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Why Didn't Stalin
Murder All the Jews It is probably a most comprehensive analysis of all the information,
theories and rumors pertaining to Stalin’s last campaign which could
have led to the annihilation of the Soviet Jewry. The campaign came to
a screeching halt with Stalin’s mysterious collapse into a coma
on March 1, 1953. The account is compact, easily readable and offers the
first rational explanation of the events. However, it compelled the author, a scientist, to look also for rational or other human motives behind the infamous campaign. This led through hundreds of books, newspaper articles, memories and rumors. Which of them could be trusted? It soon became apparent that most ‘revelations’ about the campaign were orchestrated by KGB and should be handled with care.
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Therefore, the author turned to the search for patterns in the events of the 1920s-1970s and in the characters, indicative of what might have happened and what various actors in the drama were capable of. He also uses an analogy between the reconstruction of what happened from bits and pieces of information and a reconstruction of a true image of an object from a set of noisy or distorted photographs taken from different directions. The author came up with an unexpected but consistent theory: A dramatic personal line and the stories of ordinary Soviet Jews directly told by the author’s relatives add an extra human dimension to this meticulously researched book. The author does not impose the choice between a divine intervention in the events and a political miscalculation, and leaves the reader to grope for the truth. This riveting account is of great interest to any student of modern Russian and Jewish history and to anyone pondering its mysteries. |
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