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Neverwinter
6thAugust2005, 16:40
Vinnytsia -- The Katyn Of Ukraine

A Report by an Eyewitness

by M. SeleshkoToward the end of February, 1944, when I was marking time in a German prison in Potsdam, I was transferred to cell number 20, already occupied by several other prisoners. After a brief acquaintance I learned that one of these was a Ukrainian from the vicinity of Vinnytsia. We came to know each other closely and he told me his life history. At that time he was twenty-three years of age, born and bred in Soviet Ukraine. He had been educated by the Communist party and had been a Communist in the full meaning of the word. Communist ideals were his ideals. He fought on the German/Soviet front. After his capture by the Germans, he was forced into anti-aircraft artillery work for the Germans in Berlin. Because of negligence in line of duty he was thrown into jail. There our paths met.

I kept asking him questions about life under the Soviets. He formerly belonged to a civilian border patrol unit. Being a Comsomol, he took his duties seriously and helped track down many foreign intelligence agents who were trying to slip across the border into the Soviet Union. There were others, young Soviet patriots like himself, in the villages and districts.

He told me of the steps taken by the Soviets in Ukraine as a preparation for war. In the Communist party at least as early as 1937 it was felt that war against Germany was imminent. Confidential instructions to members of the party and the Comsomol stressed this eventuality. These instructions ordered that the Soviet hinterland in Ukraine be purged of enemies of the people. By the words "enemies of the people" were meant not only all those people who worked actively against the Soviet regime, but also those who were believed to be inclined to hostility toward the government including those whose complete devotion to the regime had not been clearly manifested.

A purge of enemies of the population of the Soviet border regions was commenced. Herein lies the story of the Ukrainian tragedy in Vinnytsia, which was revealed to the world in 1943. (Vinnytsia is a Ukrainian city, which was, prior to 1939, approximately 100 miles from the eastern border of Poland.)

My young companion is now a Ukrainian patriot, and much about him must not be made public. Everything he said supplemented my own knowledge of the Vinnytsia tragedy and helped to complete the picture I had formed of it during my experiences in Vinnytsia.

In the summer of 1943 I was living in Berlin under the close supervision of the Gestapo as a suspected foreigner, an unreliable alien and a Polish citizen. On July 2, 1943, during the noon hour, I was called to the telephone by what the Germans called the Ukrainian Confidence Service. This was a German government agency which registered all Ukrainians in Germany and tried to win their support for German purposes among the Ukrainians.

The chief of this agency informed me that in the near future a special committee for the investigation of mass murders in Ukraine would depart to do its work on the spot. He also told me that I had been appointed interpreter for this committee because of my knowledge of German, Ukrainian, Russian, and Polish, and in addition because I knew how to type in both German and Ukrainian. He suggested that I accept this position voluntarily and at the same time emphasized that, should I refuse, I would be drafted for it on the basis of a certain mobilization regulation.

I had no choice. I asked for several hours to consider the proposal. I immediately got in touch with my friends, among them Dr. Oleh Kandyba-Olzhych, the Ukrainian poet, who was living illegally at that time in Berlin. We agreed that it would be best for me to go with the commission, even though its destination was not known. And I had not asked, for in Germany during the war it did not pay to be overly inquisitive.

After two hours I called the confidence service and announced my willingness to accompany the commission as a translator-interpreter, I was instructed to await further instructions via telephone. About 5 p.m. of the same day the headquarters of the criminal police telephoned. I was ordered to appear at their address and to report to an official named Denerlein. I went.

Denerlein, a friendly man of rather advanced age, immediately introduced me to several officials in his department, and said that we would depart for Ukraine immediately. After brief interviews I was given appropriate military travelling documents and allowed to return home.

The criminal police department was swarming with uniformed police, some of them wearing an arm-band marked SD, which meant that these officials were from the special political section Sicherheits-dienst. By piecing together various bits of conversation I deduced that our group was going to the front lines. Among the members of the commission were Raeder, Krupke, and Groner, all three commissars of the criminal police. State-councilor Klass, the chairman of the commission, was already at the place where the commission was supposed to function.

We set out July 4, 1943, by way of Warsaw, Lublin, Kovel and Shepetivka. Before our departure I was given a pistol as a preparation for any eventuality. We were unmolested in Warsaw, although at that time the battle in the Jewish ghetto was going on but beyond that city our route was through a region controlled by Ukrainian insurgents (UPA).

Immediately outside of Warsaw we passed long trains that had been blown up. In the town of Kovel in the Ukrainian province of Volyn we had to transfer to another train. Precautionary measures for defense against partisans were taken and, ridiculously enough, I was ordered to hold my pistol in my hand in ready position for firing against the machine-guns and mines of the guerillas. We were not attacked, however, for the insurgents shot up with machine guns the dummy tank train that had been purposely sent ahead of us and we experienced nothing beyond fear. At the railway station in Shepetivka, however, we met action on a somewhat broader scale. After our train, loaded with German soldiers, pulled in at the railway station, the Ukrainians destroyed all of the four rail lines leading into Shepetivka and we could not continue the journey. We managed to reach Vinnytsia without any losses, around 11 o'clock at night. We were driven in police automobiles to No. 5 Mazepa street. Under the Bolsheviks this had been named Dzherzhinsky street and the building had housed the regional headquarters of the NKVD.

Excavations in Vinnytsia

In Vinnytsia I was informed about the purpose of the commission by one of its members, a photographer, who arrived in the city at some earlier date. With the aid of the civilian population mass graves had been discovered, in which thousands of corpses had been buried. These graves were to be opened and the commission was to establish whom the NKVD had murdered. The commission lived and worked in the former headquarters of the NKVD, the place from which the mass-murder was directed. It included among its members German specialists in criminal investigation.

The exhumations in Vinnytsia began on May 25, 1943, and were carried on in three places. The population was of the opinion that there were around 20,000 victims in the war years. In addition to our commission two other bodies -- a legal and medical commission -- took part in the investigations.

Our committee unpacked its equipment, set up its office and on July 7, after lunch set out in automobiles for the scene of the exhumations -- a garden along the Lityn highway, which leads from Vinnytsia to Lviv by way of Lityn.

From the conversation of the police, who were housed in the same barrack that we were, I had gained a more or less adequate picture of what had taken place. The first sight of the corpses horrified me, as did the stench that came from them. It was a hot summer day and it was necessary to steel one's nerves in order to live through the horrible experience. I had been a soldier in the Ukrainian army during the First World War and had seen many men killed in battle, but what I had then seen can in no way be compared with what I witnessed in that park.

