"Under the Sign of Scorpion" by Juri - Gnostic Liberation Front

"Under the Sign of Scorpion" by Juri - Gnostic Liberation Front "Under the Sign of Scorpion" by Juri - Gnostic Liberation Front

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There was one small newspaper, The Living Word, which ignored the prohibition and published the Social Revolutionaries Grigori Alexinsky's and Vasili Pankratov's article about the German funding of Lenin's party on the 5 th (18th) of July. That was another reason why Lenin began to hate the right wing faction of the Social Revolutionaries. In their article, the authors presented various excerpts from those documents, which showed that the Bolshevik leader, Vladimir Lenin, had been given money for his agitatory campaign by the Germans through a certain Mr. Svensson who worked at the German Embassy in Stockholm. Lenin had received money and instructions from reliable people like Jakub Furstenberg alias Yakov Ganetsky and Alexander Parvus in Stockholm and Ganetsky's relative, the Jewess Yevgenia (Dora) Sumenson (actually Simmons) in Petrograd. She worked at the Fabian Klingsland firm in Petrograd and had lived in Sweden and made business trips to Denmark during the war. She also worked with speculations on the stock market. The German money was transferred from the German Imperial Bank in Berlin via Nya Banken in Stockholm to the Bank of Siberia in Petrograd. All this according to Hans Bjorkegren. Another who received this German money was the Jewish Bolshevik lawyer Mieczyslaw Kozlowski from Poland. He was in constant contact with Alexander Parvus and Jakub Fiirstenberg. German Imperial Bank had, according to order 7433 of the 2nd of March, opened accounts for Lenin, Trotsky, Ganetsky, Kollontay, Koz- lovsky (Kozlowski), Sumenson and other important Bolsheviks. Not only Lenin was involved in shady financial transfers, but also Trotsky, Zinoviev, Sverdlov, Dzerzhinsky, Kollontay, Josef (Isidor) Steinberg, Volodarsky, Ganetsky, Kozlowski, Radek, Uritsky, Menzhinsky, Yoffe and a few others. On the same day, the 5th (18th) of July, Pavel Pereverzev, the minister of justice, was made the official scapegoat for the fact that those secret documents had leaked to the press, and was forced to resign. It was claimed that the government first wanted a thorough investigation into the Bolsheviks' alleged high treason. The Bolsheviks' premature attempt to take over power ended. It is explained in the collection "The History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union" (Moscow, 1959, p. 218) that the workers and soldiers had sufficient strength to overthrow the Provisional Government and seize 206

power in July but that it was too early. Why it was too early was not explained. That was why the students were taught that what happened on the 3-4th (16-17th) of July was just a "peaceful July demonstration". On the 6th (19th) of July, Lenin published a defensive article in the newspaper Listok Pravdy, where he angrily repudiated the accusations against him as a "rotten invention" of the bourgeoisie. Lenin averred never to have met Sumenson and to have nothing in common with Kozlowski and Furstenberg. Lenin was not convincing in his unashamedness, however, and his letters showed the opposite of what his article said. Nor could he explain where he obtained the money to give out 17 different daily newspapers, whose total circulation amounted to 1.4 million copies every week. (Vladimir Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 35, Moscow, p. 260.) Trotsky tried to maintain that the money came from the workers. But could the workers really collect hundreds of thousands of roubles every week just to support the Bolsheviks when there were other labour parties, which were more popular than they were? Trotsky convinced no one with his blatant lies. On the 6th (19th) of July, other newspapers also began publishing telegrams reporting transfers of German money to the Bolsheviks in Petrograd under various innocent pretexts. (David Shub, "Russian Political Heritage", New York, 1969.) In Lenin's official biography (p. 177), all these accusations were re- garded as libel on the part of the provocateurs. On the evening of the 6th (19th) of July in Margarita Fofanova's flat, Lenin said to Stalin: "If the least fact in connection with the money transfers is confirmed, it would be exceedingly naive to believe that we should be able to avoid death sentences." (Akim Arutiunov, "The Phenomenon Vladimir Ulyanov /Lenin", Moscow, 1992, p. 73.) He might have believed so, but he was wrong. The government knew that Lenin had sent a letter to Ganetsky and Radek in Stockholm on the 12th (25th) of April 1917, in which he told them: "I have received the money from you!" That the Provisional Government knew about these shady affairs and had access to Lenin's secret letters is proved in the periodical Proletarskaya Revolyutsya (The Proletarian Revolution) which, in the autumn of 1923, published several of Lenin's strictly secret letters. He had sent one of those letters from 207

