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The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

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Many <strong>of</strong> the bolsheviks, apart from Lenin and Trotsky, were<br />

freemasons: Boris Solovyov, Vikenti Veresayev, Grigori Zinoviev<br />

(Grand Orient), Maxim Litvinov, Nikolai Bukharin (actually Moshe<br />

Pinkhus-Dolgolevsky), Christian Rakovsky, Yakov Sverdlov, Anatoli<br />

Lunacharsky (actually Balich-Mandelstam), Mechislav Kozlovsky<br />

(Polish freemason), Karl Radek (Grand Orient), Mikhail Borodin,<br />

Leonid Krasin, Vladimir Dzhunkovsky, and many more. In the KGB<br />

archives, the historian Viktor Bratyev found a document according to<br />

which Lunacharsky belonged to the Grand Orient <strong>of</strong> France (Anton<br />

Pervushin, "<strong>The</strong> Occult Secret <strong>of</strong> the NKVD and the SS", St. Peters-<br />

burg, Moscow 1999, p. 133).<br />

At the Fourth Comintern Congress, Lev Trotsky announced that the<br />

comrades Zinoviev, Radek and Bukharin were freemasons (Viktor<br />

Brachev, "<strong>The</strong> Freemasons in Russia", St. Petersburg, 2002, p. 439).<br />

Even before the seizure <strong>of</strong> <strong>power</strong> in October 1917 Zinoviev, Trotsky<br />

and Kamenev paid a visit to the lodge <strong>The</strong> Students <strong>of</strong> St. Petersburg<br />

(Yuri Begunov, "<strong>The</strong> Secret Powers in Russian History", Moscow,<br />

2000, p. 308).<br />

"What we need is hatred!" was a favourite saying <strong>of</strong> Anatoli<br />

Lunacharsky, the people's commissar for educational affairs.<br />

Lenin, Zinoviev, Radek and Sverdlov were also members <strong>of</strong> B'nai<br />

B'rith. This was confirmed by those specializing in the activities <strong>of</strong><br />

B'nai B'rith, among them Schwartz-Bostunich (Viktor Ostretsov,<br />

"Freemasonry, Culture, and Russian History", Moscow, 1999, pp. 582-<br />

583).<br />

Until the late 1990s, a particularly dark secret concerning Lenin<br />

was kept well hidden, as is shown by the correspondence between<br />

Lenin and his party comrade and freemason brother Grigori Zinoviev<br />

(Radomyslsky). Lenin wrote to Zinoviev on 1 July 1917: "Grigori!<br />

Circumstances force me to leave Petrograd immediately... <strong>The</strong> comrades<br />

suggested a place... It is so dull, being alone... Join me and let us spend<br />

some wonderful days together, far from everything..."<br />

Zinoviev wrote to Lenin: "Dear Vova! You have not answered me.<br />

Probably you have forgotten your Gershel [Grigori]. I have prepared a fine<br />

312

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