A huge mass of people were milling among the trees in the garden. Everything was permeated with the heat of summer and the horrible stench of corpses. Here and there workers were digging up the earth. From it with the use of ropes they pulled out human corpses, some of them whole, others in pieces. They laid them carefully out on the grass. At first it seemed to me that there were thousands of them, but later I counted them and there were but 700 lying on the grass. Everybody present had a serious expression. The local inhabitants examined the exhumed corpses, and scrutinized the remnants of clothing. From the graves workers threw out bits of cloth and placed them in separate piles. The wet clothes were spread on the grass to dry. The dry clothes were searched for papers and other belongings. Everything was taken out, and registered; the documents found were read, when possible, and recorded; those not legible were preserved. Now and then for one group or another burst out the agonizing, hysterical cry of a woman, or the groan of a man, which resembled the terror of death. A woman recognized the clothes of her loved ones, or a man those of a member of his family. All of them, it was later ascertained, had been sure that their relative were somewhere in exile in Siberia, perhaps, or in the Far East, in the North, somewhere. Now they leaned how the Soviet government had fooled them, for their loved ones lay in Ukrainian soil, in Vinnytsia, murdered by the NKVD. The government had met all questions with the reply that all in exile were deprived of the right of communicating with their families.

After the first shock had lessened, and I had become accustomed to the sweet, unpleasant stench, I took a greater interest in the investigations. The digging was done by common criminals from the local prison under the guard of German police. Alcohol was frequently given to the workers so that they might be able to stand the stench. Men and women, clothed and unclothed, were dug up. Men with their hands tied behind their backs. Here and there heads that had been beaten in; sometimes the nape showed signs of bullet-wounds. Black corpses, mummified corpses, corpses yellow-black with cadaverous wax. They had been in the earth a long time, for the most part deformed by the pressure of the soil above. Member of the commission, old criminologists who had seen many a crime, affirmed that never before had they seen anything so ghastly. In an area close to the graves doctors made immediate autopsies and tried to ascertain the cause of death. The horror of Vinnytsia I shall never forget and it is doubtful whether ever a Dante would be able to portray the agony that had taken place.

Our next point was the Gorky Park of Culture and Rest, named in honor of the Russian poet. Here the scene was no better than the previous one. A lesser number of corpses was unearthed, for the most of the digging was done in the garden along the highway. The bodies of mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers had been buried under the earth and over it a board had been placed for the young people to dance and amuse themselves, unaware that their relatives' corpses were lying underneath! The names of those Communists responsible for such diabolical measures are known and it is hoped that their evil memory will not pass into history forgotten.

the picture was the same in the graveyard opposite the park. Beside the regular graves as well as under the stones of the original graves were found mass-victims of the NKVD.

The Commission at work

The committee worked industriously. Witnesses of the horrible tragedy were questioned, the place of the criminal executions determined, and the time as well. Documents found either alone or on the corpses were analyzed, nothing was overlooked; German thoroughness, often approaching absurdity, as it seemed to me, was employed. I was not acquainted with the techniques of criminologists, the clues they put together in order to arrive at the facts, and often what to me appeared beyond dispute they accepted with reservations and searched for unimpeachable evidence. The hours of work were from 10 to 16 each day. I was used as an interpreter between the local inhabitants and the German specialists. Thousands of people volunteered to act as witnesses for the commission. They volunteered in spite of the fact that Bolshevik agents made many threats of revenge, and insisted that the Germans had killed these people and were now seeking to place the blame on the NKVD. This twist interested me and I paid special attention in order to ascertain its veracity. Insofar as I am concerned there is no doubt that the unearthed corpses in Vinnytsia were the first victims of the Bolsheviks, murdered in what was in fact a preparation for war.

I cannot describe the entire work of the commission, all that it ascertained and concluded. I imagine that its findings have been recorded in detail and are available somewhere. As a Ukrainian in civilian attire it was easy for me to get around, for I felt that I was at home, on native Ukrainian soil. The Germans, of course, did not enjoy such a confidence in Vinnytsia, for they had come as conquerors. A complete history of the entire tragedy will one day be written by historians. I was forbidden from doing anything on my own and was able to maintain official contact with my friends only through the German military post office, which was scrutinized by the Gestapo. I made no personal notes. Instead, another opportunity presented itself: through the kindness of one of the members of the commission I was able to send personal letters to Ukrainian friends in Berlin. He gave the letters to a pilot assigned to regular duty between Berlin and Vinnytsia. I recorded as much as I could in the from of private letters, and the material arrived in the hands of my friends without accident. On the basis of these letters I am able to reveal the impression I had of the tragedy in Vinnytsia.

Some special incidents of the tragedy in Vinnytsia

A few incidents will illustrate the tragedy.

The wife of a priest named Biletsky from the vicinity of Vinnytsia recognized the garments of her husband lying on a mound. She cleaned the garment and a patch was revealed. As proof that she spoke the truth she departed for her village, and returned to the commission a few days later with other bits of the material used for patching. The committee examined the material and agreed that the patch on the priest's coat came from the same material. This was proof that her husband had been shot and buried in Vinnytsia, but the NKVD had informed her that her husband was in exile without the right of communicating with his family.

Hanna Hodovanets, a Ukrainian peasant woman, recognized her husband's coat as they unearthed it from a mass-grave. She told the police about her husband's arrest. He had been arrested because he had not reported at work on a certain holiday. She had done everything possible to find out what had happened to him, and one day in 1938 she received a card from Moscow, from the procurator's office and signed by none other than Audrey Vyshinsky, with the news that her husband had been freed from prison in March, 1938. However, her husband had never returned home and she felt that something was wrong. Her feelings became a sad reality when she recognized her husband's coat.

Another Ukrainian woman, Olkhivska by name, sat for hours on the hills of dirt as the corpses were lifted from the graves. At one grave she gave vent to cries of anguish. She had just recognized her husband, who had been arrested by the NKVD, by a broken small finger as well as by his clothes. And she too told a story that ended in a mass-grave.

There were similar examples by the hundreds, while thousands of others found no clues whereby they might identify their loved ones. I talked with them, recorded their tragedies, shared their suffering. The commission studied the methods of Soviet interrogation and trial, torture and execution, prison and exile. It interviewed thousands of witnesses, went through a mass of varied documents, and examined the belongings of witnesses.

The following incident suggests that justice may yet triumph in this world. A note was found in the coat of the exhumed corpse of a heroic Christian. It was wet, as was the corpse, but was carefully dried. The I set to work to decipher it. With the aid of several local Ukrainians we put together the story. The paper was of ordinary stock, white in color, used on local school tablets. In crude handwriting was penciled: "I ... beg the person that finds this note to pass on to my wife, Zina ... from the village ... region of ... that I was denounced to the NKVD by the following ..." And here were the names and addresses of seven persons. The note continued: "They bore witness against me before the NKVD and spoke falsehoods. I have been sentenced to death and in a short time will be shot. God knows that I am innocent. Let God forgive their transgression; I have forgiven them."

