Jewish WW2 leaders and their bloodlines

A look into WW2 leaders and their bloodlines(3)
Hitler and his top Generals were Jews.

Stalin-Djugashvili-KOCHBA

Stalin Was A Jewish Moscow Coffee House Radical

Stalin’s childhood origins were supposedly Georgian, but the truth is his mother was Ossete, from the Khazarian region.In the Georgian language “shvili” means son of, or son, as in Johnson. “Djuga” means Jew. Therefore Djugashvili means Jewison.

So Joe Stalin’s real name, before he changed it, was Joe Jewison. It gets better, his name was Joseph David Djugashvili, a typical Jewish name. During his revolutionary days he changed his name to “Kochba”, the leader of the Jews during one of the anti-Roman uprisings of the Jews. Russians don’t change their names. Georgians don’t change their names. Jews change their names.

Stalin’s mother Ekaterina did laundry and housekeeping for David Papisnedov, a local Jew, who was Stalin’s real father. Their nickname for Stalin was “Soso”. Stalin received Papisnedov at the Kremlin often. Comrade Papisnedov often was visited by Nikolai Przhevalsky, a Jewish trader, and he is also considered a possibility as Stalin’s father.

Stalin had three wives, all of them Jewesses

The first was Ekaterina Svanidze who bore him one son, Jacob.

The Second Wife

His second wife was Kadya Allevijah. She bore him a son Vassili, and a daughter Svetlana. His second wife died in mysterious circumstances, either by committing suicide, or murdered by Stalin.

Wife Number Three

His third wife was Rosa Kaganovich, the sister of Lazar Kaganovich, who was the head of Soviet industry.

Svetlana Stalin

Stalin’s daughter (who in 1967 fled to the USA) then married Lazar’s son Mihail i.e. her step-mother’s nephew. Svetlana Stalin had a total of four husbands, three of them Jewish.

Vassili Stalin

Stalin’s vice-president Molotov was also married to a Jewess, whose brother, Sam Karp, runs an export business in Connecticut. Just to complicate things even more, the Molotov’s (half-Jewish) daughter also called Svetlana was engaged to be married to Stalin’s son Vassili.

The Rise to Power of Joeseph Djugashvili,
Known to the World as Joeseph Stalin

Joseph Vissarionovich Djugashvili (Stalin) had a career in the revolutionary movement in Russia but he would not have risen to the power he achieved if it had not been for Vladimir Ulanov (Lenin) selecting him for the important assignment of being the minister in the Bolshevik government responsible for national minorities. The assignment did not initially include an office, but Djugashvili set up a table and chair and began to compile a card index of contacts. Djugashvili had good organizational skills.

Djugashvili was in exile in Siberia during the momentous times of the March Revolution and the October Bolshevik coup d’etat. He was released from Siberia and came to Moscow where Lenin had transferred the capital from St. Petersburg. It was not ordained that he would have any significant role in the government. It was only Lenin’s selection of him as Minister of National Minorities that gave him a role.

The structure of the Communist Party was that there was a Politburo (Political Bureau) that debated and set policy and an Orgburo (Organizational Bureau) that managed the party apparatus. Once the Politburo decided on policy someone had to convey the orders to the people in the Orgburo for them to implement the policy. The laison between the Politburo and the Orgburo was from the inception of Bolshevik government was Joseph Stalin. It was not a glamourous assignment, but Stalin recognized its potential for power. Later the Politburo made Stalin General Secretary of the Communist Party. Without realizing it the Politburo handed the levers of power for the Soviet Union to Joseph Stalin. Stalin immediately started aggrandizing his power. Friends and followers he put into positions of power in the hierarchy of the Communist Party. Those that countered him were transferred out of Moscow to distant assignments. This threat brought the other party members into line.

In his position as General Secretary Stalin had a degree of power over the functioning of the Politburo. He could set the agenda and provide copies of background papers for the Politburo.

Physically Stalin was not an imposing figure. He was about five foot four inches in height. His left arm was weakend from a childhood illness and he did not have full use of it. He spoke Russian with a Georgian accent. His face was pock-marked from small pox.

