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One-Evil: Joseph Stalin (Ordained Jesuit Priest)

By Mon, 2 January 2017January 2nd, 20214 Comments

http://one-evil.org/content/people_20c_stalin.html

Joseph Stalin

Key Facts
Other names Joseph Stalin Иосиф Сталин (Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili)
Born 1878
Location Gori, Georgia, Russian Empire
Bloodline  
Married Yes
Children  
Position General Secretary, Communist Party of the Soviet Union’s Central Committee (1922-1953)
Died March 5, 1953

Background

hJosef Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, Ioseb Besarionis Dze Jughashvili; Russian: Ио́сиф Виссарио́нович Джугашви́ли Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili) (18 December 1878 – 5 March 1953), better known by his adopted name, Joseph Stalin (Иосиф Сталин, Iosif Stalin; stalin meaning “made of steel”).

Josef was born to influential Catholic parents Vissarion “Beso” Dzhugashvili and Ekaterina “Keke” Geladze.  His father Beso was a successful and relatively wealthy local businessman.  However, in later biographies, he is variously described as poor, dirt poor and a violent alcoholic.

Whatever the real truth, Josef was accepted into the Catholic Cappuchin run school at Gori.  He graduated in 1892 first in his class and at the age of 14 he was accepted to enter the “Orthodox” Seminary of Tiflis (Tbilisi, Georgia), a Jesuit institution to be trained as a Jesuit priest.

In spite of contrary history written about the Jesuit run Seminary, the Jesuits remained in Russian territory after the order was banned by Alexander I in 1820, maintaining control of several institutions, including the Seminary of Tiflis.

Stalin himself openly admitted the Jesuit control of the institution in his famous interview with Jewish Journalist Emil Ludwig (Cohen):

Ludwig: What impelled you to become an oppositionist?  Was it, perhaps, bad treatment by your parents?

Stalin: No.  My parents were uneducated, but they did not treat me badly by any means.  But it was a different matter at the Orthodox theological seminary which I was then attending.  In protest against the outrageous regime and the Jesuitical methods prevalent at the seminary, I was ready to become, and actually did become, a revolutionary, a believer in Marxism as a really revolutionary teaching.

Ludwig: But do you not admit that the Jesuits have good points?

Stalin: Yes, they are systematic and persevering in working to achieve sordid ends.  Hut their principal method is spying, prying, worming their way into people’s souls and outraging their feelings.  What good can there be in that?  For instance, the spying in the hostel.  At nine o’clock the bell rings for morning tea, we go to the dining-room, and when we return to our rooms we find that meantime a search has been made and all our chests have been ransacked…  What good point can there be in that?

While accounts of his time at Tiflis have been changed many times, it is universally accepted that Stalin was the star pupils of the Seminary.  As a result, the events of 1899 remain shrouded in mystery.

In the final week of his studies, having completed seven (7) years as the star pupil of the Jesuits, Stalin is variously claimed to have quit or been expelled.  Neither account, adequately explains how a seminary student of seven years, suddenly appeared influential and active in coordinating the Georgian Social-Democratic movement less than 12 months later — an achievement that could not possibly have happened without substantial support.

The more credible and controversial conclusion is that Stalin did graduate from the Jesuit Seminary as a proper Jesuit priest, with his first assignment being to infiltrate and manage the Georgian underground against the Russian Tsarist Government.

Again, the fact that Stalin was awarded an academic position at the Tiflis Observatory gives credence to his Jesuit credentials and completed study.  His double life as a secret leader of the May day uprising of 1901 less than 2 years from graduating from the Jesuit seminary attests to his skill as a key Jesuit agent.

After avoiding capture by the Tsarist Secret Police (Okhrana), Stalin fled to Batumi where he was hidden in safety by the Rothschild’s via one of their oil refineries located there.  In 1902, when authorities learnt of his hiding place, the local Cossacks were ordered to capture him.  However, the oil workers rallied behind Stalin with a number killed and arrested along with Stalin.  Later this whole event was turned into Stalin rather than remaining in hiding, organizing a strike and arson against the oil refinery- all of which defies common sense of his circumstances.

In 1903, Stalin was exiled to Siberia for three years.  However, a few months later the Jesuits managed to get false papers to the prison camp and free Stalin, who returned to Tiflis on January 4, 1904.

His new orders from the Jesuits was to start an underground paper called Credo, denouncing international Marxist ideology of Lenin in favour of the Facist Social-Democratic model of Roman Catholicism.  Once the Russo-Japanese War started in February 1904, Stalin was active across Georgia in organizing resistance and focused attacks against the Mensheivik breakaway faction of the communists.