We refused to believe what we had read. To expect such magnanimity from a simple peasant in the moment of death was too much to believe. But the fact stirred everybody. We informed those in charge of the investigation, and later it was found that it was all true. Two of the persons named in the note had died in the meantime, two were officers in the Red Army, and three were available in the neighborhood, peacefully going about their business, since no one knew that they were secret assistants of the NKVD. During my presences in Vinnytsia they were not arrested. The Germans, however, recorded all the secret helpers of the NKVD. Some of them managed to obtain administrative posts during the occupation, and often announced themselves as of German origin. The Germans were aware of this manoeuver and were preparing a surprise move called "lightning-action," blitzaktion. I was later informed that this "lightning action" had been executed before the Germans abandoned Vinnytsia.

Hulevych, Skrepek, and many other Ukrainians testified how the NKVD transported the corpses to the burial points. They stated that the bodies were transported from NKVD headquarters at No. 5 Dzherzhinsky street, that at night they saw and heard the tucks in action and that in the morning on they way to work they saw the blood that had dripped from the trucks and that they saw NKVD underlings covering up the signs of their work at the site of the mass graves. There were also witnesses who testified that from trees they observed what was happening behind the high walls of the NKVD compound and that graves were dug and corpses buried. It was a fact well circulated in the city that two Ukrainians, who had dared to peer through the board fence despite the prohibition, had disappeared never to be seen again. It was also common talk that a boy, who had tried to climb the fence in order to steal some apples, disappeared without a trace after the NKVD guards caught him in the act.

How the NKVD operates

I talked with those people in Vinnytsia who first divulged the information about the mass murders, on the basis of which excavation was begun by the Germans. The commission found a woman who had worked in the NKVD headquarters for fifteen years. She was superannuated, and not in command of all her mental faculties, but the memory of what had transpired long before she retained as though it had happened yesterday. When the Bolsheviks retired before the German advance, she remained in Vinnytsia by frustrating efforts made by the government to evacuate her. Her revelations, although chronologically vague, were valuable in that they described Soviet methods of investigation and punishment. Former prisoners of the NKVD gave corroborative testimony.

One such former prisoner, named Dashchin, who had been in exile in the Kolyma region, told of an incident in a gold-mining camp. The camp contained 7,000 prisoners from all parts of the Soviet Union, and upon completion of the work there it was evident that the means of transportation to another locality were not available. The prisoners were too weak from malnutrition to go elsewhere on foot, for the nearest work-camp was thousands of kilometers distant. The problem was solved very simply. The prisoners were driven to a cliff that had been mined, and were blown into oblivion. Dashchin was one of the few that miraculously survived the explosion. Somehow he managed to trek across Siberia and return to Ukraine.

The NKVD usually made arrests at night, searching the houses and later writing a protocol on the case. The Commission found very many of these protocols both with the corpses and in a separate grave where only documents were buried. All arrested were accused of being "enemies of the people." Some had refused to renounce their religion, others had opposed the collectivization of their private property, still others had spoken dangerous words against Communism. Some had been victims of denunciations or revenge others had failed to appear at work during a religious holiday, while many had changed their place of work without the permission of the NKVD. Many witnesses questioned by the committee were unable to explain why their relatives had been arrested. Their inquiries addressed to the NKVD or the judge simply evoked the stereotyped reply, "enemies of the people exiled for a long period of time without the right of communication with their relatives." Women appealed to Stalin and other leaders of the Soviet state, but the reaction was the same. I saw and read many cards carrying that message. Among the items found in the graves were remnants of priestly garments, religious books, and correspondence of the murdered with the authorities of the state and the police. Items discovered were put on display -- photographs, letters, postage stamps, and crosses -- and many residents identified their dead relatives by them.

A religious group in the region of Ulaniv deserves special mention. Called the sect of St. Michael, nineteen of its members were arrested by the NKVD and some of them were identified in the graves. They were recognized because it was their custom to wear a white cross sewn to their clothes. Garments with this cross were found in the graves, sometimes alone and at times still about the corpse. Many members of this sect visited the excavations and recognized their co-religionists.

Statistics of the tragedy

From May 1943 to October 1943, 9,432 corpses were found in three places of excavation. There were 91 graves with corpses, and three with only clothes or documents. Forty-nine graves had from one to 100 corpses, 33 from 100 to 200 corpses, and nine from 200 to 284 corpses. One hundred and sixty-nine corpses were of women, 120 of advanced age, according to the findings of the medical commission. Forty-nine women were of young or middle age. The corpses of females of advanced age were clothed, whereas those of the younger years were naked. This seemed to bear out the rumors common among the local population that the young women arrested by the NKVD were subjected to sexual brutalities prior to their execution. One pregnant woman was found who had actually given birth to a child in the grave. Most of the corpses were of people from 30 to 40 years of age. Most had died from bullets from a special gun. Some of the victims had been hit by two bullets, others had but one bullet hole, while still other had received as many as four. Evidences of skull fracture by means of an instrument, apparently the butt of a rifle, was fund in 391 cases. The stronger men had their arms and legs bound. Cases of shooting in the forehead as well as the back of their head were recorded.

Of the total of 9,432 corpses 679 were identified, 468 by their garments, 202 by documents, and 2 by body marks. From the point of view of occupation the identified included 279 peasants, 119 workers, 92 officials, and 189 members of the intelligentsia. nationally the identified were broken down into 490 Ukrainians, 28 Poles, and 161 uncertain, although the names of the last group suggested almost all the nationalities of the USSR and some from Europe as well.

These basic statistics speak for themselves. Only one place, the garden, was thoroughly examined, for the park and the cemetery were only partially investigated. It is not excluded that many more bodies had been buried in these places. Other localities, which according to the reports of the local population, were also scenes of mass murder by the NKVD were not inspected. It was ascertained that other Ukrainian cities that had been regional and district headquarters of the NKVD had also experienced mass executions. Efforts were made to verify the rumors circulating among the population regarding mass graves. Kiev, Odessa, Zhytomir, Berdychiv, Haisyn, Dnipropertrovsk, Krasnodar in the Kuban region, and other places were supposed to be investigated, but chaotic conditions in Ukraine frustrated such endeavors, It is know, however, very definitely that in Krasnodar, where the Kuban cossacks fought stubbornly against the Bolsheviks in an effort to win independence, the NKVD employed a special machine which ground up the bodies of those shot and oftentimes still living persons as it they were meat and automatically dumped this mass of flesh into the Kuban river. This brutality was affirmed by eyewitnesses who reported various phases of the slaughter.

