotten. The narrative often focuses solely on “the 6 million Jews who perished in the Holocaust”, placing the blame on the Germans.
I will reveal the truth about the murderous machinery of the Communist regime.
The Holodomor was a man-made famine in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic during 1932 and 1933, inflicted by Stalin’s regime on Soviet Ukraine and primarily Ukrainian regions in the Northern Caucasus, resulting in the deaths of 6 million people. The current Putinist regime denies this event, which I refer to as the Red Revolutionary Holocaust. During Soviet times, anyone who attempted to highlight this tragedy faced suppression through propaganda. For many years, the great famine was only known through limited pamphlets published by Ukrainian organizations and remained largely unrecognized until the late 1980s. Literature about the Ukrainian famine was censored, and authors faced arrest.
During the Holodomor, people lived in fear of what was known as the Ear law. Those condemned under this law faced severe penalties for merely taking a few ears of corn or rye from the fields, with some receiving the death penalty for such acts. They were trapped, unable to leave, and no one was allowed in. The GPU implemented a strict ban on the movement of peasants from Ukraine and the Northern Caucasus, viewing it as a direct threat to collectivization efforts and the authority of the Soviet government. Railway services were halted, and barricades were erected to prevent escape. In a desperate attempt to protect their children, many parents sent them to nearby cities, hoping someone will care for them while they return to their villages, often to face death. However, the streets were monitored by Dvorniki, who rounded up these children and any peasants attempting to flee starvation, delivering them to the police station. There, a medical team conducted a selection process; those who have not yet shown signs of severe malnutrition are sent to the Holodnaya Gora buildings, where countless individuals lied dying on straw beds. Those already exhibiting signs of swelling were taken approximately 40 miles away and left to perish out of sight.
The population was not only battling hunger but also the threat of typhus, an infectious disease caused by rickettsiae, marked by a purple rash, severe headaches, fever, and often delirium. Historically, typhus has claimed many lives during times of war and famine.
Disturbingly, some bodies were discovered with their livers excised through a slit in the abdomen. Authorities apprehended individuals involved in these gruesome acts, who confessed to using human liver as a filling for meat pies sold in local markets.
Farmers were subjected to brutal torture to extract their remaining supplies. In a desperate bid to protect their grain from state confiscation, some farmers attempted to bury it. However, the authorities employed various methods to uncover these hidden reserves. One method involved stripping the worker naked and leaving them exposed to the freezing cold in a hangar.
Another horrific technique involved dousing the feet and skirts of female workers with gasoline and igniting them, only to extinguish the flames and repeat the process, inflicting unimaginable pain.
Death permeated every aspect of life, leading many to resort to cannibalism. Countless fatalities went unrecorded, extortion became a norm, children were left to fend for themselves, and banditry surged. The peasantry faced a new, insidious form of slavery. In a desperate plea, Sholokhov reached out to Joseph Stalin, urging him to send “real communists” who would not exploit their authority and to halt the torment inflicted on farmers in the name of grain collection.
Stalin’s response included a stark warning: “Workers in your district, and in many others, have gone on strike, engaged in sabotage, and were ready to deprive Red Army soldiers of bread! This sabotage, though seemingly peaceful and bloodless, is a blatant attempt to undermine the Soviet state. It is a fight to the death, Comrade Sholokhov! While this does not excuse the abuses committed by our personnel, those responsible will be held accountable. However, it is evident that our esteemed workers are far from the innocent victims you portray in your letters.”
This situation starkly illustrates the harsh reality under Communist rule, where individuals are rendered insignificant and subjected to relentless labour, only to have everything stripped away. Starvation is a weapon wielded by the communists, as evidenced not only by the catastrophic famine in Ukraine but also by other historical instances of oppression. These are not mere echoes of the past; they are warnings of what could recur if society fails to recognize the underlying issues.
The Holodomor genocide famine in Ukraine from 1932 to 1933 resulted in the deaths of millions due to starvation. This mass food confiscation initiative, orchestrated by the Judeo-Communist regime, was designed to crush Ukrainian resistance to its tyranny.
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