Behind Iron Curtains of the Soviet totalitarian state
Free Download Behind Iron Curtains of the Soviet totalitarian state by Samuel Greenberg
English | August 20, 2024 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0DDVJJRLX | 174 pages | EPUB | 2.39 Mb
Everyday life of Soviet people based on personal story of my family
This book is based on personal story of four generations of my family during 74 years of Soviet Totalitarian rule. It shows all periods of Soviet bloody history starting from the "Great October Socialist Revolution" of 1917 and takes you step by step through all major events of the Soviet Union till its collapse in 1991. All stories and facts in this book are real. They were told to the author by people, who witnessed or participated in these events. After reading this book you will see everyday life of ordinary Soviet people behind iron curtains of the Soviet Union. You will get better understanding of todays’ Russian politics, values and reality.
What is inside the book?
Everyday life of ordinary Soviet people in former USSR on the background of the world and Soviet historical events: Soviet life style, childhood, education, work, study, military service in Missiles Forces, parenting, sex, prostitution, entertainment and leisure, Soviet propaganda and ideology, political ambitions of Soviet leaders of expansion of communist influence on other countries, which led to WWII, the Cold war, Korean, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Congo, Nicaragua… war conflicts and much more… as it was in former USSR.
This is brief but comprehensive and real history of evil state – "The Soviet Union"
Readers will see how Communists leaders exterminated its own citizens during Civil war, Ukrainian Holodomor, forced collectivization and Stalin’s repressions against Soviet people. The book shows all sides of Soviet reality: the political education starting from kindergarten, shortage of food and goods, state anti-Semitism, control of lives of Soviet people by KGB and police, restrictions on places of residency, hard labor and miserable salaries and pensions of ordinary Soviet people, constant queues for goods and food, dissidents’ movement and much more.