My companion in the German prison in Postsdam told me that in 1937 instructions were given both to the Communist party and the Comsomol to cleanse the border districts of Ukraine of "enemies of the people." This purge was carried out. The revelations of this former Comsomol both agreed with and supplemented the findings obtained by the committee of investigation.

Bibliography

Black Deeds of the Kremlin, vol. 1, Toronto, 1953.
Crime of Moscow in Vynnytsia, Scottish League for European Freedom, Edinburgh, 1952, 32 pp., reprinted by IHR, 1980, $3.
Massenord in Winniza (Mass Murder in Vynnytsia), German Government, 1940?
The Gulag Archipelago, Vol. 3, Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
History of Ukraine, "America," Philadelphia, 1975.
http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v01/v01p335_Seleshko.html (http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v01/v01p335_Seleshko.html)

Neverwinter
26thApril2006, 04:42
Poles take Russia to court over 1940 Katyn massacre
By Andrew Osborn in Moscow
Published: 24 April 2006

Relatives of Polish soldiers executed by Joseph Stalin's secret police in one of the Second World War's most infamous massacres are to take Russia to the European Court of Human Rights to try to make it disclose the full truth about the killings.

In the so-called Katyn atrocities, personally ordered by Stalin in 1940, the NKVD (forerunner of the KGB) killed 21,587 Polish Army reservists in cold blood on the grounds that they were "hardened and uncompromising enemies of Soviet authority". Russia has refused to prosecute surviving suspects or reveal their names. It is keeping two-thirds of the files on the subject classified, and has classed the murders as an ordinary crime whose statute of limitations has expired.

Relatives of victims say that the killings amounted to genocide and that Russia has a moral obligation to open its archive on them.

The killings took place at three locations but the massacre took its name from just one, the Katyn Forest in modern-day Belarus. The murders killed many of Poland's intelligentsia; among the dead were officers, chaplains, writers, professors, journalists, engineers, lawyers, aristocrats and teachers. All were killed by a single shot to the back of the head.

Some 15,000 bodies have been found and the rest are thought to be still buried in secret mass graves.

The murders have soured Moscow's relations with Poland for six decades, with Warsaw accusing the Kremlin of deceit, a lack of remorse and brutal indifference. It was only in 1989 that the then Soviet President, Mikhail Gorbachev, admitted that the killings had been perpetrated by Stalin's secret police. Before that the USSR blamed the atrocities on the Nazis who occupied the area during the war, even going to the trouble of reburying bodies and bulldozing evidence in an elaborate attempt to deflect blame.

Seventy families related to the murdered soldiers are to lodge a case at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg in the next few weeks. Some want surviving suspects to be prosecuted, while others simply want the killings to be classed as genocide and for Russia to be forced to disclose everything it knows about the atrocity.

"We are not interested in revenge or even in punishing anyone," said one Katyn survivor, Mgr Zdzislaw Peszkowski, aged 85. "We only want the full truth to be universally known. This is not just a Polish issue. Revealing all the circumstances of this atrocity is needed to finally close the chapter known as the Second World War."

Lawyers for the families believe that Russia flouted the European Convention on Human Rights by never properly investigating the atrocities. Russia's "investigation" lasted for more than a decade on and off and was definitively closed in September 2004. Poland's Institute of National Remembrance has said that Russia's position on Katyn was a "humiliation of the memory of the Polish victims and an offence to the feelings of their living family members".

http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article359770.ece

IMPERIUM
26thApril2006, 12:25
The dreaded NKVD:
butchers of millions of Whites.
NKVD: the real Bolshevics.

The NKVD:
staffed by Them!
That tribe of marauding murderers.

The NKVD:
exclusively tribal:
Them! The World Enemy!

Imperium
0604

JeanG
28thApril2006, 11:44
The dreaded NKVD:
butchers of millions of Whites.
NKVD: the real Bolshevics.

The NKVD:
staffed by Them!


That the NKVD was staffed almost exclusively by Jews has been confirmed in detail by the Russian historian Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Let someone call this antisemitic... The man is a Nobel Prize winner.

Reference: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago

Laziale
18thJune2006, 13:04
http://img433.imageshack.us/img433/2769/katyn9sa.jpg
Ask the average American, what do they know about the Katyn forest massacre, which was perpetrated some 66 years ago this past spring against some of the most educated and culturally advanced people of Poland and also many of their families, with at least one female pilot who had been captured during the German attack on Poland on Sept 1, 1939, and they will likely give you a blank stare or shrug of indifference. Actually this crime at Katyn occured before the US even got into WWII, over 19 months before Pearl Harbor. But it was one horrific crime and massacre done to the officers and reserve officers and their families, especially if they or anyone in their family had had any connection with the war of 1919 between Poland and the fledgling USSR. In that war, the Bolsheviks had thought to sweep over a war-ravished Europe and establish communism all over Europe. The Bolsheviks were winning in Russia with the whites on the run and the allies pulling out of the cocuntry, and in its early years the Communist Jews thought that they could expedite the spread of communism much like the Moors and Arabs had spread Islam centuries earlier, but by the point of a bayonet and gun. Of course the Jews would stay in the rear with machine guns at the ready and force march the peasants out in front, who were thought to be capable of driving through Europe like a hot knife through butter. It really looked like Europe was going communist in the period of 1919- 1920, but a strange thing happened to them on their way to victory just outside of Warsaw. Lenin and Trotsky had just signed the peace treaty of Brest-Litovsk in early 1918 which ended the war between Russia and the Central Powers and now in late 1919, WWI had also ended with the defeat of Germany, Austria, and Turkey, and the Jews were anxious to begin their world revolutions in the midst of all this dispair and destruction.

Trotsky at Brest-Litovsk peace conference
http://www.gmu.edu/departments/economics/bcaplan/museum/trot&del.jpg

There was already Bela Kun acting as a dictator in Hungry, Rosa Luxemburg preaching violence in Berlin, and Kurt Eisner in Bavara ... all Jews who had staged insurrections and uprisings and now the Jews in Russia were supposed to come to their aid by a land invasion through Poland and then to push on into Germany itself.

But the newly established nation of Poland, which was created out of portions of Russia, Austria, and Germany, to which the Bolsehviks in Moscow had lovingly termed " The Bastard of Versailles Treaty ", was attacked by the Jews of the USSR and seemed to be on the ropes at first. The communists were winning many battles, and things were not looking good for the hapless Poles when the drive on Warsaw was opened, and they even appealed to the western allies to save them. However for reasons not clearly understood even today, the allies refused to come to their aid and most experts expected the Russian Jews to kick Polish butt in the coming battle.

