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less important leaders, including Karl Radek Yuri Pyatakov and Grigory Sokolnikov. Thirteen defendants were shot and the rest deported to labor camps, where they died shortly after.
Jady sprâncenele ei pe sprâncenele mele ochii ei în ochii mei gura ei în gura mea pădurea ei deschisă în peptul meu muzica ei + mormânt vechi de o mie de ani în labrador.
Pledoarie pentru Y6 , lui Andrei Tarovsky & Co. I-am adus creerul meu alb Și i-a spart bradului toate globurile multicolore. A creature from heaven
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She is a creature from heaven this grl Just light like a laserdrawnstainedglass It isn’t the corn that lightened her But religion of a thousand years & more She’s just yes to me like my lost angel I bet her brain is yellow. Febr, 18 2021 Europe Radiografie Fata a devenit concept Un cântec de trist Iubire peste năruite milenumuri Un fel de Mozart Gotlieb singură cărarea sa Un Dumnezeu lumină întrupată. Înturnarea. Avertisment
Lenau, Trakl și Holderlin mai frumoși decât Schiller Dar mai potriviți pentru studiul psihiatrilor ș preoților duhovnici Să nu dea/paseze un beteșug ctitorului, . +++mm Flori mâinile mele.
Canto Felix Maja vestida maja desnuda. HOME FOR DAMNED POETS
I got into the business young With my brother and his brother All you have to do is put bread Down
All you gotta do is an e-maildon/ I mean if you hear said ragea Everybody helps themselves Why can't we? /to the Usr/ Poclisa, 2021 fevrier 1492th
/ The truth The truth's The truth's ii'm a Witch at t Stake Day One Must Break My white Knees R of no Use Must deve Deep 'Come A Muse My Long Hair Not Mine My beau Forehead Receveid Gift My Big Sad Eyes Girl's my Sadness & Miracle Sacred
Mother I float in the Chilly temple Monks Spiders Ants Nothing take a Grab at my Soul telling me they Love me + So so if you want a Grade you'll get a F at the Humane...
2021, fevrier Global psychosis Writ proved man Sinner Refectory Hypocrite Print Mad NIW Psychopath Not Us! We just Schizoids of Ark. A global psychosis Around. Sleepwell. **** am renunțat - obiectiv - să privesc pornografie Mă uitam și Video 3 n-avea nici un Dumnezeu Iar Videoclipul trei nu l-am privit nici pe ăla Că era o fată asiatică frumoasă cu un caucazian Și nu știu ce tot vorbeau și ea zâmbea din când în când aproape mereu Și i-a pus o mână pe genunchi De am spus, -Bă, de ce nu vă căsătoriți?! Și asta a fost, M-am culcat și am visat frumos. 2021, fevr... Biserica svastică
Biserica svastică Biserica pătrată Fără porumbel Ci cu lebădă
Biserica svastică Biserica pătrată Fără porumbel Ci cu lebădă. © 17 days ago, F R G Constantinescu religion • life • love • effort Like (0) Comment - Love is philosophical
[ edit poem ] Felix Medjugorje Follow 17 days ago poet, poetry translator, multidisciplinaritate, pictoră 221 views 0 +list More by Felix MedjugorjeList all » Worbox, v i i, Noapte, flori de vânt și brazdă de grâu, patrimoniu românesc 2 martie 2021+ 1dy1 workbocs vi, dream before it v, march 2021 3dy1 WORCBOCS, v5, Stimată Doamnă, Iisus Hristos este DOMNUL 6dy1 WORKBOKS, iv, Mecena & The thinkers 1wk0
Workboks iii, Femeia batuta 1wk0
Rugăciune înflorire înstelare. Haikunuevo 2021+ 1wk0
Workboks ii, Femee imbaindu-se pentru iubitul Ei 3wk0
Profanity : Our optional filter replaced words with *** on this page • Configure Help / Contact us Have you read these poets? Sylvia Plath • William Shakespeare • Pablo Neruda • Robert Frost • William Butler Yeats • Dylan Thomas • E.e. cummings • Spike Milligan • William Wordsworth • Alfred Lord Tennyson • Langston Hughes • W H Auden • Philip Larkin • Emily Dickinson • Edgar Allan Poe • T S Eliot • Rabindranath Tagore • Ogden Nash • Amir Khusro • Khalil Gibran
Workboks iii, United Woman Workboks iii, The Beaten Woman
Felix Rian Contantinescu // 2021, February 22 Dedication, Romanian Academy, Bucharest & the martyr poet Rob Nesta Marley & t Wailing Wailers !! FELIX'21
The Great Purification From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search Question book-4.svg This article or section has incomplete or nonexistent bibliography. You can contribute by adding references to support the bibliographic statements it contains. The Great Purge (Russian: Большой террор - Great Terror) is the name given to the repression campaigns in the Soviet Union at the end of the fourth decade of the twentieth century, which also included the purge of the Communist Party. The term repression was officially used for to indicate the pursuit of people recognized as enemies of the people and counter-revolutionaries. The purge was motivated by the desire of the Communist Party leadership to eliminate dissenting elements. Purge was often seen as Stalin's tactic for consolidating his own power. Additional repression campaigns were carried out against social groups that opposed the Soviet state and the policies of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). A number of purges have also been officially explained as an elimination of the possibilities