JOSEPH STALIN
G'day folks,
Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin was a Soviet revolutionary and
political leader. He governed the Soviet Union as dictator from the
mid-1920s until his death in 1953, serving as Premier of the Soviet
Union.
Joseph Stalin
(1878-1953) was the dictator of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
from 1929 to 1953. Under Stalin, the Soviet Union was transformed from a
peasant society into an industrial and military superpower. However, he ruled
by terror, and millions of his own citizens died during his brutal reign. Born
into poverty, Stalin became involved in revolutionary politics, as well as
criminal activities, as a young man. After Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin
(1870-1924) died, Stalin outmaneuvered his rivals for control of the party.
Once in power, he collectivized farming and had potential enemies executed or
sent to forced labor camps. Stalin aligned with the United States and Britain
in World War II (1939-1945) but afterward engaged in an increasingly tense
relationship with the West known as the Cold War (1946-1991). After his death,
the Soviets initiated a de-Stalinization process.
Joseph Stalin’s Early Years and Family
Joseph
Stalin was born Josef Vissarionovich Djugashvili on December 18, 1878, or
December 6, 1878, according to the Old Style Julian calendar (although he later
invented a new birth date for himself: December 21, 1879), in the small town of
Gori, Georgia,
then part of the Russian empire. When he was in his 30s, he took the name
Stalin, from the Russian for “man of steel.”
Stalin grew up poor and an only child. His
father was a shoemaker and alcoholic who beat his son, and his mother was a
laundress. As a boy, Stalin contracted smallpox, which left him with lifelong
facial scars. As a teen, he earned a scholarship to attend a seminary in the
nearby city of Tblisi and study for the priesthood in the Georgian Orthodox
Church. While there he began secretly reading the work of German social
philosopher and “Communist Manifesto” author Karl Marx,
becoming interested in the revolutionary movement against the Russian monarchy.
In 1899, Stalin was expelled from the seminary for missing exams, although he
claimed it was for Marxist propaganda.
In 1906, Stalin married Ekaterina “Kato” Svanidze (1885-1907), a seamstress. The couple had one son, Yakov (1907-1943), who died as a prisoner in Germany during World War II. Ekaterina perished from typhus when her son was an infant. In 1918 (some sources cite 1919), Stalin married his second wife, Nadezhda “Nadya” Alliluyeva (1901-1932), the daughter of a Russian revolutionary. They had two children, a boy and a girl. Nadezhda committed suicide in her early 30s. Stalin also fathered several children out of wedlock.
Joseph Stalin’s Rise to Power
In 1912,
Lenin, then in exile in Switzerland, appointed Joseph Stalin to serve on the
first Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party. Three years later, in November
1917, the Bolsheviks seized power in Russia. The Soviet Union was founded in
1922, with Lenin as its first leader. During these years, Stalin had continued
to move up the party ladder, and in 1922 he became secretary general of the
Central Committee of the Communist Party, a role that enabled him to appoint
his allies to government jobs and grow a base of political support.
After
Lenin died in 1924, Stalin eventually outmaneuvered his rivals and won the
power struggle for control of the Communist Party. By the late 1920s, he had
become dictator of the Soviet Union.
The Soviet Union Under Joseph Stalin
Starting
in the late 1920s, Joseph Stalin launched a series of five-year plans intended
to transform the Soviet Union from a peasant society into an industrial
superpower. His development plan was centered on government control of the
economy and included the forced collectivization of Soviet agriculture, in
which the government took control of farms. Millions of farmers refused to
cooperate with Stalin’s orders and were shot or exiled as punishment. The
forced collectivization also led to widespread famine across the Soviet Union
that killed millions.
Stalin ruled by terror and with a totalitarian
grip in order to eliminate anyone who might oppose him. He expanded the powers
of the secret police, encouraged citizens to spy on one another and had
millions of people killed or sent to the Gulag system of forced labor camps.
During the second half of the 1930s, Stalin instituted the Great Purge, a series
of campaigns designed to rid the Communist Party, the military and other parts
of Soviet society from those he considered a threat.
Additionally,
Stalin built a cult of personality around himself in the Soviet Union. Cities
were renamed in his honor. Soviet history books were rewritten to give him a
more prominent role in the revolution and mythologize other aspects of his
life. He was the subject of flattering artwork, literature and music, and his
name became part of the Soviet national anthem. His government also controlled
the Soviet media.
Joseph Stalin and World War II
In 1939,
on the eve of World War II, Joseph Stalin and German dictator Adolf Hitler
(1889-1945) signed a nonaggression pact. Stalin then proceeded to annex
parts of Poland and Romania, as well as the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania. He also launched an invasion of Finland. Then, in June 1941,
Germany broke the Nazi-Soviet pact and invaded the USSR, making significant
early inroads. (Stalin had ignored warnings from the Americans and the British,
as well as his own intelligence agents, about a potential invasion, and the
Soviets were not prepared for war.) As German troops approached the Soviet
capital of Moscow, Stalin remained there and directed a scorched earth
defensive policy, destroying any supplies or infrastructure that might benefit
the enemy. The tide turned for the Soviets with the Battle of Stalingrad,
from August 1942 to February 1943, during which the Red Army defeated the
Germans and eventually drove them from Russia.
As the war progressed, Stalin participated in
the major Allied conferences, including those in Tehran (1943) and Yalta
(1945). His iron will and deft political skills enabled him to play the loyal
ally while never abandoning his vision of an expanded postwar Soviet empire.
Joseph Stalin’s Later Years
Joseph
Stalin did not mellow with age: He prosecuted a reign of terror, purges,
executions, exiles to labor camps and persecution in the postwar USSR,
suppressing all dissent and anything that smacked of foreign–especially
Western–influence. He established communist governments throughout Eastern
Europe, and in 1949 led the Soviets into the nuclear age by exploding an atomic
bomb. In 1950, he gave North Korea’s communist leader Kim Il Sung (1912-1994)
permission to invade United States-supported South Korea, an event that
triggered the Korean War.
By some estimates, he was responsible for the deaths of 20 million people during his brutal rule.
Clancy's comment: Apparently I was almost named Joseph, after this man. It probably had a lot to do with the fact that I was born on May Day. Mm ... Any wonder I became an activist?
I'm ...
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