Initially Polish successes were very impressive. Minsk and Kiev fell to Poland's armies. Misled by this turn of events, Wrangel's armies in the Crimea made a final offensive northwards. But the Red Army decisive beat back the Poles and drove into the heart of Poland. Now that their enemies had been beaten back, the Red Army began what Franz Borkenau called "the attempt to carry revolution into the West with Russian bayonets." As Borkenau elaborates:


Trotsky, in the gazette of his armoured train, wrote an article in which he claimed to see the Red Army, after defeating the Whites, conquer Europe and attack America. And Sinovjev, in number 1 of the Communist International, prophesied that within a year not only would all of Europe be a Soviet republic, but would already be forgetting that there had ever been a fight for it. (Franz Borkenau, World Communism)


Instead the Poles routed the communist Jews in a stunning defeat for Lenin, Stalin and Trotsky, and the Soviets were forced to sue for peace. Stalin hated the Poles for this defeat ... and he then adopted for building up communism in Russia and immediate surrounding nations instead of the internationalism favored by Lenin and Trotsky.

"Stalin also hated the Poles. They had defeated Lenin in 1920 when the Red Army had been humiliated before Warsaw and forced to retreat far into White Russia and the Ukraine."

(Norman Stone, "Katyn: The Heart of Stalin's Darkness,"
The Sunday Times [London], 15 April 1990.)

http://www.gmu.edu/departments/economics/bcaplan/museum/his1f.htm (http://www.gmu.edu/departments/economics/bcaplan/museum/his1f.htm)

Molotov and Ribbentrop signing non-aggression treaty
http://img131.imageshack.us/img131/2685/russiangermannonagressionpact1.gif

When the Germans signed a non-aggression Pact with Stalin in Aug 1939, and proposed to attack Poland to reclaim former German lands lost at Versailles, Stalin saw his chance to humiliate and destroy some of Poland which had broken up his plan to spread communism by the barrel of a gun, and he attacked Poland on the 17th of Sept after Germany had invaded.

Edward J. Rozek, Allied Wartime Diplomacy: A Pattern in
Poland, (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1958), 34. By invading Poland,
the Soviets violated their 1932 nonaggression pact with Poland (which
had been extended to 31 December 1945), as well as the 1929 Treaty of
Paris, outlawing war, which they had signed. Ibid., 18-9, 35.

The Jews now had a chance for revenge on those Poles who had humiliated them some 20 years earlier, and even asked the Germans to turn over any of their Polish prisoners who were connected to or related to any of those who had inflicted so much pain on the Jews in 1919. These were sent to the camps at Katyn, near Smolensk, Kharov, Kalinin, and to other camps in western Ukraine in late 1939. Among these was a female pilot with the Polish air force who had been shot down by the Germans.

the written order by the members of the Politoro and carried out by the almost exclusively Jewish NKVD under the command of the Jew Beria
http://img504.imageshack.us/img504/1538/berialpberiankvd9xj.jpg
No. P13/144
Com. Beria
March 5, 1940

Excerpt from the minutes No. 13 of the Politburo of the Central Committee meeting

Resolution 144 - March 5, 1940 regarding the matter submitted by the NKVD USSR

I. To instruct the NKVD of the USSR that:

1/ the cases of 14,700 people - former Polish Army officers, government officials, landowners, policemen, intelligence agents, military policemen, homesteaders and jailers remaining in the camps for prisoners of war,

2/ and also the cases of 11,000 people - members of various counter-revolutionary spy and sabotage organizations, former landowners, factory owners, former Polish Army officers, government officials and fugitives arrested and remaining in prisons in the western districts of Ukraine and Byelorussia - be considered in a special manner with the obligatory sentence of capital punishment - execution by firing squad.

II. The consideration of the cases to be carried out without the convicts being summoned and without revealing the charges; with no statements concerning the conclusion of the investigation and the bills of indictment given to them. To be carried out in the following manner:

a/ people remaining in the camps for prisoners of war - on the basis of information provided by the Administration of Prisoners-of-War Affairs NKVD of the USSR,

b/ people arrested - on the basis of case information provided by the NKVD of the Ukrainian SSR and NKVD of the Byelorussian SSR.

III. The responsibility for consideration of the cases and passing of the resolution to be laid on three comrades: Merkulov, Kobulov and Bashtakov (Head, 1st Special Division of the NKVD of the USSR).

The Secretary of the Central Committee

Photos of the graves and bodies
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/d4/Katyn3.jpg/250px-Katyn3.jpghttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/5/58/Katyn.jpg/250px-Katyn.jpg

Memorial to the dead
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Troy/1791/rich385.jpg

The Soviet Jews tried to blame the Germans for over 50 years and denied any responsibility but the Poles knew better.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Troy/1791/rich395.jpg

The American government knew about Katyn

Katyn Photographs Found in U.S. Archives." Times
(London), 18 July 1989, 10.

The Roosevelt Administration did whatever necessary to suppress the
outcries. When a Polish-American radio announcer in Detroit quoted
London Polish sources' evidence of Soviet guilt, he was silenced by the
Foreign Language Division of the Office of War Information.49
Specifically, in a May 1943 meeting in New York, division chief Allen
Cranston (lately a U.S. Senator from California), with the presence of
FCC representative Hilda Shea, expressed concern about the anti-Soviet
broadcasts to the station owner who then removed the commentator.

Lloyd George, who had always been regarded by the Poles as
hostile to their cause, justified his reputation with a suitable
piece of invective in the Sunday Express. Under the heading "What
is Stalin up to?" he criticized the "class-ridden Polish government"
and praised the Soviet government for "liberating their kinsmen from
the Polish yoke."10 At a somewhat later stage, on 11 November 1939,
Picture Post captured the careful distinction fostered by many
British officials, in referring to "The Nazi Army of invasion and
the Russian Red Army of intervention . . . ."11


THE KATYN MASSACRE:

Louis Robert Coatney

December 1993
When in September 1943 Goebbels was informed that the German Army had to withdraw from the Katyn area, he entered a prediction in his diary. His entry for September 29, 1943 reads: "Unfortunately we have had to give up Katyn. The Bolsheviks undoubtedly will soon 'find' that we shot 12,000 Polish officers. That episode is one that is going to cause us quite a little trouble in the future. The Soviets are undoubtedly going to make it their business to discover as many mass graves as possible and then blame it on us.".

