Historical Figure
Joseph Stalin
d. 1953
Leader of the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1953
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Biography
Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin was a Soviet revolutionary and politician who led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953. He held office as general secretary of the Communist Party from 1922 to 1952 and as premier from 1941 until his death. Despite initially governing the country as part of a collective leadership, he eventually consolidated power to become a dictator by the 1930s. Stalin codified the party's official interpretation of Marxism as Marxism–Leninism, and his version of it is referred to as Stalinism.
In Their Own Words (5)
Social democracy is objectively the moderate wing of fascism.... These organisations (i.e. Fascism and social democracy) are not antipodes, they are twins.
“Concerning the International Situation,” Works, Vol. 6, January-November, 1924, pp. 293-314. , 1924
God's not unjust, he doesn't actually exist. We've been deceived. If God existed, he'd have made the world more just... I'll lend you a book and you'll see.
A teenaged Stalin after reading The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin as quoted in Young Stalin (2007) by Simon Sebag Montefiore, p. 49 , 2007
The existing pseudo-government which was not elected by the people and which is not accountable to the people must be replaced by a government recognised by the people, elected by representatives of the workers, soldiers and peasants and held accountable to their representatives.
"What We Need", editorial published (24 October 1917), as quoted in Stalin : A Biography (2004) by Robert Service; also in Sochineniya, Vol. 3, p. 389 , 2004
If any foreign minister begins to defend to the death a "peace conference," you can be sure his government has already placed its orders for new battleships and aeroplanes.
Speech "The Elections in St. Petersburg" (January 1913) , 1913
The press must grow day in and day out — it is our Party's sharpest and most powerful weapon.
Speech at The Twelfth Congress of the R.C.P.(B.) (19 April 1923) , 1923
Timeline
The story of Joseph Stalin, told in moments.
Born Ioseb Jughashvili in Gori, a small town in Georgia, then part of the Russian Empire. His father is a cobbler and a drunk who beats him. His mother, a laundress, scrapes together money to send him to seminary. He is the only one of his parents' children to survive infancy.
Organizes the Tiflis bank robbery. His gang ambushes an armored stagecoach with bombs in the middle of a crowded square. Forty people are injured. They steal 241,000 rubles, equivalent to several million dollars today. Lenin is impressed. Stalin is 28.
Appointed General Secretary of the Communist Party. It is considered an administrative post, not a position of real power. Lenin, already ill, soon warns the party: "Stalin has concentrated an unbounded power in his hands, and I am not certain he will always know how to use that power with sufficient caution." The warning goes unheeded.
The collectivization of agriculture, which he ordered in 1928, triggers a famine that kills between 5 and 7 million people. In Ukraine, the Holodomor kills an estimated 3.5 million. Stalin denies the famine exists. Soviet officials who report starvation are punished. Foreign journalists who write about it are expelled.
The Great Purge reaches its peak. He executes eight senior Red Army commanders in a single day. By the time the purges end in 1938, three of five marshals, 13 of 15 army commanders, and 50 of 57 corps commanders are dead. When Germany invades four years later, the Red Army is led by officers too frightened to make decisions.
Meets Roosevelt and Churchill at the Tehran Conference. It is the first time the three leaders sit together. They plan the invasion of France, which will come six months later at Normandy. Stalin asks for a second front in Europe. Churchill resists. Roosevelt sides with Stalin. The postwar division of Europe begins at this table.
Orders the deportation of the Chechen and Ingush peoples. In a single operation, half a million people are loaded onto cattle cars and shipped to Central Asia. Thousands die in transit. Entire villages are erased from maps. The Chechen-Ingush ASSR is abolished. He accuses them of collaborating with the Nazis. Most were fighting for the Red Army.
Dies after suffering a stroke at his dacha. His guards, terrified of disturbing him, wait 12 hours before entering his room. They find him on the floor, soaked in urine. Doctors are summoned, but the best doctors in Moscow are in prison, arrested on his orders weeks earlier in the Doctors' Plot. He dies four days later. He is 74. None of his inner circle weep. Several celebrate.
Nikita Khrushchev delivers his "Secret Speech" to the 20th Party Congress, denouncing Stalin's cult of personality, the purges, and his wartime blunders. Delegates sit in stunned silence. Stalin's body is later removed from Lenin's Mausoleum. Stalingrad is renamed Volgograd.
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