The information detailed in the United Press letter immensely expands my knowledge to help me better understand the Stalin era. For example, this letter is written by the soviet secret police, giving insight into practices used under Stalin through the secret police. The letter is addressed to Stalin, informing him on a citizen who had sent telegrams about Russian events abroad. Stalin’s secret police believed that this citizen was sending telegrams with the intent to spread false information about Russia abroad. First, this piece of information of the letter shows how the lives of individuals were constantly being controlled under Stalin’s reign. All of the telegrams being sent by this citizen were being monitored by Stalin’s secret police,
Source 1 contrasts liberalism through supporting fascism. The source is contrasting one of the liberals main ideas, Freedom of choice. Liberalism focuses on the freedom of the individual and that choices that regard the individual should be made by the individual or majority. The quotes is suggesting that through a general election, the chances of a good leader being chosen are rare. He suggests a specific individual will be born a leader. In the first sentence of the quote, Hitler talks about the way a general election works. He calls it absurd and in turn is saying how a general election is not a good way to elect a leader. This shows the resistance to liberalism as liberalism believes in a general election as it backs up
Joseph Stalin DBQ The Soviet Union had been a king full nation in Europe. One of the most mentioned leaders is Joseph Stalin. He was a father figure to the nation. He was in power from 1922 to 1951.
On December eighteenth 1879 in Gori, Georgia, Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili (Joseph Stalin) was born into a large family. Stalin had two brothers, Georgy Jughashvili, born one year before Stalin, and Mikhail Jughashvili, born three years before Stalin. Stalin's father, Besarion Jughashvili was a cobbler though later became an alcoholic later becoming a vagrant. Stalin’s mother, Ketevan Geladze worked as a washerwoman.
Joseph Stalin's Leadership Through World War Two Stalin (1927-1953) led the Soviet State through the challenges of World War II. Although the war was a terrible drain on the already impoverished and exhausted society, it resulted, paradoxically in strengthening the Soviet dictatorship.
Over the past two centuries, a common pattern has arisen among European leaders. Most of them have proven to have followed the reasoning of Niccoló Machiavelli, a renowned literarian. Machiavelli had a deep understanding of what it took to be a leader and maintain control. He put this understanding into The Prince, a book giving advice to leaders on how to gain and maintain power over a state. Joseph Stalin lead the Soviet Union as a Machiavellian leader. He followed many of the steps described by Machiavelli and prospered. Stalin is known as one the most cruel dictators in history and was widely feared by his people. He built his way
From the 1920's onwards, Stalin set the stage for gaining absolute power, through a number of campaigns of repression against groups which opposed the Communist Party and Stalin himself. The use of terror became a central part to Stalin's rule during the 1930's with the launching of The Great Purges against opposition to Stalin. It can be seen that Stalin did effectively remove opposition to the exercise of his personal power until 1941 when Germany invaded Russia. The term 'purge' in Soviet political slang was an abbreviation of the expression 'purge of the party ranks.'
From the beginning, Stalin had always expected war to break out again in Europe. “In every major speech in the Central Committee’s behalf he stressed the dangers in contemporary international relations [1].” World wars were inevitable and the Soviet policy had to start from this first premise of Leninist theory on international relations. Stalin’s reluctance to take sides, increased the instabilities in Europe and lessened the chances of preventing continental war. This war started with Russia at a totally disadvantage. The Soviet armed forces went from two million men under arm in 1939 to five million by 1941. There was also a leap in factory production of armaments to the level of seven hundred military aircraft, four thousand guns and mortars
once this was a very silly idea as they would not be able to pull it
The Impact of Stalin on Russia and the Russian People Joseph Stalin was born to a poor family in the province of Georgia in 1879. Stalin's real surname was Djugasvili; he adopted the name 'Stalin' whilst in prison as he felt the translation 'Man of Steel' would help his image. Stalin joined the Bolshevik party as a young man and soon became an active member organizing bank raids to gain money for party funds; this led to Stalin's imprisonment a number of times. Stalin first met Lenin in December 1905 in Finland and was quite surprised to see him as an ordinary man unlike the person he had imagined. In 1918 Stalin was made Commissar for Nationalities of the Bolshevik party, then in 1922 he became
With the civil war ending in October 1922, the Bolsheviks launched a more inappropriate propaganda directed at common religions. In 1922, the Central Committee created the Anti-Religious Commission, chaired by Emelian Iaroslavskii. Iaroslavskii was a well-known Bolshevik and one of the earliest leaders of militant atheism; in 1917, he partook in the Bolshevik takeover of Moscow and became the first commissar of the Moscow region. Throughout the 1920s, Iaroslavskii was secretary of the Central Control Commission of the Communist party and was on the editorial board of the anti-religious paper Bezbozhik. The Central Committee was eventually abolished in 1929, and Iaroslavskii supervised the newly created League of the Godless. By 1930 the League alleged to have more than two million members. Previously in January 1923, on Orthodox Christmas Day, the government youth organization, the Komsomol, indorsed its members to deface Orthodox Churches and to harass worshippers. The Komsomol dressed as clowns paraded around Moscow holding anti-religious banners. “These were followed by trucks bearing clowns who mocked God, a figure of God embracing a nude woman, and rabbis and priests in ridiculous poses chanting parodies of church liturgy set to indecent lyrics. As night fell, effigies of all the
In 1956, Nikita delivered a speech to the Twentieth Party Congress, in which he denounced the repressive practices of Joseph Stalin. This speech resulted in a call for reform in many of the Soviet satellite states in Eastern Europe. In Hungary, the people called for the removal Mátyás Ráákosi, known to the people as the “little Stalin. Rákosi’s methods were so brutal that at one point in his political career he was summoned to Moscow and told to tone down his methods. As student lead riots for reform broke out and spread around the country, Rákosi was forced to resign. He was replaced Imre Nagy, who sought to satisfy the public by promising free elections in the country, almost guaranteeing the fall of Communism in Hungary. In response
Joseph Stalin was the leader of the Soviet Union from 1922-1953, when he died. He was responsible for one of the most notable and devastating genocides, the Great Purge. His vicious reign took the lives of around 20-60 million people by his rigid and cruel treatment. Through his exploitation of the lower class and his manipulative abuse of power, Stalin created one of the worst examples of leadership in history. It takes an interesting character to be able to execute the cruelties displayed in his regime and the traits that Stalin developed into his cult of personality were likely acquired as a child and adolescent.
World leaders are leaders with high governmental power in the world. Every leader, not just world leaders, is either great or corrupt; they are rarely both. Most of Russia’s history is filled with corrupt leaders. Joseph was one of those leaders. Stalin killed millions of people during his rule. But Stalin also led the Soviet Union almost to the top in world power. Stalin had many influences that led him to his Soviet Leadership in which gave him many admirers but even more non-supporters.
Stalin vs. Trotsky I. Dzhugashvili and Bronstein Joseph Stalin, born Dzhugashvili, and Leon Trotsky, born Bronstein, were the same age, and both had been from early youth members of the Russian Social Democratic party. As dedicated Communists, they had common basic outlook: they were philosophical materialists, committed to the unity of theory and practice and bent upon spreading Communism throughout the whole world. While Lenin was alive (at any rate until 1922) both men had a secure place in his favor and therefore in the party as a whole. Since 1917, at least, Trotsky had supported Lenin on the main issues and seemed to have more of his candor and flexibility than Stalin. However, as
Question: How far did Stalin achieve and maintain what Kruchev described as “the accumulation of immense and limitless power”, in the USSR between 1924 and 1945?