Bio World Leader Joseph Stalin 19230 True
Bio World Leader Joseph Stalin 19230 True
Bio World Leader Joseph Stalin 19230 True
Synopsis: Born on December 18, 1878, in Gori, Georgia, Joseph Stalin rose to power as
General Secretary of the Communist Party, becoming a Soviet dictator upon Vladimir
Lenin's death. Stalin forced rapid industrialization and the collectivization of agricultural
land, resulting in millions dying from famine while others were sent to camps. His Red
Army helped defeat Nazi Germany during WWII.
Early Life
On December 18, 1878, in the Russian peasant village of Gori, Georgia, Iosif
Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili (later known as Joseph Stalin) was born. The son of Besarion
Jughashvili, a cobbler, and Ketevan Geladze, a washerwoman, Joseph was a frail child. At
age 7, he contracted smallpox, leaving his face scarred. A few years later he was injured
in a carriage accident which left arm slightly deformed (some accounts state his arm
trouble was a result of blood poisoning from the injury). The other village children treated
him cruelly, instilling in him a sense of inferiority. Because of this, Joseph began a quest for
greatness and respect. He also developed a cruel streak for those who crossed him.
Joseph's mother, a devout Russian Orthodox Christian, wanted him to become a priest. In
1888, she managed to enroll him in church school in Gori. Joseph did well in school, and
his efforts gained him a scholarship to Tiis Theological Seminary in 1894. A year later,
Joseph came in contact with Messame Dassy, a secret organization that supported
Georgian independence from Russia. Some of the members were socialists who
introduced him to the writings of Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin. Joseph joined the group in
1898.
Though he excelled in seminary school, Joseph left in 1899. Accounts differ as to the
reason; ofcial school records state he was unable to pay the tuition and withdrew. It's also
speculated he was asked to leave due to his political views challenging the tsarist regime
of Nicholas II. Joseph chose not to return home, but stayed in Tiis, devoting his time to
the revolutionary movement. For a time, he found work as a tutor and later as a clerk at the
Tiis Observatory. In 1901, he joined the Social Democratic Labor Party and worked fulltime for the revolutionary movement. In 1902, he was arrested for coordinating a labor
strike and exiled to Siberia, the rst of his many arrests and exiles in the edgling years of
the Russian Revolution. It was during this time that Joseph adopted the name "Stalin,"
meaning steel in Russian.
Though never a strong orator like Vladimir Lenin or an intellectual like Leon Trotsky, Joseph
Stalin excelled in the mundane operations of the revolution, calling meetings, publishing
leaets and organizing strikes and demonstrations. After escaping from exile, he was
marked by the Okhranka, (the tsar's secret police) as an outlaw and continued his work in
hiding, raising money through robberies, kidnappings and extortion. Stalin gained infamy
being associated with the 1907 Tiis bank robbery, which resulted in several deaths and
250,000 rubles stolen (approximately $3.4 million in U.S. dollars).
In February 1917, the Russian Revolution began. By March, the tsar had abdicated the
throne and was placed under house arrest. For a time, the revolutionaries supported a
provisional government, believing a smooth transition of power was possible. In April 1917,
Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin denounced the provisional government, arguing that the
people should rise up and take control by seizing land from the rich and factories from the
industrialists. By October, the revolution was complete and the Bolsheviks were in control.
a vast reign of terror, having people arrested in the night and put before spectacular show
trials. Potential rivals were accused of aligning with capitalist nations, convicted of being
"enemies of the people" and summarily executed. The purges eventually extended beyond
the party elite to local ofcials suspected of counterrevolutionary activities.
In the late 1920s and early 1930s, Stalin reversed the Bolshevik agrarian policy by seizing
land given earlier to the peasants and organizing collective farms. This essentially reduced
the peasants back to serfs, as they had been during the monarchy. Stalin believed that
collectivism would accelerate food production, but the peasants resented losing their land
and working for the state. Millions were killed in forced labor or starved during the ensuing
famine. Stalin also set in motion rapid industrialization that initially achieved huge
successes, but over time cost millions of lives and vast damage to the environment. Any
resistance was met with swift and lethal response; millions of people were exiled to the
labor camps of the Gulag or were executed.
As war clouds rose over Europe in 1939, Stalin made a seemingly brilliant move, signing a
nonaggression pact with Adolph Hitler and Nazi Germany. Stalin was convinced of Hitler's
integrity and ignored warnings from his military commanders that Germany was mobilizing
armies on its eastern front. When the Nazi blitzkrieg struck in June 1941, the Soviet Army
was completely unprepared and immediately suffered massive losses. Stalin was so
distraught at Hitler's treachery that he hid in his ofce for several days. By the time Stalin
regained his resolve, German armies occupied all of the Ukraine and Belarus, and its
artillery surrounded Leningrad.
