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A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia

A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia

List Price: $18.00
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Lenin too, was a brutal murderous thug!
Review: "Impose mass terror immediately." Such was Lenin's direction to officials in Nizhny Novgorod, dated 9 August 1918. "Not a minutes delay..." he continued, "we must take all-out action: mass searches, executions for concealing weapons, mass deportation of Mensheviks and the unreliable." This wasn't the only such order nor, states the author of this historical expose on Soviet Marxism, was it the first. In other words, "Stalinist excesses" (exposed by Khrushchev in his "secret speech"---behind closed doors to the Party) weren't an aberration, but the norm. Lenin was not similarly castigated as that would have called into question the legitimacy of the Soviet regime itself; notwithstanding the author's view that Stalin was simply a student of his homicidal progenitor Lenin. It was the notion that "within the country, the regime couldn't exist without grand political trials and permanent civil war." The "thaw" of Khushchev's years, moreover, didn't put an end to this violence toward the individual (obfuscated, in the Marxist tradition, by baseless communal indictments). Well, so much for the history lesson. You are, I presume, trying to decide whether or not to buy this book, aren't you? I, for one, got a copy because I wanted to see how Mr. Yakovlev (a senior advisor to Gorbachev and "the father of glasnost") viewed the Soviet Era.Just the fact that Mr. Yakovlev was in the audience when Khrushchev made the speech I referred to above, morover, made it worthwhile for me to read this book. But if you've read much on the brutality of the USSR this book is not going to tell you much that's especially new. Mr. Yakovlev presents 238 pages of evidence damning the evils perpetrated by the USSR and Marxism, but the book is a bit laden with political-organization abbreviations and names of victims (prominent individuals that to the casual reader will not be familiar). So while I found it interesting I would hesitate to recommend this treatise to you unless you have read a number of books already on some aspects of Soviet history. It's just hard to absorb the enormity of the numbers involved herein. Some examples: "In the Russian Federation alone, according to incomplete data," Mr Yakovlev states, "the number of people sentenced between 1923 and 1953 total more than 41 million." 41 MILLION! "More than 994,000 Soviet servicemen were sentenced during the war by military tribunals alone, and of this number more than 157,000 were sentenced to be shot." During the month of august 1922, 135,000 of 300,000 domestic letters were opened and examined, and "all 285,000 letters sent abroad had also been censored." 5.5 million died of famine during the civil war and more than 5 million in the 1930s. And such staggering numbers appear every few pages in this book. Soviet history---It's crazier than fiction. Cheers!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Present at the Destruction
Review: Alexander Nikolayevich Yakovlev may be best known as the godfather of perestroika. He was instrumental in formulating the concept of perestroika (restructuring), in persuading Gorbachev to implement perestroika, and in bringing Gorbachev back to perestroika when he vacillated, Hamlet-like, between his liberal and hard-line advisors in the late 1980s. Yakovlev was, in a very real sense, along with Eduard Sheverdnadze, Gorbachev's political conscience.

In A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia, Yakovlev presents the tragedy of Russia under Lenin and Stalin. He examines in separate chapters how various constituents of the Soviet Union fared under Communism: Political parties other than the Bolsheviks, the peasants, the intelligentsia, the clergy, the military, the numerous non-Russian nationalities, the Jews. All were exploited, when possible, to further the Bolshevik hold on Russia, and executed, exiled, or enslaved when political exploitation was not possible. Yakovlev holds Lenin and Stalin responsible for 60 million deaths. These include peasants that starved as a direct result of the collectivization of agriculture and World War II deaths, many of which were a direct result of Stalin's purge of competent military officers on the eve of the war and the unwarranted trust he placed in the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact. Some have questioned the legitimacy of attributing these deaths to Stalin. Rather than debate that responsibility here, the reader is referred to Robert Conquest, The Harvest of Sorrow, and Richard Pipes, Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime.