Goebbels prediction when Katyn had to be abandoned

Roosevelt knew about Katyn but try to act as if he didn't:

Although British Prime Minister Winston Churchill did not dispute
the Nazi charges, he told General Sikorski, "If they are dead nothing
you can do will bring them back."21 American President Franklin D.
Roosevelt was unwilling to accept the validity of the Nazis' charges.
When Captain George Earle, a personal friend of Roosevelt and a former
naval attache to Bulgaria, later expressed to the president his desire
to publish evidence implicating the Soviets (which he had received in
Sofia), Roosevelt gave him a written order not to do so. After Earle
indicated he might "go public" about Katyn anyway, he was soon there-
after abruptly and otherwise inexplicably posted to the Samoan Islands
for the remainder of the Second World War.22

THE KATYN MASSACRE:

AN ASSESSMENT OF ITS SIGNIFICANCE AS
A PUBLIC AND HISTORICAL ISSUE
IN THE UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN, 1940-1993
Louis Robert Coatney

December 1993


http://info-poland.buffalo.edu/web/history/WWII/katyn/040807.shtml (http://info-poland.buffalo.edu/web/history/WWII/katyn/040807.shtml)

The bottom line of all this is that the Bolshevik Jews perpetrated a horrific massacre of thousands of Poles or their descendents which was based solely on revenge for their earlier defeat at the battle of Warsaw in 1920. It was payback time and when the Jews got their chance, they murdered over 25,000 Polish elites simply out of a long simmering hatred for a people who had defeated them 20 years earlier. What is also staggering is the knowledge that Roosevelt and Churchill knew about the outlines of this massacre but decided to cover it up out of loyalty to Stalin. This is one of the reasons that WWII ws a disaster for Europe and America.

http://www.libertyforum.org/

Sepp44
18thJune2006, 14:18
I think interrupt_00h will have a differing opinion of your post Laziale.

Neverwinter
21stNovember2007, 04:31
Admin:
Please merge into this thread (http://www.vivamalta.org/forum/showthread.php?t=2322)

Neverwinter
21stNovember2007, 04:32
Source (http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hJ9blnux0_d6E8UnvdHHkr83ydmA)
Poland holds commemoration for WWII Katyn massacre
Nov 9, 2007

WARSAW (AFP) — Poland's President Lech Kaczynski paid homage Friday to thousands of Polish soldiers who were killed in the Soviet Union after being captured by the invading Red Army in World War II.

In a ceremony at the tomb of the unknown soldier in central Warsaw, Kaczynski awarded posthumous promotions to the 22,500 members of the military who in 1940 were massacred in the notorious Katyn forest and other areas.

"This is an act of remembrance for our heroes, their families and the entire nation," Kaczynski said.

Under Polish law, the names of the beneficiaries of military promotions must be read out at a public ceremony, and at 5:30 pm (1630 GMT) Kaczynski began listing the first three dozen himself.

Other officials were to continue reading the names until midnight (2300 GMT). The ceremony was to resume at 6:00 am (0500 GMT) Saturday, when it was due to last for a further 12 hours.

The event had originally been scheduled to take place last month, but was called off after relatives of the victims said it was ill-timed, falling just three weeks before Poland's October 21 parliamentary election.

Kaczynski, his identical twin prime minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski and their Law and Justice party had regularly played the nationalist, anti-communist card against Poland's liberal and left-wing opposition parties since coming to power in 2005.

Law and Justice lost power in the election to the liberal Civic Platform, but Lech Kaczynski's presidential term runs until 2010.

Among those who protested last month were the acclaimed 81-year-old Polish film director Andrezj Wajda, who recently released a film about the massacre and whose father Captain Jakub Wajda was among the dead officers due to be promoted.

The Katyn massacre came in the wake of Moscow's deal with Nazi Germany to invade and carve up Poland in 1939.

The Polish officers captured by the Red Army were deemed anti-communist "counterrevolutionaries" and picked out to be killed by the Soviet NKVD secret police.

The episode long remained obscured, even when the Nazis revealed the existence of the mass graves which they discovered in 1941 after they invaded the Soviet Union.

Moscow blamed the Germans for the massacre, and the West remained silent so as not to antagonise the Soviet Union, then a valuable ally in the fight against Hitler.

The subject remained taboo under Poland's post-war communist regime.

It was only in 1990, a year after the end of communist rule in Poland, that then Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev admitted his country's responsibility.

Neverwinter
21stNovember2007, 04:37
Source (http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article2648430.ece)
October 13, 2007
Nationalists exploit war film to stir hatred from the past
Roger Boyes in Warsaw

One by one the unshaven Polish officers are hauled into a cellar and shot in the back of their heads by Soviet officers. The wall opposite is spattered with blood and chunks of brain.

You need a strong stomach to watch Andrzej Wajda’s new film, Katyn: the execution scene lasts 20 minutes and the audience at the Atlantic Cinema in Warsaw stayed silently in their seats long after the screen went blank.

More than 200,000 Poles saw the film in the first weekend after its release. Now, a fortnight later, it is playing to full houses.

“I’m really shocked,” said Agnieszka Bendkowska, an architecture student, outside the cinema. “It shows that the Russians are as bad as the Germans.”

Her use of the present tense was significant: the film about the notorious 1940 Soviet massacre of more than 15,000 officers is feeding into an already bitter election campaign in which Germans and Russians are being demonised by politicians scrambling for attention.

Wajda did not want it this way — the veteran director had pleaded to keep the film, the massacre and wartime history out of the campaign. “I don’t want the death of my father, and the deaths of thousands of Polish officers exterminated in the Soviet Union, to be exploited,” he said.

But the Kaczynski twins, who as President and Prime Minister have set Poland on an ultranationalist course, are trying to shape a new Polish patriotism that defines itself in opposition to its neighbours. And so the gritty film has become politically hot.

Poland faces a general election on October 21 because the right-wing government coalition led by Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the Prime Minister, collapsed after fierce infighting between the coalition partners. Polish voters will be looking for political stability.

Before polling day the Prime Minister has to convince Poles that his Law and Justice party offers the country more security than any other grouping. That means a campaign against communist old-boy networks, a ruthless use of information gleaned from secret police files, support for the US missile shield and a fierce, terrier-like defence of Polish sovereignty.

Lech Kaczynski, the President, though not up for election, travelled to Berlin yesterday for talks with Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor. Though the agenda was tame — technically about the forthcoming European Union summit — many observers reckon that he was looking for an opportunity to pick a new voter-mobilising row with Germany.

Certainly there is no shortage of flashpoints, such as those Germans expelled from Poland after the war who are trying to reclaim estates there. Pawel Zalewski, chairman of the parliamentary and foreign affairs committee and an ally of the Prime Minister, made it plain that Warsaw was going to press Mrs Merkel hard to distance herself in writing from such claims.

