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The Romanovs
About the murder of the imperial Romanov family in Russia
by Jews, July 1918
As Dr. William Pierce noted, the brutal murder of
Czar Nicholas II and the Romanov family is an important topic which can be used
to start a conversation with anyone about the Bolsheviks and the so-called
Russian Revolution
At the beginning of July 1918 suspicion arose
among the top Jewish Bolshevik leaders that the soldiers who were guarding the
imperial Romanov family at the Ipatiev House in Ekaterinburg were undergoing a
change of attitude -- they were beginning to show signs of sympathy for the
Romanovs. So the squad of guards was ordered to be changed by the Jew Yakov
Yurovsky -- head of the Ekaterinburg section of the Cheka [secret police] and
then chief of Ipatiev's house guards. Ten new guards were then put in charge of
guarding the Romanovs until the death night, July 16th/17th.
The Romanov
family and several of their assistants were taken to a room where they were told
that a photo was going to be taken of them. After they were arranged in several
lines, Yurovsky stood in front of the family and read a quick condemnation of
sorts. Before the victims could react, the killers began shooting. They
bayonetted the girls. [One of the Jews later sexually fondled one of the dead
Romanov women at their burial site in a Russian forest, saying that he could die
happy having touched a royal breast].
One of the people present at the
murder of the Romanov family -- Medvedev, aka Medvedoff, a Russian -- later told
his wife that he was the only Russian among the key actors in the murders, of
course meaning that most of the killers were Jews, as has been noted by many
Romanov biographers. Furthermore, the Urals Regional Council of Deputies, which
was responsible for the fate of the Romanovs -- they issued the written 'death
warrant' that was read to Nicholas II by Yurovsky just before the killings
occurred -- consisted of five members, four of them Jewish: Shaya Goloshchekin,
Safarov, Voikov and Syromolotov. And the Urals Cheka was run by six Jews, among
them Goloshchekin, Efremov and Chustkevich. The Romanov death order itself came
from the Jew Yakov Sverdlov of the Soviet Central Committee in Moscow. Sverdlov
was a close pal of V. Lenin.
In other words, the people directly involved
in the Romanov murder event were almost all Jews, save one or
two.
Furthermore, seven other Romanovs were also hunted down and
murdered. The order for these deaths came from Sverdlov as well and the killings
were carried out by the Jews Soloviev and Goloshchekin.
Still another
group of people -- all of them members of the royal Romanov household -- were
also murdered by the same Jews after the Romanov killings. However, during their
murders the Czar's former valet managed to escape into the forest and so
survived to tell his tale of murder-by-Jew.
Sources for this
page include the book "The Zionist Factor: The Jewish Impact on Twentieth
Century History," by Ivor Benson, Noontide Press, Costa Mesa, CA., 1992 and the
book "The Last Days of the Romanovs" by Robert Wilton, Thornton Butterworth
Limited, London, 1920
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