The other members of the Politburo did not consider Stalin a serious contendor for power. It was as if the Clinton administration had included a short, handicapped Puerto Rican. The other members would not have taken him to be a serious rival.

George Kennan, the American expert on Russia and archtect of much of American policy toward the Soviet Union said of Stalin:

Stalin’s greatness as a dissimulator was an integral part of his greatness as a statesman. An unforewarned visitor would never have guessed what depths of calculation, ambition, love of power, jealousy, cruelty, and sly vindictiveness lurked behind this unpretentious facade.
Stalin’s Childhood
The man whom the world would come to know as Joseph Stalin was born Iosif Vissarionovich Djugashvili, on December 21, 1879, in the Georgian province of Tiflis (Tbilisi) in the village of Gori, a small town in the southern reaches of the vast Russian Empire. He was the third child born to Vissarion Dzhugashvili, a poor shoemaker, and his wife Yekaterina, who augmented her husband’s income by working as a domestic servant. However, the young Iosif was the only one of their offspring to survive infancy. Vissarion was an abusive, hard-drinking man, who eventually failed as an independent artisan and left his family to work in a factory in Tiflis, the capital of Georgia, when his son was five years old. For the rest of Stalin’s childhood, Joseph and Yekaterina lived in the home of a priest, Father Charkviani, where the pious, hard-working woman attempted to ensure that her only son would be well-educated enough to escape the drudgery of a lower-class existence.
Georgia was a mountainous region, which at the time of Stalin’s birth had been under the rule of the Tsar for only about fifty years. Like other great despots such as the Austrian-born German ruler Adolph Hitler and the Corsican-born French leader Napoléon Bonaparte (originally Napoleone di Buonaparte) , Stalin was an outsider, a provincial in the empire he came to rule. Georgians possessed their own culture and language, which was radically different from the official Russian of the empire, and the young Stalin only began learning Russian when he was nine years old. Years later, at the height of his power, he still spoke with a pronounced Georgian accent, and while he boasted that he had forgotten the language of his birth, it is reported that in his last years his ability to speak Russian deteriorated, and he spoke only in Georgian.
In other ways in his early life, Stalin retained pieces of his native culture–during his early days as a revolutionary, he took the name “Koba,” after a legendary Georgian bandit who was the hero of a popular novel. But Stalin never showed any partiality to Georgia politically: he generally treated it, in his own words, as merely a “little piece of Soviet territory called Georgia.”

Culturally separate as it was, one institution that Stalin’s birthplace shared with the larger Russian Empire was the Orthodox Church; indeed, Georgia actually converted to Christianity more than 500 years before Russia. The Church played a strong role in his early life: he lived with a priest, and his schooling was religious. His mother enrolled him in the Gori Church School in September 1888, when her son was nine, and he graduated six years later, despite various interruptions. (One of these interruptions lasted a whole year: Stalin’s father took the young boy to Tiflis to work alongside him in a shoe factory. Vissarion seems to have intended this as a permanent career for his son, but his mother intervened, and succeeded in bringing her son home to Gori. Thereafter his father was never a strong presence in Stalin’s life–he would die before World War I, although the exact date is uncertain.) Stalin was a somewhat misshapen and diminutive boy: smallpox left his face scarred and pitted for the rest of his life, and a case of blood poisoning caused his left arm to grow shorter than his right; in a school photograph he appears considerably smaller than the boys around him. (Indeed, he would never cut a very imposing figure–he grew to just five feet four inches, and for the rest of his life his shortness rankled him, causing him to resort to platform shoes and other devices in an effort to appear taller than he actually was.) However, Stalin received excellent grades, and distinguished himself in the school choir. He seems to have loved reading, devouring the classics of Georgian literature as well as adventure novels, and he had a passion for the outdoors, spending days climbing in the wild, mountainous countryside around Gori. Thus he was ardent and energetic, and developed physical strength despite his short arm and small stature. He was swarthy, too, and contemporaries described his eyes as being yellowish–many compared them to the eyes of a tiger. Stalin graduated from the church school in July 1894, near the top of his class. He had a reputation for being callous toward his fellow students, and had been in trouble with the school authorities a few times, but there were no other signs of the direction his career was to take. Indeed, he seems to have been a pious young man–unsurprising, given his upbringing. At his mother’s urging, he applied for and won a small scholarship to the Tiflis Theological Seminary, where he enrolled in September 1894. The Seminary was for children of priests and the priest that Stalin’s family lived with had to register Joseph as his son in order for Joseph to attend.
Yekaterina worked hard to afford the tuition, and she nourished a strong hope that her son would become a priest. Indeed, even years later, when Stalin ruled all of Russia, she told an interviewer that she would have preferred for him to have entered the priesthood. Russia, in retrospect, undoubtably would have preferred it as well.

