White vs White insanity; the juish holocaust of the Kazakhs

I dedicate this blog to a Danish comrade and outstanding donor who is on the honor roll for $1,000 plus in donations. This was his most recent contribution, equivalent to US$471.

 

I was quite smitten with a Danish reporter named Inge Arvad in another life. Later, she was the girlfriend of some guy named Kennedy.

He was hard to resist!

 

As for the Danish Free Corps of the Waffen-SS, its 6,000 volunteers fought valiantly on the Eastern Front…..,

Yet when they went home on leave from the front, they faced insane hostility from many of the Danish people — whom they were defending against bolshevism!

Himmler with the Danes

FACT: ALL foreign Waffen-SS volunteers were promised by contract that they would be used in combat only against the horrific Soviet Army.

They were not fighting for the Germans — but fighting against the communists!

Never were these non-Germans sent against the western Allies — the Anglo-Americans — or against their own countrymen who were partisans within  the anti-German resistance.

They only served on the Eastern Front!

My late wife Margaret and I translated 2006-08 the entire memoirs of French-Belgian Waffen-SS officer Leon Degrelle. For five years he fought ONLY the Soviets!

What a guy Degrelle was. 

 

So how on earth were those Danes (and Norwegians, Frenchmen, Belgians, Bosnians, etc.) “traitors” when they were only fighting the Red Army, which after WWII NATO also was formed to do?

But everything is connected.

This Danish mom taught her son to hate all Germans:

The Crown Prince Nicholas (who ruled Russia as Tsar Nicholas II 1889-1917) as a boy with his Danish mother Maria. 

She was an excellent mother but extremely anti-German, and this mindset she inculcated in her son, which was nuts because he then married a beautiful German princess, Alexandra, and he loved her dearly!

But all the other Germans he loathed.

This proved disastrous in WWI, leading to Russian military defeats, the tsar’s overthrow by bolshevik juze, and their murder of him, his whole family and staff.

 

And THEN came the full horrors of Soviet communism for 70 years!

…..and THEN came the spread of murderous marxism to China, North Korea, North Vietnam and Cuba, where the world nearly blew up over the Cuban Missile Crisis!

 

ONE HUNDRED MILLION PEOPLE DIED from communism, as the Black Book of Communism proved, and it is all connected to one Dane teaching one Russian to hate all Germans.

Nicholas spoke to his German wife Alexandra only in English!

Yes, we are all connected.

 

My father suffered terribly in the Korean War and was in a coma in 1952 for three days….in a way, because of that one Danish mom in the 1880s.

Because of him, my brother (rear center in the yellow shirt) was living in a friend’s car, drank himself to death, and died at just 60 in 2019!

We are all connected.

Glory to all my major donors who understand their karma, group karma, intergenerational karma.

A gift you give today will ensure safety and happiness to a white baby that will be born on 6 October of 2325!

 

…..Truly harrowing trailer to “The Crying Steppe”

This is really disturbing. The Kazakh people were just minding their own business when this vile, arrogant, sadistic genocidal ju Goloshchyokin showed up.

.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mDidkHgil4

 

They — Danes, Frenchmen, French Walloons and Dutch Flemings from Belgium — shed their lives to save European civilians from bolshevik rape and death!

 

 

…..A normal ju who just wanted to kill some goyim

Philip, a nice jewish boy, murdered the tsar, and ran the Kazakh genocide. See, the juze like to kill. It is THAT simple. They starve people to death and let the wolves eat them.

Literally.

 

Sculpture “Ana” in the Kazakh city of Almaty.

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Philip Goloshchyokin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Filipp Goloshchyokin
Филипп Голощёкин
Chief State Arbiter of the Council of People’s Commissars of the Soviet Union
In office
12 September 1933 – 15 October 1939
Preceded by Vasily Schmidt
Succeeded by Vsevolod Mozheiko
First Secretary of the Kazakh Regional Committee of the All-Union Communist Party
In office
19 February 1925 – 12 September 1933
Preceded by Viktor Naneishvili
Succeeded by Levon Mirzoyan
Full Member of the Central Committee of the 15th and 16th Party Congresses
In office
19 December 1927 – 10 February 1934
Candidate Member of the Central Committee of the 13th and 14th Party Congresses
In office
2 June 1924 – 19 December 1927
Personal details
Born
Shaya Itsikovich Goloshchyokin