There was one small newspaper, The Living Word, which ignored <strong>the</strong><br />

prohibition and published <strong>the</strong> Social Revolutionaries Grigori Alexinsky's<br />

and Vasili Pankratov's article about <strong>the</strong> German funding <strong>of</strong> Lenin's party<br />

on <strong>the</strong> 5 th (18th) <strong>of</strong> July. That was ano<strong>the</strong>r reason why Lenin began to<br />

hate <strong>the</strong> right wing faction <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Social Revolutionaries.<br />

In <strong>the</strong>ir article, <strong>the</strong> authors presented various excerpts from those<br />

documents, which showed that <strong>the</strong> Bolshevik leader, Vladimir Lenin, had<br />

been given money for his agitatory campaign <strong>by</strong> <strong>the</strong> Germans through a<br />

certain Mr. Svensson who worked at <strong>the</strong> German Embassy in Stockholm.<br />

Lenin had received money and instructions from reliable people like Jakub<br />

Furstenberg alias Yakov Ganetsky and Alexander Parvus in Stockholm<br />

and Ganetsky's relative, <strong>the</strong> Jewess Yevgenia (Dora) Sumenson (actually<br />

Simmons) in Petrograd. She worked at <strong>the</strong> Fabian Klingsland firm in<br />

Petrograd and had lived in Sweden and made business trips to Denmark<br />

during <strong>the</strong> war. She also worked with speculations on <strong>the</strong> stock market.<br />

The German money was transferred from <strong>the</strong> German Imperial Bank in<br />

Berlin via Nya Banken in Stockholm to <strong>the</strong> Bank <strong>of</strong> Siberia in Petrograd.<br />

All this according to Hans Bjorkegren. Ano<strong>the</strong>r who received this German<br />

money was <strong>the</strong> Jewish Bolshevik lawyer Mieczyslaw Kozlowski from<br />

Poland. He was in constant contact with Alexander Parvus and Jakub<br />

Fiirstenberg.<br />

German Imperial Bank had, according to order 7433 <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 2nd <strong>of</strong><br />

March, opened accounts for Lenin, Trotsky, Ganetsky, Kollontay, Koz-<br />

lovsky (Kozlowski), Sumenson and o<strong>the</strong>r important Bolsheviks. Not only<br />

Lenin was involved in shady financial transfers, but also Trotsky,<br />

Zinoviev, Sverdlov, Dzerzhinsky, Kollontay, Josef (Isidor) Steinberg,<br />

Volodarsky, Ganetsky, Kozlowski, Radek, Uritsky, Menzhinsky, Y<strong>of</strong>fe<br />

and a few o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

On <strong>the</strong> same day, <strong>the</strong> 5th (18th) <strong>of</strong> July, Pavel Pereverzev, <strong>the</strong> minister<br />

<strong>of</strong> justice, was made <strong>the</strong> <strong>of</strong>ficial scapegoat for <strong>the</strong> fact that those secret<br />

documents had leaked to <strong>the</strong> press, and was forced to resign. It was<br />

claimed that <strong>the</strong> government first wanted a thorough investigation into <strong>the</strong><br />

Bolsheviks' alleged high treason.<br />

The Bolsheviks' premature attempt to take over power ended. It is<br />

explained in <strong>the</strong> collection "The History <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Communist Party <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Soviet Union" (Moscow, 1959, p. 218) that <strong>the</strong> workers and soldiers had<br />

sufficient strength to overthrow <strong>the</strong> Provisional Government and seize<br />

206

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