Yakovlev traces all of the totalitarian acts of terror associated with Stalin's rule to their beginnings under Lenin, demolishing the myth that Stalin somehow perverted the more humane party of Lenin. The book is a somber read, 200 plus pages documenting murders, torture, slave labor in the name of an ideology that is morally, intellectually, and (now, thankfully) financially bankrupt.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Boleshivism debunked
Review: Am important book for Russians, and for all people who doubt the stark reality of the Bolshevik regime. Yakolev asserts at one point that the only true statement that came out of the Stalinist period was that there ws no change in the party from Lenin's time. Stalin, for Yakovlev, was the true student of Lenin, whoose brutality was shown from the very beginning. More, the entire system of Marxist-Leninism was flawed from the start, an untenable ideology doomed to failure. Coming from an insider, despite his ten years in the west as ambassador to Canada, and from the person who oversaw the rehabilitation of political victims under peristroika and after, these comments are damning indeed.

Yakovlev documents the atrocities--to the peasants, the church, the jews, ethnic groups, the inteligensia, to political dissidents, to prisoners of war and saddest of all to children and families of those considered dangerous to the regime. For Yakovlev Russia must purge itself of Bolshevism in order to once again move forward. At times an emotional journey, it nevertheless gives an accurate accounting. Well done.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Boleshivism debunked
Review: Am important book for Russians, and for all people who doubt the stark reality of the Bolshevik regime. Yakolev asserts at one point that the only true statement that came out of the Stalinist period was that there ws no change in the party from Lenin's time. Stalin, for Yakovlev, was the true student of Lenin, whoose brutality was shown from the very beginning. More, the entire system of Marxist-Leninism was flawed from the start, an untenable ideology doomed to failure. Coming from an insider, despite his ten years in the west as ambassador to Canada, and from the person who oversaw the rehabilitation of political victims under peristroika and after, these comments are damning indeed.

Yakovlev documents the atrocities--to the peasants, the church, the jews, ethnic groups, the inteligensia, to political dissidents, to prisoners of war and saddest of all to children and families of those considered dangerous to the regime. For Yakovlev Russia must purge itself of Bolshevism in order to once again move forward. At times an emotional journey, it nevertheless gives an accurate accounting. Well done.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A grim, vital study of the horror that was Soviet Russia
Review: I am not sure I can possibly convey the importance of this book and how urgently it needs to be read by almost anyone with an interest in the history of the last century. Actually, I would go further, and turn that last sentence on its ear. This is an indispensable book for those who have little knowledge of or interest in the 20th Century. People need to understand what went on in the Soviet Union between the years 1916 and 1989.

Growing up in the 60s and 70s, it was not at all uncommon, at least in Canada, for one�s circle of friends to include Marxist-Leninists � particularly once you got to University. I actually had a rather close friend who not only adopted this political philosophy, but also actively espoused the cause of Soviet Russia � to the point of making excuses for Stalin. This made for extremely lively debates. In retrospect, knowing what we now know about communist Russia, I rather think my friend needed at the very least a good thrashing. For it was people like him, and the left-leaning western media, that gave succor to, and in a way legitimized, what we now know was one of the must shocking brutal, tyrannies ever to disgrace our planet.

The subject of the culpability of the western media, fellow travelers and communist sympathizers is covered by Richard Pipes, in �Russia Under the Bolsheviks�. These people have, in a very real sense, blood on their hands, and I often tremble with rage when I recall the facile and damaging lies that they propagated. Under the noses of these gullible and willfully naïve �liberal thinkers�, 35 million people died, either as the result of political terror or deliberate starvation.