9 March 1876
NevelVitebsk GovernorateRussian Empire

Died 28 October 1941 (aged 65)
KuybyshevRussian SFSRSoviet Union
Cause of death Execution by firing squad
Nationality RussianSoviet
Political party RSDLP (Bolsheviks(1903–1918)
Russian Communist Party (1918–1939)
Spouses
  • Bertha Iosifovna Perelman
  • Elizaveta Arsenievna Goloshchyokina
Known for Kazakhstan famine of 1932–1933Shooting of the Romanov Family, senior figure of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union

Filipp Isayevich Goloshchyokin[a] (RussianФилипп Исаевич Голощёкин) (born Shaya Itsikovich Goloshchyokin) (RussianШая Ицикович Голощёкин) (March 9 [O.S. February 26] 1876 – October 28, 1941) was a Jewish-Russian Bolshevik revolutionarySoviet politician, and party functionary.

A member of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party since 1903 and a founding member of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), he was a participant in the Revolution of 1905 and the October Revolution. During the Russian Civil War he was a major figure in the establishment of Soviet power in the Urals and Siberia, acting as the People’s Commissar for Military Affairs for the Ural Region, and a member of the Central Executive Committee of the Ural Regional Council of Workers’, Peasants’, and Soldiers’ Deputies, more commonly known as the Ural Soviet, as well as a member of the Perm Central Executive Committee. He was one of the primary perpetrators in the murder of the Romanov family.

Following the establishment of the Soviet Union in 1922, in his capacity as a senior figure in the Communist Party, he was elected as a Full and Candidate Member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1934, First Secretary of the Kazakh Regional Committee of the All-Union Communist Party from 1925 to 1933, and Chief State Arbiter of the Council of People’s Commissars of the USSR from 1933 to 1939. He played a deadly role in the Sovietization of Kazakhstan, (Small October [ru]), (RussianМалый Октябрь, a reference to the “Great October”), leading to the Kazakh famine of 1932–1933, in which 1.5 million people died, of whom 1.3 million were ethnic Kazakhs.[1] An estimated 25[1][2] to 42[3] percent of all Kazakhs died or emigrated, the highest percentage of any ethnic group killed by the Soviet famine of 1932–1933. Other sources state that as many as 1 to 2.3 million died.[4]

An active participant in Stalinist repression during the Great Purge (1936–1938), he was arrested after the fall of Nikolai Yezhov in 1939, and later shot without trial by the NKVD in 1941. He was posthumously rehabilitated in 1961, 20 years after his death, after de-Stalinization.

Early life and career

[edit]

Born 9 March [O.S. 26 February] 1876 in Nevel

to a family of Jewish contractors, his middle name has been spelt as, Isai (Yiddish: Shaya or Shai) and Isak, Isayevich, Isaakovich, Itskovich are indicated as real names.

 

After graduating from a dental school in Riga, Goloshchyokin worked for a time as a dental technician.

In 1903 he joined the RSDLP. He conducted revolutionary work in St. PetersburgKronstadtSestroretskMoscow and other cities. He took part in the Revolution of 1905–1907. From 1909, he worked in the Moscow Committee of the RSDLP and directed it. In 1909 he was arrested and exiled to the Narym region, and fled in 1910.

In 1912, he was a delegate to the Bolshevik Congress in Prague, at which Vladimir Lenin formalized the break with the Mensheviks and created a separate Bolshevik organization with its own Central Committee, of which Goloshchyokin was a founding member. He assumed the alias Filipp, also transliterated Philipp or Philippe, as his party cryptonym.

In 1913 he was again arrested by the Russian authorities and deported to the Turukhansk Territory in Siberia, and released only after the February Revolution in 1917. In May, Yakov Sverdlov, the Chairman of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, sent Goloshchyokin to the Ural Region, informing the local Bolsheviks: “Comrade Philippe has gone to the Urals; a man; very energetic; with the right party line”. He served as a member of the Perm Committee of the All-Union Communist Party, then a member of the Regional Committee.

As a delegate to the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, Goloshchyokin arrived in Petrograd. He joined the Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee and participated in the October Revolution. At the Second Congress of Soviets, he was elected a member of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee. Goloshchyokin recalled that before his departure for the Urals, Lenin aimed at delaying the convocation and the subsequent dispersal of the All-Russian Constituent Assembly.