If such claims were even considered by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg “they would throw into question the results of the Second World War”, he said. “Why hasn’t this issue been solved?” The German Government has, in fact, publicly stated that it does not support the claims, but Poland wants more. “We want Germany to state formally that these claims are not justified.”

It does indeed seem that the Poland of the Kaczynskis is determined to mop up all the unfinished business of the Second World War. In the midst of an EU argument about voting rights, the Kaczynskis enraged the Germans by saying that the Polish population would have been substantially larger had the Nazis not murdered so many people. Germany therefore had a moral duty to give ground. Lech Kaczynski has argued, too, for extra German reparations for the destruction of Warsaw.

The brothers use the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 as a reference point for their relations with Germany and Russia: their parents fought in the bloody insurgency and, as children, they grew up playing in the postwar rubble of the city. While the Nazis set the Polish capital alight in 1944, the Red Army sat passively on the other side of the Vistula river. Many historians believe that Stalin was effectively allowing the Germans to wipe out a future Polish political class that could have resisted a Communist takeover.

The Katyn killings, too, have become a metaphor for Poland’s troubled relationship with Berlin and Moscow. In September 1939 Poland was crushed between the armies of Hitler and Stalin. From the occupied east of Poland, Soviet commissars deported hundreds of thousands to Siberia. Some of the captured officers and intellectuals, held in three Soviet camps at Kozelsk, Starobilsk and Ostashkov, were offered a role in an army that was to fight alongside the Red Army. But 15,000 were deemed unsuitable and murdered. It was an astonishing crime — Poland and the Soviet Union were not even at war.

For decades Moscow lied about the massacre, blaming it on the Nazis. The Germans had stumbled on the graves when they invaded the Soviet Union and duly made propaganda out of it.

Between 1945 and 1989 it was forbidden for Poles to suggest even that their relatives had been slaughtered on Soviet territory in 1940. Even now the Russians are withholding information from the Poles about the identity of the killers.

A deep suspicion about German and Russian intentions runs through all parties apart from the so-called Left and Democratic party, led by Aleksander Kwasniewski, the former President. This grouping, with a large ex-communist component, is committed to improving relations with both of the big neighbours.

Its foreign policy credibility took a knock, however, when Mr Kwasniewski was spotted drunk while delivering a lecture in Ukraine recently. The incident reminded voters that as President he had also been drunk while visiting the graves of murdered officers at a site near Katyn.

For outsiders, the link between wartime martyrdom and present-day politics may seem far-fetched. But it is part of the daily rhetoric and contains a serious message.

Radek Sikorski, who used to be Defence Minister in a Law and Justice-led government, compared the building of a gas pipeline between Russia and Germany with the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop pact that fragmented Poland. His point was that an EU and Nato ally, Germany, was deliberately going over the heads of the Poles to deal with President Putin to guarantee its own energy security. Although Mr Sikorski has joined the opposition Civic Platform, his views have not changed and are in line with the thinking of his new party.

Katyn thus fits into the popular mood. An imprisoned officer in the film says: “We will be slaves under the Germans, and slaves under the Russians — what’s the difference?”

Well, in modern Europe, there naturally is a difference. But election campaigning deliberately blurs it.

Donald Tusk, the head of the moderately conservative Civic Platform, has been campaigning for émigré votes in Britain and Ireland but decided not to meet Mrs Merkel. Quite simply, a Polish politician loses votes if he even smiles at a German or a Russian.

Yet part of this extraordinary tension at the heart of Europe has its roots in the EU itself. “Before EU entry-pressure could be put on Poland to conform but now that we are in, the Kaczynskis can speak their thoughts out loud,” said Alexander Smolar, of the Stefan Batory Foundation think-tank. Another politician, on the Left, says: “It can’t be that Poland is accused of being anti-European every time it refuses to obey German orders or questions Russian policy.”

Whoever wins the Polish election next weekend will have to help to formulate EU policy towards the new post-Putin Russia. Although Mrs Merkel grumbles about Russian human rights and the British Government has stood firm on the Litvinenko case, only Poland has really been highlighting the potential dangers in the east. Russia is embarking on a huge rearmament programme as well as a response to the US missile shield that could destabilise Eastern Europe. And President Putin has shown that he is prepared to use energy exports as a foreign policy weapon.

Maybe the EU should be listening more carefully to the political discourse in Poland. Behind the sabrerattling and wartime martyrology, the Poles are identifying a real problem: the emergence of a restless Russia with a newly enriched and empowered military class ready to flex its muscles in the EU borderlands.

Neverwinter
5thJuly2009, 05:32
Source (http://www.henrymakow.com/the_greatest_story_hollywood_n.html)

Katyn: The Story Hollywood Won't Tell
January 24, 2009
by Henry Makow Ph.D.

"Defiance", yet another movie about Jewish victimhood and heroism opened in 1800 US theaters last week.

This story of Jewish partisans fighting Nazis adds to a growing Holocaust film genre that includes Sophie's Choice, Shindler's List and The Pianist.

But one incredible Jewish story of genocide continues to elude Hollywood. This is the execution of 20,000 Polish Officer POW's, (devout Roman Catholics who represented much of the Polish elite,) by the Bolshevik Jewish-led NKVD in the Katyn forest in 1940.

Why has Hollywood ignored this story? My opinion is that, with six degrees of separation, Hollywood, (and indeed America) is ultimately run by the spiritual descendants of these murderers.

Thus we are brainwashed to ignore genocides that don't fit the Nazi-Jew paradigm. Movies are essential to this programming. Part of an ongoing psychological war on the Christian European majority, we are made to identify with minorities. If we object, we are counted as Nazis. I will expand later when I briefly review Hollywood's current fare.

Andrej Wajda, 82, Poland's most celebrated film director, lost his father at Katyn. In 2008, Wajda made a movie about this genocide and its effect on the victims' families. Financed by Polish TV, the film, "Katyn," was a major artistic and commercial success in Poland. It was nominated for an Oscar for Best Foreign Film in 2008, but still has not found wide distribution outside Poland.

It didn't win the Oscar. The award went to a Jewish Holocaust movie, "The Counterfeiters," a "true story" from Germany. It described the moral dilemma faced by a Jewish master-counterfeiter forced to forge British and US currency. ("Should I sabotage this process?") I saw this movie. It is an enjoyable piece of propaganda which helps the audience identify with Jews. In real life, I doubt if the hero had any such moral qualms. Even in the film, he filled his own pockets.

KATYN

Here is the trailer for "Katyn". I haven't seen the movie but I did stumble across information that illustrates why this is the stuff of which epics are made.

