Dmitry Manuilsky

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Dmitry Manuilsky, or D. Z. Manuilsky (18831959) was an important Bolshevik. Alfred Rosenberg singled him out - among many others - as being Jewish and therefore as evidencing that Bolshevism was a Jewish phenomena.

He also played a role in defending the Bolshevik state against its adversaries as is exhibited by Lenin's 1920 letter to him:

Manuilsky Headquarters of the South-Western Front Kharkov

Sapronov is wrong, because before focussing on the middle peasant it is necessary first, before that, to organise the poor peasants. This must definitely be done, and best done not in the form of Poor Peasants’ Committees, but in the form of Soviets composed exclusively of poor and middle peasants, with special measures on our part for safeguarding the interests of the poor peasants and for collection of grain. I asked you about transport since the chief task now is to step up the transport of troops and complete the defeat of Denikin. We must mobilise the workers for this and at all costs bring up large forces quickly and win back Rostov. I ask Stalin to reply to me whether he is taking all measures.

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[edit] Sources

[edit] References

  • Walter Lacquer, Russia and Germany; A Century of Conflict, London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1965.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

  • V. I. Lenin, 528, TELEGRAM TO D. Z. MANUILSKY [1]