After the success of the October Revolution and the outbreak of the Russian Civil War, he was elected to the Presidium of the Ural Regional Soviet, based in Ekaterinburg, and was elected Military Commissar of the Urals, where he formed and headed the Red Guard in the region and oversaw the activities of the Red Army Reserve District in Ekaterinburg. In Spring 1918, he proposed to execute Prince Georgy Lvov, who had served as Chairman of the Provisional Government after the February Revolution, and was a prisoner in Ekaterinburg, but was ordered not to by the People’s Commissar for Justice, a Left Socialist Revolutionary, during the period when the Left SRs were in coalition with the Bolsheviks.[5]

Killing of the Romanovs

[edit]

While he was in Moscow in the spring of 1918, Goloshchyokin decided to first suggest to Yakov Sverdlov that the former Emperor Nicholas II should be moved to Ekaterinburg, where there was less chance of his being rescued by the anti-Bolshevik White Army. Sverdlov and Lenin were reluctant to agree because they planned to put the former emperor on trial in a grand public spectacle, with Leon Trotsky acting as Chief Prosecutor, and they suspected that the militant Ekaterinburg Bolsheviks would lynch him instead, but ultimately agreed that the prisoner and his family should pass through Ekaterinburg on the way to Moscow.[6]

Upon arrival in Ekaterinburg, the family and their retainers were imprisoned in the Ipatiev House on the suggestion of Pyotr Voykov, a member of the Ural Soviet, with Yakov Yurovsky, a ranking member of the Ekaterinburg Cheka, appointed as commandant of the Ipatiev House by the decision of the Soviet. Though Yurovsky held direct command on the grounds, overall command was ultimately held by Goloshchyokin as Military Commissar of the Ural Region. In this capacity, he frequently oversaw the dismissal of guardsmen believed too sympathetic to the family and their replacement with more hardened, ruthless Bolshevists. When one of the guards, Ivan Skorokhodov, who was smitten with the Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna, smuggled a birthday cake to the grand duchess for her 19th birthday and was caught fraternizing with the same, Goloshchyokin had him arrested and tightened security.[7]

In a special session on 29 June the Ural Soviet met at the Cheka headquarters in the Amerikanskaya Hotel and agreed that the entire Romanov family should be executed. Goloshchyokin arrived in Moscow on 3 July with a message insisting on the tsar’s death.[8] Only seven of the 23 members of the Central Executive Committee were in attendance at the time, three of whom were Lenin, Sverdlov and Felix Dzerzhinsky, where it was seemingly agreed the tsar should be killed without delay, with the details and preparations being left to the discretion of the Ural Soviet.[9]

The tsar’s four daughters

Yurovsky detailed his interactions with Goloshchyokin in great detail in his memoirs, stating: “In about the middle of July, Filipp told me we had to make preparations for the liquidation in case the [White] front got any closer.” On 15 or 16 July, Yurovsky was informed by the Ural Soviet that Red Army contingents were retreating in all directions, and the executions could not be delayed any longer. A coded telegram seeking final approval was sent by Goloshchyokin and Georgy Safarov at around 6:00 PM to Lenin and Sverdlov in Moscow, but the lines were down and they could not get a direct connection, leaving them with no choice but to send the telegram on the direct line to Petrograd instead addressed to Grigory Zinoviev, the head of the Petrograd Soviet, based in the Smolny Institute, with a request to forward a copy to Sverdlov in Moscow. Zinoviev duly forwarded the telegraph to Moscow, noting that he had done so by 5:50 PM Petrograd time. There is no surviving documented record of a final answer from Moscow, although Yurovsky insisted that an order from the Central Executive Committee to move forward signed by Sverdlov had been passed on to him by Goloshchyokin at around 7:00 PM.

While Beloborodov and Safarov remained at the local Cheka Headquarters at the Amerikanskaya Hotel nearby, Goloshchyokin arrived personally at the Ipatiev House along with Peter Ermakov and Stepan Vaganov as a representative of the Ural Soviet to direct the executions, but did not appear to physically participate in the shooting himself, and instead remained outside with the other guardsmen while Yurovsky personally led the assembled death squad.

Goloshchyokin is said to have nervously paced back and forth along the perimeter palisade erected around the Ipatiev House in an attempt to determine whether anyone could hear what was going on from outside as one of the guardsmen revved the engines of the fiat truck waiting outside to mask the sounds of the gunfire and barking dogs.