of sabotage and espionage, given an expected war with Germany. The greatest public attention was focused on purging the party leadership itself, as well as the government bureaucratic apparatus and the army leadership, most of which consisted of communists. But the campaigns affected many other categories of society: elements considered anti-Soviet among the intellectuals, the wealthiest peasants - chiaburi (kulacii), but also from industry and transport. A series of operations by the NKVD (Soviet secret police) affected a number of psycho-national minorities, considered the fifth pillar of the Soviet Union's enemies. According to Khrushchev's 1956 speech, On the cult of personality and its consequences, as well as newer discoveries, many accusations, including those presented in the "Moscow spectacle trials," were based on forced confessions and very broad interpretations of Article 58 of the Code. Criminal dealing with counter-revolution crimes. Proper legal deliberations were replaced by the NKVD Troika with summary proceedings. Hundreds of thousands of people were executed by execution platoons and millions more were sentenced to forced residence or sent to labor camps. The peak of the campaigns came as long as the NKVD was led by Nikolai Ejov, from September 1936 to August 1938. This period is sometimes referred to as Ejovșcina ("Ejov Era"). However, the campaigns were carried out according to the general outline and often led by direct orders by the party's political bureau, led by Stalin. In particular, in 1937, the political bureau (PolitBuro) issued an order to apply "means of mental correction". Until the
end of the purges, Ejov was released from office, then arrested on charges of espionage (proven to be false) and treason, tried, found guilty and executed by shooting.
content 1 Origin 2 The Moscow Trials 3 Purge the army 4 Extended purification 4.1 The former chiaburi 4.2 National operations of the NKVD 4.3 Members of communist parties in other countries 5 The End of the Ejov Era 6 Reactions of the West 7 Rehabilitation 8 The victims 9 Denial 10 References and notes 11 External links origin The term "purge" in Soviet political jargon was an abbreviation of the term purge of the party hierarchy. In 1933, for example, about 400,000 members were expelled from the party. But from 1936 to 1953 the term changed its meaning, because being expelled from the party was synonymous with being arrested, imprisoned and, most of the time, executed. The origin of the Great Purge was the desire of the political bureau to eliminate any possible source of opposition. Poliburo members wanted to ensure that party members would follow the orders of the center in strict accordance with the principle of democratic centralism, that the situations of the 1920s, when there were factions, would not be repeated, and that there would be no fifth column. in case of war. Viaceslav Molotov later said that purging and imprisoning those suspected of disloyalty was a measure of protection against a potential invasion of Nazi Germany. The Communist Party also wanted to eliminate "socially dangerous elements", such as the chiaburi, the former chiaburi, former members of opposition parties such as the socialist-revolutionaries and former tsarist officials.
The repression against the real or only imaginary enemies of the Bolsheviks has been uninterrupted since the October Revolution, but there have been periods of increasing intensity such as the Red Terror or the deportation of the scoundrels who opposed collectivization. A distinct feature of the Great Purge was that for the first time, even the ruling party was subjected to widespread repression. However, only a minority of those affected by the purges were party members or members of the bureaucracy. The purge of the party was accompanied by purges throughout society. The following events are used to demarcate the treatment period: The First Moscow Trial, 1936, The introduction of the NKVD troikas for the faster implementation of "revolutionary justice" in 1937, Introduction of Article 58-14 on "counterrevolutionary sabotage" in 1937. The Moscow trials Main article: Moscow trials.
Between 1936 and 1938 there were three Trials in Moscow of former leaders of the Communist Party. They were accused of plotting with Western powers to assassinate Stalin and other Soviet leaders, dismember the Soviet Union and restore capitalism. The first trial was the trial of 16 members of the so-called "Trotskyist-Zinovievist Terrorist Center" held in August 1936, whose main defendants were Grigory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev, two of the party's most prominent former leaders. The second trial was in January 1937, involving 17 less important leaders, including Karl Radek, Yuri Pyatakov and Grigory Sokolnikov. Thirteen defendants were shot and the rest deported to labor camps, where they died shortly after. The third trial, in March 1938, included 21 defendants who were allegedly part of the socalled "Trotskyist and Right-wing Bloc" led by