Alexander Yakovlev now reinforces the point with a harrowing, grim collection of essays, �A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia.� Yakovlev was an advisor to Gorbachev and is now the head of a commission charged with analyzing and cataloging the horrors of Soviet Russia. In my review of Pipes� book (mentioned above), I had occasion to remark that in that book, Lenin came in for the thrashing that he so richly deserved. Lenin has had it easy. When the full horrors of the Stalinist period became known, Marxists and Socialists to a man rushed to point out that Stalin was an anomaly, that he and his regime had nothing to do with the gentle, humane, philosophical Lenin (and, in any event, �one had to break eggs to make an omlette�). Some people still believe this. Do you? Well here is Yakovlev�s trenchant, damning summing up:

�Exponent of mass terror, violence, the dictatorship of the proletariat, class struggle and other inhuman concepts. Organizer of fratricidal Russian civil war and concentration camps, including camps for children. Incessant in his demands for arrests and capital punishment by bullet or rope. Personally responsible for the deaths of millions of Russian citizens. By every norm of international law, posthumously indicted for crimes against humanity.�

Shockingly, Russians (as well and never-say-die communists throughout the world) continue to revere Lenin. This horrifies Yakovlev who notes that �to this day the country proliferates with monuments to Lenin and streets names after him.� Worse than this, a shockingly large segment of Russian society today believes that Stalin is in need of rehabilitation, that he did nor good than bad for Russia. Stalin has become nothing more than a name to most people in the world. When Saddam Hussein was compared to Stalin, when it was noted that he had actually studied Stalin, this tended to make little impression - because most of the world has forgotten. Men like Conquest, Pipes, Figes and Yakovlev write so that we will NOT forget. Their books should be required reading, because men like Lenin and Stalin NEVER go away, they are always with us and we must be forever vigilant and on our guard that they do not take root again.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A grim, vital study of the horror that was Soviet Russia
Review: I am not sure I can possibly convey the importance of this book and how urgently it needs to be read by almost anyone with an interest in the history of the last century. Actually, I would go further, and turn that last sentence on its ear. This is an indispensable book for those who have little knowledge of or interest in the 20th Century. People need to understand what went on in the Soviet Union between the years 1916 and 1989.

Growing up in the 60s and 70s, it was not at all uncommon, at least in Canada, for one's circle of friends to include Marxist-Leninists ' particularly once you got to University. I actually had a rather close friend who not only adopted this political philosophy, but also actively espoused the cause of Soviet Russia ' to the point of making excuses for Stalin. This made for extremely lively debates. In retrospect, knowing what we now know about communist Russia, I rather think my friend needed at the very least a good thrashing. For it was people like him, and the left-leaning western media, that gave succor to, and in a way legitimized, what we now know was one of the must shocking brutal, tyrannies ever to disgrace our planet.

The subject of the culpability of the western media, fellow travelers and communist sympathizers is covered by Richard Pipes, in 'Russia Under the Bolsheviks'. These people have, in a very real sense, blood on their hands, and I often tremble with rage when I recall the facile and damaging lies that they propagated. Under the noses of these gullible and willfully naïve 'liberal thinkers', 35 million people died, either as the result of political terror or deliberate starvation.

Alexander Yakovlev now reinforces the point with a harrowing, grim collection of essays, 'A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia.' Yakovlev was an advisor to Gorbachev and is now the head of a commission charged with analyzing and cataloging the horrors of Soviet Russia. In my review of Pipes' book (mentioned above), I had occasion to remark that in that book, Lenin came in for the thrashing that he so richly deserved. Lenin has had it easy. When the full horrors of the Stalinist period became known, Marxists and Socialists to a man rushed to point out that Stalin was an anomaly, that he and his regime had nothing to do with the gentle, humane, philosophical Lenin (and, in any event, 'one had to break eggs to make an omlette'). Some people still believe this. Do you? Well here is Yakovlev's trenchant, damning summing up:

'Exponent of mass terror, violence, the dictatorship of the proletariat, class struggle and other inhuman concepts. Organizer of fratricidal Russian civil war and concentration camps, including camps for children. Incessant in his demands for arrests and capital punishment by bullet or rope. Personally responsible for the deaths of millions of Russian citizens. By every norm of international law, posthumously indicted for crimes against humanity.'