Nicholas and Alexandra, killed by the bolshevik juze — financed by ju banker Jacob Schiff

When it was clear that the gunfire could be discerned even from outside the palisade walls, one of the guards, Alexei Kabanov, told the killers to cease fire and to use their bayonets and gun butts.[10]

He was the grandson of Queen Victoria of England, just like the Kaiser of Germany, his cousin, on whom he foolishly and unnecessarily declared war. 

As the corpses were brought out from the house and loaded onto the truck, Goloshchyokin stooped down to examine the corpse of the tsar, murmuring, “So this is the end of the Romanov Dynasty, is it…”, to which Mikhail Kudrin responded: “No, not yet; there is still much work to be done”.

According to Kudrin, when the body of the French Bulldog Ortino, “the last pathetic remnant of the Imperial Family”, was brought out on the end of a Red Guardsman’s bayonet and unceremoniously hurled onto the fiat, Goloshchyokin sneered, “Dogs deserve a dogs death” as he glared at the dead tsar.[11][12]

Goloschyokin climbed into the truck and departed along with Yurovsky, Kudrin, Ermakov, and Vaganov, while Yurovsky’s deputy Nikulin was left in charge of the Ipatiev House.

At a telegraph office in Ekaterinburg on 18 July, he caught Thomas Preston, a diplomat at the British Consulate, attempting to cable Sir Arthur Balfour in London with the message, “The Tsar Nicholas the Second was shot last night.”[13] Goloshchyokin snatched it, and struck out the words of Preston’s text with a red pencil, rewriting on the paper, “The hangman Tsar Nicholas was shot last night – a fate he richly deserved.”[14]

On 19 July, Goloshchyokin announced at the Opera House on Glavny Prospekt that “Nicholas the Bloody” had been shot and his family taken to a secure location.[15] He subsequently oversaw the disposal of the remains along with Yurovsky, while Beloborodov and Nikulin oversaw the ransacking of the Romanov’s quarters, with the most valuable items piled into Yurovsky’s office and later transported to Moscow in sealed trunks under heavy guard by commissars on Goloshchyokin’s instructions, while items deemed of little consequence were stuffed into the stoves and burned. Goloshchyokin was safely evacuated from Ekaterinburg along with most of the other members of the Ural Soviet prior to the arrival of the White Army, who captured Ekaterinburg on 25 July.

Famine in Kazakhstan

[edit]

From October 1922 to 1925, Goloshchyokin served as Chairman of the Samara Provincial Council of Workers, Peasants and Red Army Deputies, Chairman of the Samara Gubernaya Executive Committee and a member of the Provincial Committee of the RCP. On October 23, 1922, he abolished martial law in the Samara Province. He was elected a Candidate Member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1924, and a Full Member in 1927. On 19 February 1925, he was appointed First Secretary of the Communist Party in the newly created Kazakh Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic.

From 1925 to 1933 he ran the Kazakh ASSR as a local dictator with virtually no outside interference. He played a prominent part in the construction of the Turkestan-Siberia railway, which was constructed to open up Kazakhstan’s mineral wealth. After Joseph Stalin ordered the forced collectivization of agriculture throughout the Soviet Union, Goloshchyokin ordered that Kazakhstan’s largely nomadic population was to be forced to settle in collective farms. This caused a deadly famine in Kazakhstan which killed between 1 and 2 million people.[1]

Stalin and two of his demonic friends

Some historians and scholars contend that this famine amounted to genocide of the Kazakhs,[16] however others do not accept this view.[17] In Kazakhstan some studies repeated the Soviet explanation of the genocide, labeling it as the Goloshchyokin genocide.[18] 38% of all Kazakhs died, the highest number of any ethnic group killed per capita in the Soviet famines of the early 1930s. Violent measures were taken to enable the transfer of nomads to sedentary lifestyles, which led to massive casualties, mainly among the indigenous Kazakh population. Large numbers of Kazakh nomads fled across the border into Xinjiang in the Republic of China during this time.[19]

