The Jewish Role in the Bolshevik Revolution & Russia’s Early Soviet Regime, by Mark Weber - On the night of July 16, 1918 a squad of Bolshevik secret police murdered Russia’s last emperor Tsar Nicholas II his wife and their five children, cut down in a hail of gunfire and finished off with bayonets
(web.archive.org)https://web.archive.org/web/20190401002914/https://www.darkmoon.me/2017/the-jewish-role-in-the-bolshevik-revolution-and-russias-early-soviet-regime/To prevent a cult for the dead Tsar forming the bodies were carted away to the countryside and hastily buried in a secret grave, Bolshevik authorities at first reported that the Romanov emperor had been shot after the discovery of a plot to liberate him.
For some time the deaths of the Empress and the children were kept secret, while Soviet historians claimed for many years local Bolsheviks had acted on their own in carrying out the killings, and that Lenin founder of the Soviet state had nothing to do with the crime.
In 1990 Moscow playwright and historian Edvard Radzinsky announced the result of his detailed investigation into the murders, he had unearthed the reminiscences of Lenin’s bodyguard Alexei Akimov, who recounted how he personally delivered Lenin’s execution order to the telegraph office.
The telegram was also signed by Soviet Government Chief Yakov Sverdlov, Akimov had saved the original telegraph tape as a record of the secret order.
Radzinsky’s research confirmed what earlier evidence had already indicated, which Leon Trotsky — one of Lenin’s closest colleagues — had revealed years earlier, that Lenin and Sverdlov had together made the decision to put the Tsar and his family to death.
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It is important to note that Jews made up roughly 82% of the Bolshevik government in 1917 when the Russian Revolution began. This was a revolution instigated entirely by international Jewry, with Jacob Schiff in America playing a predominant role in helping to fund and kickstart the revolution, with the help of Lenin who was at least one-quarter Jewish. Of the 545 officials in the Bolshevik government in 1917, as many as 447 were Jews. In 1917 however Jews made up only 1.8 per cent of the population of Soviet Russia.
Darkmoon.