To make matters worse, the purges of the 1930s had depleted the Soviet Army and
government leadership to the point where both were nearly dysfunctional. After heroic
efforts on the part of the Soviet Army and the Russian people, the Germans were turned
back at Stalingrad in 1943. By the next year, the Soviet Army was liberating countries in
Eastern Europe, even before the Allies had mounted a serious challenge against Hitler at
D-Day.
Stalin had been suspicious of the West since the inception of the Soviet Union. Ever since
the Soviet Union had entered the war, Stalin had demanded the Allies open up a second
front against Germany. Both British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and American
President Franklin D. Roosevelt argued that such an action would result in heavy
casualties. This only deepened Stalin's suspicion of the West, as millions of Russians died.
As the tide of war slowly turned in the Allies' favor, President Roosevelt and Prime Minister
Churchill met with Joseph Stalin to discuss postwar arrangements. At the rst of these
meetings, in Teheran, Iran, in late 1943, the recent victory in Stalingrad put Stalin in a solid
bargaining position. He demanded the Allies open a second front against Germany, which
they agreed to in the spring of 1944. In February 1945, the three leaders met again at Yalta
in the Crimea. With Soviet troops liberating countries in Eastern Europe, Stalin was again in
a strong position and negotiated virtually a free hand in reorganizing their governments.
He also agreed to enter the war against Japan once Germany was defeated.
The situation changed at the Potsdam Conference in July 1945. Roosevelt died that April
and was replaced by President Harry S. Truman. British parliamentary elections had
replaced Prime Minister Churchill with Clement Attlee as Britain's chief negotiator. By now,
the British and Americans were suspicious of Stalin's intentions and wanted to avoid Soviet
involvement in a postwar Japan. The dropping of two atomic bombs in August 1945 forced
Japan's surrender before the Soviets could mobilize.
Convinced of the Allies' hostility toward the Soviet Union, Stalin became obsessed with the
threat of an invasion from the West. Between 1945 and 1948, he established Communist
regimes in many Eastern European countries, creating a vast "buffer zone" between
Western Europe and "Mother Russia." Western powers interpreted these actions as proof of
Stalin's desire to place Europe under Communist control, thus formed the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization to counter Soviet inuence. In 1948, Stalin ordered an economic
blockade on the German city of Berlin, in hopes of gaining full control of the city. The Allies
mounted a massive airlift, supplying the city and eventually forcing Stalin to back down.
Stalin suffered another foreign policy defeat after he encouraged North Korean Communist
leader Kim Il Sung to invade South Korea, believing the United States would not interfere.
Earlier, he had ordered the Soviet representative to the United Nations to boycott the
Security Council because it refused to accept the newly formed Communist People's
Republic of China into the United Nations. When the resolution to support South Korea
came to a vote in the Security Council, the Soviet Union was unable to use its veto.
Quiz
1
Which of the following sentences from the biography shows Stalin's character and public
image?
(A)
Joseph did well in school, and his efforts gained him a scholarship to Tiis
Theological Seminary in 1894.
(B)
In 1901, he joined the Social Democratic Labor Party and worked full-time
for the revolutionary movement.
(C)
It was during this time that Joseph adopted the name "Stalin," meaning steel
in Russian.
(D)
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
Yes. It highlights the skills that earned Stalin respect and helped him gain
power.
(B)
Yes. It contrasts Stalin's leadership style against the leadership of Lenin and
Trotsky.
(C)
No. It does not mention Stalin's obsession with and suspicion of Western
powers.
(D)
No. It does not mention Stalin's brutality or his obsession with total power.
Answer Key
1
Which of the following sentences from the biography shows Stalin's character and public
image?
(A)
Joseph did well in school, and his efforts gained him a scholarship to Tiis
Theological Seminary in 1894.
(B)
In 1901, he joined the Social Democratic Labor Party and worked full-time
for the revolutionary movement.
(C)
It was during this time that Joseph adopted the name "Stalin," meaning
steel in Russian.
(D)
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
Yes. It highlights the skills that earned Stalin respect and helped him gain
power.
(B)
Yes. It contrasts Stalin's leadership style against the leadership of Lenin and
Trotsky.
(C)
No. It does not mention Stalin's obsession with and suspicion of Western
powers.
(D)
No. It does not mention Stalin's brutality or his obsession with total
power.