While a general figure of around 1–2 million deaths is often given, some Kazakh historians, such as Professor K.M. Abzhanov, Director of the Institute of History and Ethnology, give significantly higher estimates of the number of victims of the famine and violence: “Hunger killed at least 3 million Kazakhs. One-sixth of the indigenous population left their historical homeland forever. Of 3.5 million Kazakhs in 1897 accounting for 82% of the region’s population, by 1939 there were only 2.3 million, their share in the population of the republic fell to 38%”. Two Soviet censuses show that the number of the Kazakhs in the Kazakh ASSR dropped from 3,637,612 in 1926 to 2,181,520 in 1937. The actions of the Soviet government made Kazakhs a minority in the Kazakh ASSR, and not until the 1990s did Kazakhs become the largest group in Kazakhstan again.[20]

A historian of the revolution, V.L. Burtsev, who knew Goloshchyokin, characterized him as such:

This is a typical Leninist. This is a man who does not stop the blood. This trait is especially noticeable in his nature: the executioner, cruel, with some elements of degeneration. In party life he was arrogant, was a demagogue, a cynic. He did not count the Kazakhs as people at all. Goloshchekin did not have time to appear in Kazakhstan, as he stated that there is no Soviet power, and it is “necessary” to orchestrate a “Small October”.

Statements that, in seven years, he never went outside the capital and was not interested in how the people lived, did not correspond to reality. In April 1931, for example, Goloshchyokin toured ten raions of the republic. Nonetheless, the handling of collectivization and “dekulakization” under his leadership in Kazakhstan is remembered by a feeling of hatred and horror by the Kazakh people.

Downfall

[edit]

In August 1932, the second most senior communist in Kazakhstan, the Chairman of the Council of People’s Commissars, Uraz Isayev, wrote to Stalin accusing Goloshchyokin of believing his own myth that every single Kazakh had decided to join the collective farms, and of blaming his own mistakes on ‘kulaks‘. In October, a prominent Kazakh writer, Gabit Musirepov reporting finding corpses stacked like firewood by the roadside in the Turgai district of Kazakhstan. The West Siberian party boss, Robert Eikhe, also complained about starving Kazakhs pouring into Siberia, while Stalin and Vyacheslav Molotov queried the number of Kazakh refuges crossing the border into China.

Goloshchyokin defended himself by claiming that the poor and middle income Kazakhs had “Voluntarily, in powerful waves, turned towards socialism”. At first it appeared he had Stalin’s support. On 11 November 1932, he and Isaev ordered the mass arrest and deportation of peasants accused of impeding grain collection. In January 1933, at a plenum of the Central Committee, he boasted of the “enormous successes” of the Five year Plan in Kazakhstan[21] – but a few days later, he was suddenly sacked, and was subject to widespread public criticism for his handling of collectivization. By blaming the famine on Goloshchyokin personally rather than larger structural issues with collectivization, Stalin failed to prevent similar problems during collectivization in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic that would lead to the Holodomor.[19]

After his return to Moscow, despite being appointed to a senior post as President of the State Council of Arbitration, Goloshchyokin brooded over his dismissal, and threatened suicide until his exasperated wife, Elizaveta Arsenievna Goloshchyokina, handed him a pistol and dared him to shoot himself – after which he reputedly never threatened suicide again.[22] Throughout his term as Chief State Arbiter of the Council of People’s Commissars, he was an active participant in Stalinist repression, and was a frequent contact and collaborator of Nikolai Yezhov, the head of the NKVD from 1936 to 1938 during the most active period of the Great Purge.

Arrest and execution

[edit]

Unlike most prominent Old Bolsheviks, he survived the Great Purge unscathed for as long as Nikolai Yezhov was the head of the NKVD; but when Yezhov was arrested in 1939, he made a detailed confession to his interrogators, including the information that he had lived in Goloshchyokin’s apartment in Kzyl-Orda, then the capital of the Kazakh ASSR, in the latter half of 1925, and that during those months, they were homosexual lovers.[23] Homosexuality was not a criminal offense in the USSR in 1925, though it was criminalized in 1934,[24] but Goloshchyokin, who was almost 20 years older than Yezhov, was arrested nonetheless on 15 October 1939.

He was accused of sympathy for Trotskyism, the preparation of a terrorist act, excesses in the matter of collectivization, and of spying for Nazi Germany.[25]

*** JdN: Good things about the psychopathic monster Stalin:

— Wile he used juze, he killed them too and took away their power. In four waves, he killed tens of thousands of bolshevik juze: The Trotskyite purge of the 1920s; the Moscow Show Trials of the 1930s; the Cosmopolitan Trials of the 1940s; and the Doctors Plot trials of the 1950s.