In January 9 1905, Stalin succeeded in starting the spark his masters had requested by successfully arranging a mass demonstration of workers with communist and anti-Tsarist banners in Baku.  He then secretly alerted the Cossacks that the demonstration was an armed rebellion.  The Cossacks reacted as expected and killed several hundred demonstrators thus sparking the Russian Revolution of 1905.

During the following months, Stalin excelled as guerilla leader in maintaining the rebellion across Georgia.  Yet the movement never gained critical mass and Stalin was ordered to redirect his efforts to infiltrating the top echelon of the Bolsheviks.  In December 1905, Stalin secured a meeting with Lenin, but failed to gain his trust and endorsement and returned to Tiflis, effectively a free agent.

In February 1906, to prove his credentials to the Bolsheviks, Stalin arranged for the assassination of General Fyodo Griiazanov.  He also continued to stage bank robberies and extortions, sending the money through to the Bolsheviks as proof of his trustworthiness.

These event were enough to force Lenin to permit Stalin to attend the Socialist Democratic Party meeting in London in 1907.  After returning to Georgia, Stalin was again arrested in March 25, 1908.  He was sentenced to two years in exile in Siberia, but after seven months, the Jesuit influence within the Tsarist Government enabled his escape by February 1909.

Around the exact same time, the Bolsheiviks were on the verge of extinction in account of their leaders in prison or exile and a lack of new recuits and funds.  Stalin called for a reconciliation with the Menshevik faction, which Lenin opposed.  Stalin then called for a major witchunt to weed out alleged double-agents.  A number of key Lenin supporters and intelligensia were hounded out and some murdered – later records revealing none were traitors.  Stalin was again arrest in 1910 and again in 1913 for four years.

In the wake of the February Revolution in 1917, Stalin was released from prison and moved to Saint Petersburg and promptly founded the Pravda, the official Bolshevik newspaper with substantial finances and equipment that arrived virtually overnight, while Lenin and the rest of the leadership were still in exile.

The Pravda became a major tool of the revolution and Lenin was forced to include Stalin in senior committees on account of the power and influence of Pravda.

Lenin like most of the Bolsheviks regarded Stalin as a double agent of the Jesuits.  Their most visible proof was the fact that Stalin had escaped death in prison and the extraordinary and unprecedented leniency given to him by the Tsarist Government – when agitators found guilty of a fraction of the actions of Stalin had been brutally tortured and killed.  While the escapes and “near misses” are recorded about the life of Stalin, the fact that he was apparently the “luckiest revolutionary” of the 20th Century is not discussed.

By 1922, the Bolsheviks had won the Civil War, but left the whole country broke.  The Rothschilds and the American Jesuit Bankers on Wall Street made a simple offer – they would help fund and bail out new new Soviet Union, providing Stalin was given a key role.  Thus on 3 April 1922, Stalin was made General Secretary of the Central Commitee, a post he subsequently grew to become the most powerful.

In spite of his position, Lenin still sought to thwart the influence of Stalin and in December 1923 it came to a head with Lenin planning to have Stalin finally eliminated.  In January 1924, Jesuit Superior General Wlodimir Ledochowski gave the order to Stalin allowing him to kill Lenin and on 21 January 1924, Lenin was poisoned to death at the age of 53.

To quell any rumours of foul play, Stalin published retractions in Pravda against “allegations” that never existed such as Lenin had been mentally unwell and that he even died from Syphilis.

From this point on, Stalin was the most powerful and undisputed ruler of the Soviet Union.

One of the earliest acts of Stalin was to begin the outlawing of the Russian Orthodox Church, allowing seized thousands of churches and schools to be handed over to the Catholic Church — a highly controversial program that has largely been unreported even to this day.  By 1939, the Russian Orthodox Church was all but extinct.

Of the other persecutions, the Ukraine and deportation of Jews is also infamous under his reign in which tens of millions perished.  But what is rarely, if ever, published is that the Head of the Death Camps of Siberia was none other than Catholic Cardinal Gregory Agagianian, his former classmate at the Jesuit Seminary of Tiflis.

There is a further and most disturbing note to this Catholic connection concerning the nature of the atrocities of Siberia.  While it has been admitted by some historians that a number of concentration camps in Siberia had ovens to burn dead bodies, the lack of sufficient mass graves, even with the use of quick lime to destroy evidence has been found.

This implies that the use of ovens for body disposal must have been in frequent use across the thousands of camps.  Furthermore, that people were not dead when fed into the furnaces.  Unlike the Nazis who at least used a nerve agent to render people unconscious but living before being fed into the furnaces of the death camps, it appears Stalin and Catholic Cardinal Agagianian had no need for such sensitivity.