Shockingly, Russians (as well and never-say-die communists throughout the world) continue to revere Lenin. This horrifies Yakovlev who notes that 'to this day the country proliferates with monuments to Lenin and streets names after him.' Worse than this, a shockingly large segment of Russian society today believes that Stalin is in need of rehabilitation, that he did nor good than bad for Russia. Stalin has become nothing more than a name to most people in the world. When Saddam Hussein was compared to Stalin, when it was noted that he had actually studied Stalin, this tended to make little impression - because most of the world has forgotten. Men like Conquest, Pipes, Figes and Yakovlev write so that we will NOT forget. Their books should be required reading, because men like Lenin and Stalin NEVER go away, they are always with us and we must be forever vigilant and on our guard that they do not take root again.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: dissapointed
Review: It sounded really good, so I actually went out and bought it, rather than wait for the library to get it.

Big dissapointment. It's just a list of all the bad things that happened: the people who were killed, tortured, exiled, etc. It got quite boring. There was no analysis or insight. This might be a good historical record - these details do need to be uncovered and made public - but it's not a good book.

I also had a problem with the way he counts the dead. For example, in the first chapter he blames Stalin for the 30 million Russian's who died in WWII. I hate to defend Stalin but you can't add 30 million to the number of people he killed because he was responsible for Russia being unprepared for the war. It was Hitler's war, not Stalins. He also need to be more careful in counting famine victims as murder victims. This is valid in a man-made famine (ie. in the Ukraine), but not otherwise. Famines due to a combination of poor harvests and human incompetence are not exactly new.

The reason this bothers me is that I suspect he is inflating these figures for shock-value and publicity. But this is only a suspicion - I have no proof.

One last comment. The author claims that his conversion occurred at the time of Kruschev's dununciation of Stalin, at which the Author was present. How is it that he managed to spend the next 30 years, not just doing his job, but doing it so well that he rose to the very top, if he was so totally opposed to the system? In particular, his work at the core of soviet repression between 1956 and 1973 was good enough to get him a plum diplomatic posting (ambassador to Canada).

If you disagree with me and want to respond then please E-mail me. Don't bother responding to me in your review because I'm not likely to check back.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The case against the Evil Empire
Review: This is one of the best and most important books ever written on the Soviet Union, which is exposed here as a blood-soaked totalitarian tyranny every bit as nefarious as Hitler's Third Reich. Yakovlev, once a prominent member of the Soviet elite and architect of "perestroika" who is now head of the Presidential Commission for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Political Repression, demolishes the revisionist history coming from Gregory L. Freeze, J. Arch Getty, Robert W. Thurston and others. He has been going through the archives and listening to the stories from terror victims for the last ten years. All this makes A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia the most damning indictment of Soviet Communism since Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's monumental work of history, The Gulag Archipelago.

Yakovlev confidently states with absolute certainty that the number of people murdered by the Soviet state for political reasons or who perished in camps/gulags or in state-enforced famines is around 30-35 million - with a total of 60 million dead if you include those who perished during the second world war, in which Stalin is partly responsible for being foolish enough to form a pact with Hitler and paranoid enough to butcher tens of thousands of his military elite, leaving his country open to attack. The clergy were subjected to the most bestial of atrocities: priests, monks and nuns were crucified on the central doors of iconostases, thrown into cauldrons of boiling tar, scalped, strangled with priestly stoles, given Communion with melted lead and drowned in holes in the ice. An estimated 3,000 were executed in 1918 alone. Besides the clergy and military elite, other victims of Soviet Communism include: peasants (many millions), the intelligentsia, returning Soviet POW's, whole ethnic groups (Crimean Taters, Don Cossacks, Chechens, Volga Germans, Kalmyks, etc.), even so-called "Socially Dangerous Children."