FOTO:STALIN AND FIRST WIFE Ekaterina Svanidze

Churchill-Jacobson

Churchill’s Mother Was Jewish

Winston Churchill was the spoiled son of an aristocratic father and an American mother who doted on him. As a young man he was a dilettante who developed an early taste for expensive clothes, imported cigars and old brandy.

At 26 he entered parliament.

In the company of members of the English aristocracy and establishment Winston’s ‘night on the town’ often ended at fringe homosexual private shows in which every depravity known to man was indulged.

Jenny Jacobson

Churchill’s mother was Jenny Jerome. Her father was involved in theatre investment and changed his name from Jacobson to Jerome.

‘Cunning, no doubt, came to Churchill in the Jewish genes transmitted by his mother Lady Randolph Churchill , née Jenny Jacobson/Jerome.’ Moshe Kohn, Jerusalem Post. In England at the beginning of the 1900s commenting that there were very few English aristocrat families left that hadn’t intermarried with aspiring Jews. It was said that, when they visited the Continent, Europeans were surprised to see Jewish looking persons with English titles and accents.

http://blockyourid.com/~gbpprorg/judicial-inc/winston_churchill_biography.htm

Roosevelt-Rosenfelt

The Roosevelts (nee Rosenfelt) were Jewish Dutch

Marten Van Rosenfelt
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Claes Martensen Van Rosenfelt
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Nicholas Roosevelt
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+—————————-+
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Johannes Roosevelt Jacobus Roosevelt
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Jacobus Roosevelt Isaac Roosevelt
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Jacobus Roosevelt James Roosevelt
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Cornelius Roosevelt Isaac Roosevelt
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Eliot Roosevelt James Roosevelt = Sara Delano
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Anna Eleanor—-married——-Franklin Delano [U.S. President]

Claes Rosenfelt

The first Roosevelt came to America in 1649. His name was Claes Rosenfelt. He was a Jew. Nicholas, the son of Claes was the ancestor of both Franklin and Theodore. He married a Jewish girl, named Kunst, in 1682. Nicholas had a son named Jacobus Rosenfeld…” (The Corvallis Gazette Times of Corballis, Oregon).

“Claes Rosenvelt entered the cloth business in New York, and was married in 1682. He accumulated a fortune. He then changed his name to Nicholas Roosevelt. Of his four sons, Isaac died young. Nicholas married Sarah Solomons. Jacobus married Catherina Hardenburg.

The Roosevelts were not a fighting but a peace-loving people, devoted to trade. Isaac became a capitalist. He founded the Bank of New York in 1790.”

Sarah Delano

“The President’s father married Sarah Delano; and it become clear. Schmalix (genealogist) writes: ‘In the seventh generation we see the mother of Franklin Delano Roosevelt as being of Jewish descent.

The Delanos are descendants of Italian or Spanish Jewish family; Dilano, Dilan, Dillano. The Jew Delano drafted an agreement with the West Indies Co., in 1657 regarding the colonization of the island of Curacao. About this the directors of the West Indies Co., had correspondence with the Governor of New Holland.

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One Response to “Jewish WW2 leaders and their bloodlines”

  1. Soveraine says:

    Great article. Finally somewhere to write it properly and throughly.

    You forgot one crucial detail. Jews have no bridge between the nose and forehead. Their nose sloaps directly from the root of their forehead, with no “bridge” between the eyes.

    Stalin has no nose bridge, neither does Ruswelt. Their jewish noses sloap directly from their foreheads.

    Whereas Hitler has a visible bridge between the angle of the nose and the forehead, between the eyes. Therefore the “jewish sloaped nose” isn’t present in Adolf.

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