First, some background from Wikipedia: "Since Poland's conscription system required every nonexempt university graduate to become a reserve officer, the Soviets were able to round up much of the Polish intelligentsia. Those who died at Katyn included an admiral, two generals, 24 colonels, 79 lieutenant colonels, 258 majors, 654 captains, 17 naval captains, 3,420 NCOs, seven chaplains, three landowners, a prince, 43 officials, 85 privates, and 131 refugees. Also among the dead were 20 university professors; 300 physicians; several hundred lawyers, engineers, and teachers; and more than 100 writers and journalists as well as about 200 pilots. In all, the NKVD executed almost half the Polish officer corps."

In 1945, Maurice Shainberg was the Assistant to KGB Col. Grigory Zaitzev who was the Commandant of the main Katyn work camp. In his book, "Breaking from the KGB," (1986) Shainberg, a Polish Jew, tells how he discovered Zaitzev's Katyn diary in the safe. Shainberg had misgivings about Communism and identified with his fellow Poles. He took great personal risks to copy sections of the diary. The Zaitzev Diary was dynamite because the Soviets always claimed the Nazis had committed the war crime.

The diary appears authentic except for one major discrepancy. Zaitzev pretends the slaughter was necessitated by lack of transport to remove the prisoners in advance of the Nazi onslaught in June 1941. In fact, Stalin and Beria gave the order to murder the Poles in early March and the executions took place in April and May 1940. Only 4250 were actually shot in Katyn forest. The remainder were executed in prisons elsewhere. Many were taken out in barges on the White Sea and drowned.

Otherwise, the diary describes how the Soviets tried to indoctrinate and intimidate the Poles into betraying their culture and their country (as the Western-elite has done today), by forming a puppet class in a future Soviet-dominated Poland. The Poles refused and that is the reason they were slaughtered.

THE ZAITZEV DIARY

When Zaitzev got his assignment, he was warned that the Poles were all "educated religious fanatics" always singing patriotic songs and hymns with their chaplain. Zaitzev was confident he could teach them to "pray to a new God."

The prisoners worked cutting trees from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. In the evening they boycotted the indoctrination sessions. They had no desire to assist in building the future Soviet Poland.

One officer explained: "As a Pole I know my nation. None of us have the desire to dictate to other people, and we don't want other people to dictate to us. We are neither a Fascist or a Communist nation, but a devoutly Catholic one."

Once during a speech, the Polish Army Chaplain Jozwiak lifted up the crucifix he wore and began to chant a prayer. The prisoners followed suit. That night, Jozwiak was taken to the Interrogation Chamber.

"The use of electrical currents on Father Jozwiak's eyes and body didn't help. Nor was the Chinese method successful, where the prisoner was stripped from the waist down and forced to sit over an open cage of starving rats. We couldn't allow the priest to go back to the other prisoners in the condition he was left in, so we finished him off." (Shainberg, p. 165)

The NKVD thought the priest's example would have a sobering effect on the POW's but instead they curtailed their work. The NKVD retaliated by decreasing rations which made the prisoners too weak to work. When the NKVD started shooting prisoners who didn't work; the others turned on the guards with their axes and 192 Poles were shot.

Now the Poles were more defiant than ever. When a collaborator lectured to them, they began to chant a prayer: "We Polish soldiers and prisoners of the Soviets have been brought here to foreign lands to die. We beg of you, Mother of God, to take care of our nation...Save us from German and Soviet imprisonment. We are offering ourselves as a sacrifice for the independence of our fatherland..."

Of course this is the kind of self sacrifice and patriotism that our Masters don't want us to see.

"Our task was impossible," Zaitzev wrote. "People who have never met these Poles will not understand how difficult it was to change their attitude toward us. No beating or abuse would make them stop their singing. They are a hard and proud people. Every day they get physically weaker but their anger and hatred increased."

Polish historian Krzystztof Siwek tells me that Poland has declared April 13 a National Day of Rememberance of the Katyn martyrs. "A joint Polish-Russian commission was formed to develop an official position of both sides. Most of controversies remain unresolved. Russians fear that admitting fully to the crime against humanity would allow the victims' families to demand compensations and other penalties as in the case of Germany."

MOVIES AS PROPAGANDA

The goal of Illuminati Jewish bankers and their Masonic gentile collaborators is to meld the world's population into a single servant class in a "New World Order." This requires the destruction of the four legs of human identity: race, religion, nation and family.

The Illuminati bankers established the USSR as a preccursor to the New World Order. The execution of the Polish elite was necessary to the longterm plan. The Nazis, also an Illuminati Jewish creation, treated Polish and other national elites in a similar fashion.

The Illuminati are Luciferian. They wish to substitute their rule for God's natural and spiritual (moral) order. They need to destroy the Western European Christian heterosexual middle class to fulfill their agenda. Culture is a function of money and the Illuminati control credit. Thus our culture maintains a conspiracy of silence about the gradual subversion of Western Civilization by its own traitorous elite.

Instead the focus, in movies for e.g., is on minorities. Clint Eastwood's "Gran Torino" is about a redneck who learns to love Asian immigrants kids. Oscar nominated "Slumdog Millionaire" is about Bombay street kids. Sean Penn's "Milk" is about a crusader for homosexual rights. Oscar nominated "The Reader" combines pedophilia and German guilt for the Holocaust. "Revolutionary Road" presents a negative view of marriage and the 1950's, a period when the nuclear family recovered. (I liked this movie, but not the message.) "Doubt" is about homosexuality in the Catholic Church. French Best Foreign Language nominee "The Class" is about immigrant youths and how lovable they are. And on it goes, movies are propaganda for the Illuminati agenda.

When the movie is about white Americans, as in "Benjamin Button," no collective identity can be upheld, no universals revealed. Life must be literally turned upside down, in this case reversed from old to young, before it has any interest for the screenwriter, Eric Roth. This diverting but ultimately vacuous movie is a triumph of make-up. It has nothing important to say to Americans at this critical moment.

So there should be no surprise that a film about Christian martyrs and patriots coming from an anachronism called a nation like Poland will be quietly swept under the carpet by Hollywood.
Heaven forbid that the sheep figure out that the same fate may await them.

ricsi
9thJuly2009, 13:37
Kissinger is the front man for the real string pullers,they have always had the presidents and other world leaders by the balls !

ComradeDTAII
9thJuly2009, 23:13
There are Soviet Katyns all over Eastern Europe.

Neverwinter
12thJuly2009, 16:07
The post isn't really that funny is it?There is much truth in the pics.Should N'winter wish it to be moved,then we'' have to find somewhere else for your post.I would like it if this thread remained focused on Katyn and similar events without clutter.