Hungarian Soviet Republic Was a Terrorist State
This demonstration was reinforced by Holodomor of 1933 in Ukraine and especially by Great Purge (Great Terror) of 1937-38 in the Soviet Union. By that time Jews were all but purged from the Soviet government, armed forces and security services… but the Nazis did not want to see or hear it. Likewise, they did not want to see that the “Red Terror” in bloodthirsty HSR had nothing to do with the Jews – and everything to do with Communists (Bolsheviks).
HSR (officially Socialist Federative Soviet Republic of Hungary was a short-lived communist state that existed from March 21 to August 1, 1919. Thus, it was a contemporary of Bavarian Soviet Republic – but it was far, far worse.
Official head of HSR government was S;ndor Garbai, but its de-facto ruler was Jewish Communist B;la Kun. His right hand (and the second-in-command) was another Jew (Tibor Szamuely). The latter operated the “death train” that committed most of “Red Terror” murders. Another key member of HSR government (Jeno Landler, commissar of the interior) was also a Jew.
HSR was essentially a puppet state run from Moscow with Bela Kun was but the officer in the government of the Soviet Russia. HSR was so dependent on Moscow that Kun, as the Commissar of Foreign Affairs, held the real power only because only Kun had the acquaintance and friendship with Lenin.
He was the only person in the HSR government who met and talked to the Bolshevik leader during the Russian Revolution, and Kun kept the contact with the Kremlin via radio communication.
In 1919, the Red Terror in Russia was at its peak; consequently, it is no surprise at all that Lenin ordered Bela Kun to initiate the same serial mass murder in Hungary. Which proved beyond the reasonable doubt that “Jewish Bolsheviks” intended and planned not only to conquer the whole Europe, but to unleash hellish Red Terror on its population. And that the only way to deal with them was the “Roman way” in the “Diaspora revolt”: kill them first.
Serial mass murder (“Red Terror”) in HSR was committed by death squads that aptly called themselves “Lenin Boys” (Lenin apparently did not mind at all). These death squads (numbering about 200 thugs) were put together by one J;zsef Cserny (a full-blooded Hungarian, for a change).
And then a genuine Hell broke loose (Communist-style). Checkpoints were established in Budapest, and civilians were regularly arrested and taken away to be tortured with burning cigars, water cure, and nails.
In April, Szamuely ordered high-level politicians to be taken hostages. They were to be brought to Budapest but sometime along the way Szamuely changed his mind. The hostages were forced to dig their own graves along an embankment and shot even before they had finished.
Using an armored train (“death train”) to travel the country side, the “Lenin Boys” would regularly take hostages from random at villages and execute them in advance of invading anti-Communist forces, or if they believed the village in question was “anti-Communist”.
Not surprisingly, these thugs used their power over life and death appropriate grain from peasants. Hence, it is no surprise that the latter hated Communists and the power of the latter in the countryside was largely non-existent.
HSR fell in the first week of August 1919, when Romanian forces entered Budapest. Kun went into exile in Russia; Szamuely fled to Austria, but killed himself after being captured by Austrian authorities.
J;zsef Cserny was arrested and tried in November 1919; the Hungarian Bar Association refused to defend him at trial, so a lawyer was appointed by the court. He was executed in December along with 13 other members of the “Lenin Boys”.
You go to bed with the Devil – you wake up in Hell. Bela Kun learned this truth the hard way. Deadly way, in fact. But first, he continued to unleash Hell (i.e., Red Terror) – this time in Russia where he ended up after escape from Hungary.
Bela Kun was put in charge of the regional Revolutionary Committee in Crimea and issued orders to execute over 70,000 “enemies of the revolution” – including 50,000 POWs and anti-Bolshevik civilians who had surrendered after they had been promised amnesty (standard operating procedure of Bolsheviks). His right-hand henchwoman was Rosalia Zemlyachka (a Jewess).
Throughout the 1920s Kun was a prominent Comintern intelligence operative, working mostly in Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia, but his notoriety ultimately stopped him from being useful for undercover work.
Then he worked for Comintern in Moscow… until he was deemed no longer useful. On June 28, 1937, he was arrested by NKVD as the “enemy of the people”. After the parody of a trial, he was sentenced to death and executed later that day at the Kommunarka shooting ground.
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