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The author of this translation of the famous Protocols was himself
a victim of the Revolution. He had lived for many years in Russia
and was married to a Russian lady. Among his other activities in
Russia he had been for a number of years a Russian Correspondent of
the MORNING POST, a position which he occupied when the Revolution
broke out, and his vivid descriptions of events in Russia will
still be in the recollection of many of the readers of that
Journal. Naturally he was singled out for the anger of the Soviet.
On the day that Captain Cromie was murdered by Jews, Victor Marsden
was arrested and thrown into the Peter-Paul Prison, expecting every
day to have his name called out for execution. This, however, he
escaped, and eventually he was allowed to return to England very
much of a wreck in bodily health. However, he recovered under
treatment and the devoted care of his wife and friends. One of the
first things he undertook, as soon as he was able, was this
translation of the Protocols. Mr. Marsden was eminently well
qualified for the work. His intimate acquaintance with Russia,
Russian life and the Russian language on the one hand, and his
mastery of a terse literary English style on the other, placed him
in a position of advantage which few others could claim. The
consequence is that we have in his version an eminently readable
work, and though the subject-matter is somewhat formless, Mr.
Marsden's literary touch reveals the thread running through the
twenty-four Protocols.
The Protocols was supposedly written in 1897 from the minutes of 24
secret meetings between Jews and Freemasons in which they conspired
to bring down Western civilization and jointly rule the world. In
reality, it is nothing of the sort. In 1921, Philip Graves of the
London Times revealed The Protocols to be a fraud, showing it to be
based on a French satire aimed at Napoleon III. It is the most
notorious and most successful work of modern antisemitism, and was
used as part of a propaganda campaign by the Russian secret police
in 1905.
Translated from the Russian by Victor Marsden. The Protocols
supposedly outlines a plan of action by elders of the Jewish Nation
to rule the world -- to take control over key organizations,
including assets, in order to manipulate world affairs in their
favor. Some say the issue has already been settled conclusively --
that it is clearly a forgery. Although there may be final evidence
to this effect, we have not seen a clear and convincing version of
it produced by those making the claim. Others maintain that it was
and is absolutely genuine -- proven by the fact that all copies
were destroyed in Russia in the early 1900s by the Kerensky regime.
In the following years, anyone caught with a copy could be, and
sometimes were, shot on sight. It was law, The Protocols were taken
seriously by the Russians and by people in America like the famed
industrialist, Henry Ford. This seems to give it validity, but
people (and nations) have been known to be fooled. If The Protocols
are a forgery, they still form an interesting book which deserves
to be studied in the same way "The War of the Worlds" radio
broadcast duped many thousands into thinking we were being invaded
by Martians in the early part of the 20th century. If, however. The
Protocols are genuine (which can never be proven conclusively), it
might cause some of us to keep a wary eye on world affairs. We
neither support nor deny its message, we simply make it available
for those who wish a copy.
This is a new release of the original 1934 edition.
This is a new release of the original 1934 edition.
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion was supposedly written in 1897
from the minutes of 24 secret meetings between Jews and Freemasons
in which they conspired to bring down Western civilization and
jointly rule the world. In reality, it is nothing of the sort.
Protocols tells of a Jewish plot to take over the world. Historians
have long said the work is a forgery concocted by Czar Nicholas
II's secret police to blame Russia's troubles on Jews. In 1921,
Philip Graves of the London Times revealed The Protocols to be a
fraud, showing it to be based on a French satire aimed at Napoleon
III. Professor Nilus was a priest in the Orthodox Church in Russia.
He published the first Russian language edition in 1905. In 1920
Henry Ford bought "The Dearborn Independent," a virile and very
independent journal published in his home town. He used it to
publish the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and a series of
articles about the book, as part of his series of 81 articles
(between 1920 and 1922) on "the Jewish Question in America," which
he called "the world's foremost problem." The Dearborn Independent
was distributed nationwide to Ford dealer showrooms and was offered
free of charge to the general public. The relevant articles are
collected here so that the whole can be studied at one time. This
book is an important document in the history of anti-Semitism, and
has been used as required reading in many university anti-Semitism
courses.
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