Tens of millions of people burnt alive under Satanic Vatican rituals in Siberia — at least three times those of Catholic Dictator Hitler, and not a single book accounting for these major anomalies has made the light of day.

Towards the end of his life, there appears a major falling out between Stalin and the Catholic Church, with Stalin ordering extraordinary suppression orders against the Catholic Church in his final year, including the execution of Lubyanka General Alexander Poskrebyshev — who oversaw the hanging of Vlasov in the Lubyanka — and NKVD General Nicolai Vlasik.

Shortly thereafter, Stalin was poisoned and died on 5 March 1953.

Most Evil Crimes:

Crime of publishing a false statement for the purpose of concealment of status: (1900 to present day) —

That the Catholic Church, more specifically the Jesuit Order has maintained countless false statements and documents pertaining to the status of Joseph Stalin.

That Fr. Joseph Stalin S.J. was a trained, dedicated and fully ordained Catholic priest of the Jesuit order, who was recruited for a historic mission in his final year at the seminary in 1899.

That in addition to failing to recognize Fr. Joseph Stalin S.J.

Furthermore, that the Jesuit Order did permit Fr. Stalin to marry not once but twice, while remaining a fully ordained priest.

That for his entire life until his death, there is no indication that Fr. Joseph Stalin S.J. was ever defrocked as a priest.

Of Murder (political assassination) (1924):

That Jesuit Superior General Wlodimir Ledochowski did order Fr. Joseph Stalin S.J. to murder the leader of Communist Russia on 21 January 1924, aged 53.

That Fr. Stalin did act to protect his position and mission as General Secretary of the Communist Party upon the insistence of Lenin that he be removed.

That not only did Stalin have Lenin poisoned, but that he did spread rumours upon his ascendancy to absolute power that Lenin has been mentally unwell for the last few years of his reign and had even died from Syphilis.

Of one of the greatest crimes against humanity (1939-1945):

That the Catholic Church through its deliberate placement of key figures including loyal Catholics Mussolini, Hitler, Franco and Fr Stalin S.J. and through its financing of a second European arms race including the deliberate extension of the war is directly and ultimately responsible for the deaths of in excess of 63,000,000 people between 1939 and 1945.

What is of supreme depravity and inhumanity is that this was done by an organization that maintains the façade of being a “good” religion headed by a position known as “his holiness”.

Furthermore, that the Catholic Church did profit on this terrible act of evil.

Of open contempt for church law for the purpose of promoting crimes against humanity (1953 to present):

That the Catholic Church has well established laws and cases of excommunicating individuals after their death from actions considered heretical.

That these laws enabling a dead person to be excommunicated have been available for use for over three hundred years.

That at the death of Fr. Joseph Stalin S.J. the leader of the Soviet Union in 1953, there was sufficient evidence both that Fr. Stalin was Catholic and had ordered some of the greatest atrocities of human history including reputedly the death of over 60,000,000 innocent people.

That at no time since the end of Word War II until the present day has any Pope ever sought to excommunicate Fr. Stalin S.J.

That such inaction, and deliberate concealment of his status even until his death of being a fully empowered Catholic priest and of even being Catholic by itself implies the tacit support of Stalin’s actions, regardless of any public statement by the Vatican to the contrary.

Furthermore, such inaction voids any legality, or credibility of the excommunication and heresy investigation process of the Catholic Church as such inaction by the Vatican is in open contempt for church law.

That all excommunications since 1953 are to be considered suspect and potentially invalid due to the nullification of the credibility of such law.

 

4 Comments

  • Marko Milanovic says:

    Where is the proof that Stalin was a jesuit priest like ordination paper or proof that jesuits controlled seminary?

  • Clark says:

    Johnny, the Jesuits have their stooges in many places and as one says, most CNN audience has drunk the kool aid and therefore not somewhat stupid, but very stupid.
    These people can’t understand nor fathom that education has been a purview of Jesuit jurisdiction since early 1900s.
    It’s why the LGBT movement is running thru out the high schools and colleges in various countries. And those rejecting it actively are vilified, like Russia. Pedophilia is prevalent among the Catholic Clergy and now in protestant denominations, so with the so called house of God filled with this filth, its only natural so many people don’t say a peep which is what the Jesuits use to measure their propaganda and aptly fits that Arab saying: “if you allow the camel’s head in the tent, its ass soon follows.”
    Not only is one to allow this filth, but to participate in it vociferously or branded anti LGBTU. This filth straight from Lucifer is now common in every country of earth with few exceptions. But those living in the US will see it burn around them and its not long to wait.
    Good for you Johnny.

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