Topic > The Story of Stalin's Great Purges - 790

People say that Stalin's Great Purges could otherwise be translated as Stalin's Terror. They grew out of his paranoia and his desire to be an absolute autocrat, and the NKVD and public show trials were applied. When someone went against him, he didn't really take the time to do anything about it. He would “get rid” of those who opposed industrialization and the kulaks. The Kulaks were farmers in the later Russian Empire. (“Of Russian origin: Stalin's purges). There were many reasons to explain what caused the Great Purges, but the main one seems to be Stalin. He believed that the country had to be united as long as he became its leader if it wanted to be strong. The Soviet Union had a prosperous and declining industry, obviously lacking the ability to produce sufficient flour and heavy machinery for the impending war. One of the worst nations to suffer from Stalin's great purges in the Soviet Union were not the Russians. Fascists sought to rejuvenate their nation based on a commitment to the national community as an organic entity whose individuals are bound together by ancestry, culture, and blood which are all super-personal connections. However, although Stalin succeeded in imposing Russia on the Soviet Union, his main enemies were his political opponents and their followers. His most ferocious acts of terror, “The Great Purges,” took place between 1934 and 1939. In 1934, Sergey Kirov, a rival of Stalin, was assassinated. Stalin is believed to have been behind the assassination, using it as a pretext to arrest thousands of his other opponents who, in his words, might have been responsible for Kirov's murder. These purges not only affected those who openly opposed Stalin, but also ordinary people. During the reign of Spot or... half of the card... to do. It was more said that Stalin was like a little boy, that he had to get everything he wanted otherwise he would get angry. If he hadn't understood it, in other words he would have "made a scene"; deal with it yourself. Stalin then died on March 5. It was said that he died peacefully in his bed but in reality it was just a legend. Stalin actually died from a brain hemorrhage initiated by a stroke on March 1, 1953. There were also times before that when he had a stroke, but there were always medications there for him in time to treat him. One day he had a stroke and collapsed and that was the first sign that the situation was very serious at this point. When he collapsed, an alert was sent to all his doctors to arrive with medicine, but they did not receive it in time. The doctors were all on purge missions. (“The Death of Stalin”)