Zydokomuna 1905 Provoked Pogroms Tsar Nicholas II Bing
The Secret Letters of the Last Tsar, by Edward J. Bing (Editor). 1938
Tsar Nicholas II: Jewish Revolutionaries Provoked the Pogroms of the Revolution of 1905
By way of introduction, the author was head of a special British Mission to the Bolshevik government. Earlier, he had attended the celebrations, in Moscow in 1913, of the 300th anniversary of the founding of the Romanov dynasty. (p. 9).
The selection of correspondence in this volume, of Tsar Nicholas, starts in 1879 and ends in 1917, with the tsar imprisoned by the Bolsheviks. A few months later, the Communists were to murder him and his entire family.
The content of most of the letters is mundane, and seldom refers to policy issues. It focuses on family matters, and often mentions religion. Not surprisingly, there are frequent mentions of the royal families of England, Germany, and Denmark.
Tsar Nicholas II was the last Russian tsar that ruled over partitioned Poland. Nowhere in these letters does he mention Poland, except indirectly and without detail.
THE HEMOPHILIA OF TSAREVICH ALEXIS: POLISH SYMPATHY
Virtually every biology textbook traces the sex-linked genetics of hemophilia in the royal families of Europe. The tsar’s only son, Tsarevich Alexei, was to be the successor to the Russian throne. In the event of his death, Grand Duke Michael was to be the heir to the throne. (p. 284). Alexei had inherited hemophilia from Queen Victoria. A number of the letters written by Tsar Nicholas II (p. 231, 275-on) discuss fears for the life of his son when he developed massive swelling, and even fever, from what ordinarily would be a minor bruise. In one of these incidents, which occurred during a 1912 hunting trip at Spala, Poland, the Polish peasants gathered in crowds, and wept in sympathy, during a prayer led by a priest. (p. 277).
TSAR NICHOLAS II: JEWS PROVOKED THE POGROMS OF THE REVOLUTION OF 1905
Here is what Tsar Nicholas II wrote on October 27, 1905: (Quote) In the first days after the Manifesto the subversive elements raised their heads, but a strong reaction set in quickly, and a whole mass of loyal people suddenly made their power felt. The result was obvious, and what one would expect in our country. The impertinence of the Socialists and revolutionaries had angered the people once more; and, because nine-tenths of the troublemakers were Jews, the People’s whole anger turned against them. That’s how the pogroms happened. It is amazing how they book place SIMULTANEOUSLY in all the towns of Russia and Siberia. In England, of course, the press says that those disorders are organized by the police; they still go on repeating this worn-out fable. But not only Jews suffered; some of the Russian agitators, engineers, lawyers, and such-like bad people suffered as well. Cases as far apart as in Tomsk, Simferopol, Tver, and Odessa show clearly what an infuriated mob can do: They surrounded the houses where revolutionaries had taken refuge, set fire to them, and killed everybody trying to escape. (unquote)(emphasis in the original). (pp. 187-188).
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