Trotsky (Lev Bronstein) fled to Mexico where a Soviet assassin — his own secretary – snuck up behind him and struck him with an icepick in the brain.

— Stalin also promoted Russian nationalism and patriotism

— He decreed an inofficial policy that no ju could be the head of anything in the Soviet Union, at most the number-two.

— After recognizing Israel, he turned against it, and began arming Arab countries and training their soldiers to fight against IsraHell

Soviet poster: Uncle Sam with a $ sign on his hat pours booze from many bottles, all marked with dollar signs, for Israel to drink, who is holding a border post that looks like a brutal club, and with blood on the bottom of his boots.

Autumn 1973. The GDR (“German Democratic Republic” AKA communist East Germany) supplies twelve MiG fighter planes, including ammunition, to the Syrian army under the very anti-Israel Assad family.

Syria uses them to bombard the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights during the Yom Kippur War. GDR state and party leader Erich Honecker personally approved the military aid – the fact that German weapons again kill Jews does not bother him. In 1982 he toasts Yasir Arafat, leader of the PLO, the Palestinian Liberation Organization, which advocated the end of Israel

 

***

Goloshchyokion spent 12 months under heavy interrogation in the Sukhanovo Prison, after which he was returned to Butyrka prison by August 1941 at the time of the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union during World War II, and was then transferred a final time to Kuybyshev by 17 October, when the headquarters of the NKVD were evacuated there in connection with the approach of the Wehrmacht towards Moscow.

He was one of 20 ‘especially dangerous’ prisoners, who included 14 high-ranking military officers, who were executed by firing squad on 28 October 1941 on the direct orders of Lavrentiy Beria near the village of Barbysh and consigned to an unmarked grave.[26][27]

He was posthumously rehabilitated in 1961, 20 years after his death. From 1976 to 1990, one of the streets in Ekaterinburg, then known as Sverdlovsk, was named after Goloshchyokin.

Name

[edit]

The surname is often written as “Goloshchekin”, a transliteration of the surname written without diacritics: Голощeкин.

He is also often referred to as Shaya Goloshchekin (Шая) by the diminutive from the name Isay in Yiddish. “Filipp” was his party cryptonym.

Family

[edit]

His first wife, Bertha Iosifovna Perelman, was born in 1876 to the family of an artisan. She was arrested and sent into exile in the Narym region. In exile Bertha Perelman married Goloshchyokin. She died in 1918.

He subsequently married Elizaveta Arsenievna Goloshchyokina.

[edit]

Goloshchyokin was portrayed by Lithuanian actor Jokūbas Bareikis in the 2019 American docudrama The Last Czars, and by Russian actor Sergei Nikonenko in the 2021 Kazakh film The Crying Steppe.

[end]

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……Kazakhstan

….the ninth-biggest country on earth….

…it is mostly steppe (grasslands with few or no trees, and some mountains)

Astana, the capital, with trees that were planted

The country has lots of oil, gas, gold and silver. The people are a mix of East Asian and white (both from ancient Aryan Iranians and from modern slavic Russians) and speak a Turkish language.

Kazakh soldiers

.

They are friendly with both Russia and China, 69% moderate muslim, and they defeated a CIA-launched coup in 2023 with the help of Russian troops.

Russia’ version of Cape Canaveral, the Baikonur Cosmodrome, is located in Kazakhstan and was started there in 1955 when it belonged to the Soviet Union.

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……Goloshchyokin’s Genocide — article and trailer

https://www.ewawomen.com/film-industry-articles/the-crying-steppe-by-marina-kunarova-is-the-kazakh-entry-for-the-oscars-2021/

The Crying Steppe, by Marina Kunarova is the Kazakh entry for the Oscars 2021

Alexia Muiños Ruiz
Alexia Muiños Ruiz

Marina Kunarova, the first Kazakh female director candidate to the Oscars

Kunarova is an alumna of the EWA Network Multiple Revenue Stream Training course, where this film was developed. “The Crying Steppe” is her third directorial feature after 2010’s 999 and 2014’s Hunting The Phantom;  Currently, she is developing an action feature titled Kill Tarantino. 

We are ecstatic to see Marina Kunarova’s film on its way to the Oscars.