Yakovlev also tackles one of the great myths about Soviet Communism: Good Lenin/Bad Stalin. Lenin was no big-hearted idealist concerned for humanity, but a fanatic and a cold-blooded murderer, willing to kill off millions of his fellow countrymen in the name of the "revolution." Yakovlev quotes the murderous orders Lenin issued: "impose mass terror immediately, shoot and deport hundreds of prostitutes who have been getting soldiers, former officers, and so on drunk. Not a minute's delay." "Hang (by all means hang, so people will see) no fewer than 100 known kulaks, fat cats, bloodsuckers." "launch merciless mass terror against kulaks, priests, and White Guards. Suspicious individuals to be locked up in concentration camp outside city." In 1919, Lenin ordered the Cheka (Bolshevik secret police) to execute those who did not show up for work on a particular religious holiday. As Yakovlev shows, Stalin simply picked up where Lenin left off.

I absolutely urge anyone interested in the bloody history of the 20th century to read this book.

In addition to this I would recommend the following:

The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression by Stephane Courtois, et al
Lethal Politics: Soviet Genocide and Mass Murder since 1917 by R. J. Rummel
Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got It Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First by Mona Charen

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The case against the Evil Empire
Review: This is one of the best and most important books ever written on the Soviet Union, which is exposed here as a genocidal totalitarian tyranny every bit as nefarious as Hitler's Third Reich. Yakovlev, once a prominent member of the Soviet elite and architect of "perestroika" who is now head of the Presidential Commission for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Political Repression, demolishes the revisionist history coming from Gregory L. Freeze, J. Arch Getty, Robert W. Thurston and others. He has been going through the archives and listening to the stories from terror victims for the last ten years. All this makes A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia the most damning indictment of Soviet Communism since Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's monumental work of history, The Gulag Archipelago.

Yakovlev confidently states with absolute certainty that the number of people murdered by the Soviet state for political reasons or who perished in camps/gulags or in genocidal state-enforced famines is around 30-35 million - with a total of 60 million dead if you include those who perished during the second world war, in which Stalin is partly responsible for being foolish enough to form a pact with Hitler and paranoid enough to butcher tens of thousands of his military elite, leaving his country open to attack. The litany of sadistic atrocities against the clergy is absolutely hair-raising: priests, monks and nuns being crucified in their own churches, thrown into cauldrons of boiling tar, scalped, strangled, given Communion with melted lead and other bestial horrors. In one incident, 47 clergymen were shot, axed to death, or drowned. Besides the clergy and military elite, other victims of Soviet Communism include: peasants (many millions), the intelligentsia, returning Soviet POW's, whole ethnic groups (Crimean Taters, Don Cossacks, Chechens, Volga Germans, Kalmyks, etc.), even so-called "Socially Dangerous Children."

Yakovlev also tackles one of the great myths about Soviet Communism: Good Lenin/Bad Stalin. Lenin was no big-hearted idealist concerned for humanity, but a fanatic and a cold-blooded murderer, willing to kill off millions of his fellow countrymen in the name of the "revolution." Yakovlev quotes the murderous orders Lenin issued: "impose mass terror immediately, shoot and deport hundreds of prostitutes who have been getting soldiers, former officers, and so on drunk. Not a minute's delay." "Hang (by all means hang, so people will see) no fewer than 100 known kulaks, fat cats, bloodsuckers." "launch merciless mass terror against kulaks, priests, and White Guards. Suspicious individuals to be locked up in concentration camp outside city." In 1919, Lenin ordered the Cheka (Bolshevik secret police) to execute those who did not show up for work on a particular religious holiday. As Yakovlev shows, Stalin simply picked up where Lenin left off.

I absolutely urge anyone interested in the history of the 20th century to read this book.

In addition to this I would recommend the following:

Koba the Dread: Laughter and the Twenty Million by Martin Amis
Lethal Politics: Soviet Genocide ands Mass Murder since 1917 by R. J. Rummel
Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got It Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First by Mona Charen


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