Ike Nahem
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Lenin on the Train
- De: Catherine Merridale
- Narrado por: Gordon Griffin
- Duración: 10 h y 2 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
In April 1917, as Tsar Nicholas II's abdication sent shockwaves across war-torn Europe, the future leader of the Bolshevik revolution, Vladimir Lenin, was far away, exiled in Zurich. To lead the revolt, Lenin needed to return to Petrograd immediately. But to get there, he would have to cross Germany, which meant accepting help from the deadliest of Russia's adversaries and betraying his homeland.
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Deteriorates into Unhinged Lenin-Bashing
- De Ike Nahem en 03-18-19
- Lenin on the Train
- De: Catherine Merridale
- Narrado por: Gordon Griffin
Deteriorates into Unhinged Lenin-Bashing
Revisado: 03-18-19
This book especially in the final chapter rapidly goes from a good read (or hearing as it were) with lots of facts, style, and anecdotes to unhinged Lenin-bashing and spurious assertions that just echoes the capitalist party line, e.g. Lenin as a “mass murderer.”
It seems that Merridale wants to make Lenin responsible for the bloody Russian Civil War which all the powers of Europe united to back the Russian Whites. Lenin’s great crime was to take Russia out of that imperialist slaughterhouse and publish the secret treaties that revealed it’s predatory, looting character. It’s striking that given the prejudice and bile that pours out at the end, that up to then it was fairly good and objective work.
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