“70% of indigenous population of Kazakhstan died during the Great Famine, artificially imposed on people in the 1920s by the Bolsheviks. Overcoming blind fear of death and despair, an eagle hunter Turar tries to save his family. ”

The Director

Marina Kunarova began working in the film industry when she was 17. She started as a clapper loader and worked her way up, eventually becoming a film director and scriptwriter. She has worked with films in different genres; however, her favorite is definitely action. Most of her filmmaking skills come from working on sets. She has also attended several filmmaking and scriptwriting workshops and seminars around the world. But she believes that practice is the best way to learn and improve your skills.

Filmography as a Director:

2010: 999 (director, scriptwriter)
Kurdastar TV serial (director, scriptwriter);
2014: Hunting the Phantom feature film (director, scriptwriter)
2017: Like a men TV serial (director, scriptwriter);

2017: The Reporter (director, scriptwriter)

2015-2020 The Crying Steppe (director, scriptwriter)

2020: Years of Joy and love feature film (director, scriptwriter)

It is quite astonishing that little is known in the West about one of the most horrendous acts of cruelty in modern history. In the 1920s and 30s some eight million Kazakhs, 70% of the nation’s population, were killed through systemic starvation by Stalin’s Soviet Union. This exceeds the Jewish Holocaust which came just half-a-dozen years later. Writer and director Marina Kunarova turns her camera’s light on this obscure devastation in her film The Crying Steppe.

It was known as the Goloshchyokin genocide, named after the man most responsible, Filipp Goloshchyokin. He was a founding member of the Russian Communist Party, leader of those who killed Tzar Nicolas II and other members of the Romanov Family, and the head of the Sovietization of Kazakhstan. He got his comeuppance when his protector, Nikoli Yezhov, head of the NKVD, was executed in 1937. Goloshchyokin was arrested two years later and executed without trial by the NKVD in 1941.

But that was too late for the millions of Kazakh victims. They were considered inferior by the Bolsheviks, who took their cattle and cereal to be used in the cities. The Soviet government confiscated food and livestock from the Kazakhs in order to buy weapons. With these exact weapons, the Bolsheviks suppressed uprisings. More than 300 uprisings took place in Kazakhstan in just one year under Soviet ruling. The Soviet authorities undertook a campaign of persecution against the nomad Kazakhs, believing that the destruction of the class was a worthy sacrifice for the collectivization of Kazakhstan. Hunger was a tool for suppressing the freedom of the people, invented by the Soviet government specifically for those people who resisted the Soviet regime.

This is the first time a feature film has ever accurately depicted one of the most catastrophic periods in the history of Kazakhstan, events which have been kept a secret from the world until now. At a time when wheat grains were more expensive than human life, the Holodomor “Murder by Hunger” affected many of the Soviet Union republics, including Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Bashkiria, Tatarstan, Chechnya, Azerbaijan, Armenia etc, with over 47 million Soviet people suffering death or severe, acute malnutrition during the ten years of famine.

The hunger was so great that a few took to cannibalism.

Others were so weak that they could not fight off, nor run from hungry packs of wolves.

But some did manage to escape with their cattle to neighboring countries.

In the 1920s, despite the difficult circumstances during those years of famine, the USA, the American Relief Administration (ARA), the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) and the European countries tried to get the humanitarian help to the starving people on the territory of the Soviet Union. More than 15 million lives were saved from starvation death.

Even in Kazakhstan itself people and the government today try not to talk about it, think about it, remember it. In fact, it was not until 1990 that Kazakhs once more became the majority in their own country.

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Esenya Antheia, also alumna of EWA Network’s MRST has worked in The Crying Steppe as creative producer and the second unit director.

The film is a Kazakh production however, European producers such as Eleonora Granata, Birgit Gernböck and Angelika Schouler have been attached to the project.

 

Wherever the juze go, they kill.

Blood of Mary Phagan in 1913

1 Comment

  1. I don’t agree with the mainstream narrative that Jews have been persecuted throughout history. I think they’ve committed horrific crimes and persecuted other people in every country they’ve been in, including Ancient Persia, Turkey Armenia (the Middle East), central Asia and China.

    And I think it’s been a normal reaction by the victims of their diabolical, subhuman behaviour.

    They’re a bunch of psychotic liars, Most people could not imagine the huge scale at which they lie. The “big lie” technique is a good way of manipulating the stupid people.

    Most people can’t comprehend their cowardly, subhuman behaviour, because there is no other group like that.

    Islam is backwards and barbaric, but at least they’re honest about their subhuman behavior and the retarded ideology they follow.

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