Author: | Unknown Author | ISBN: | 9780244450236 |
Publisher: | Lulu.com | Publication: | January 16, 2019 |
Imprint: | Lulu.com | Language: | English |
Author: | Unknown Author |
ISBN: | 9780244450236 |
Publisher: | Lulu.com |
Publication: | January 16, 2019 |
Imprint: | Lulu.com |
Language: | English |
First published in 1920 by an anonymous author, probably White Russian emigré to the US, Boris Brasol, The Protocols and World Revolution begins with a translation of the "Protocols of Meetings of the Zionist Men of Wisdom" by Natalie de Bogory. It really comes into its own in Part Two, which uses evidence from the US Senate Overman Committee, a British Government White Paper and press cuttings to show that the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution was led by a group of apostate Jews. Leon Bronstein (Trotsky) and Hirsch Apfelbaum (Zinoviev) figure prominently as do harrowing accounts of atrocities committed by Bolshevik troops. The author demonstrates the link between the Protocols and the ideas of prominent Jewish leaders such as Hertzl, Cremieux and even Montefiore and closes with a call for an open inquiry into the origins and significance of the Protocols in the light of the very real events of the Bolshevik Revolution. European Freedom brings you this essential text with foreword by Protocols scholar Simon Harris.
First published in 1920 by an anonymous author, probably White Russian emigré to the US, Boris Brasol, The Protocols and World Revolution begins with a translation of the "Protocols of Meetings of the Zionist Men of Wisdom" by Natalie de Bogory. It really comes into its own in Part Two, which uses evidence from the US Senate Overman Committee, a British Government White Paper and press cuttings to show that the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution was led by a group of apostate Jews. Leon Bronstein (Trotsky) and Hirsch Apfelbaum (Zinoviev) figure prominently as do harrowing accounts of atrocities committed by Bolshevik troops. The author demonstrates the link between the Protocols and the ideas of prominent Jewish leaders such as Hertzl, Cremieux and even Montefiore and closes with a call for an open inquiry into the origins and significance of the Protocols in the light of the very real events of the Bolshevik Revolution. European Freedom brings you this essential text with foreword by Protocols scholar Simon Harris.