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Fyodor Viktorovich Vinberg

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The Protocols

The Protocols of the Elders of Zion

Editions of The Protocols

First publication of The Protocols
Programma zavoevaniya mira evreyami

Writers, editors, and publishers associated with The Protocols
Carl Ackerman · Boris Brasol
G. Butmi · Natalie de Bogory
Denis Fahey · Henry Ford · L. Fry
Howell Gwynne · Harris Houghton
Pavel Krushevan · Victor Marsden
Sergei Nilus · George Shanks
Fyodor Vinberg · Clyde J. Wright

Debunkers of The Protocols
Vladimir Burtsev · Herman Bernstein Norman Cohn · John S. Curtiss
Philip Graves · Michael Hagemeister
Pierre-André Taguieff · Lucien Wolf

Influenced by The Protocols
The International Jew
The Jewish Bolshevism · Mein Kampf

Fyodor Viktorovich Vinberg (Russian: Фёдор Викторович Винберг, 27.06.1868 - 14.02.1927) — Russian officer and journalist.

Contents

[edit] Life & Work

Born in Kiev in the family of general, Vinberg studied in high school in Kiev and in Alexander Lyceum. In years 1891-1892 he worked in the ministry of internal afairs. In 1893 he entered military service. Serving in cavalry, he rose to the rank of colonel in 1911.

In the years before World War I, he became involved in extreme right-wing politics, joining Russian Assmebly, Union of Archangel Michael and writing for right-wing publications.

During the first world war he commanded 2nd Baltic cavalry regiment. After the February Revolution he left the army.

After the October revolution he was imprisoned by Bolsheviks for his role in alleged plot to overthrow the provisional government. He pleaded not guilty and pointed out to the absurdity of such charges by Bolsheviks, who have overthrown Provisional government themselves. He was sentenced to one year imprisonment by the revolutionary tribunal, but released in early 1918. In prison he kept notes, which he published later.

In 1919 he found his way to Berlin, where he published short-lived right-wing newspaper Prizyv ("The Call") and Luch Sveta ("A Ray of Light") magazine. He was a friend and colleague of Piotr Shabelsky-Bork, with whom he collaborated. In his magazine he republished Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

In the wake of the Kapp Putsch of March 1920, Vinberg moved from Berlin to Munich. In 1922 he moved to France, where he died in 1927.

Vinberg was a loyal Russian monarchist with an aristocratic contempt for the masses. He called for "Aryan peoples" to unite against the "Jewish plan for world domination".

Walter Laqueur describes his ideas as "a half-way house between the old Black Hundred and National Socialism". Vinberg distinguished two kinds of anti-semitism: the "higher", concerned with restrictive laws against the Jews, and the "lower", the brutal and homicidal behaviour of the lower classes, which was terrible but essential if the Jewish menace, recently responsible for communist revolution, is finally to be laid to rest. Their task would be the complete annihilation of the Jews.

[edit] Works

Taĭnyĭ vozhdʹ īudeĭskīĭ.: Perevod s frantsuzskago
[of Miss L. Fry by Th. Vinberg, being an attempt to prove
the "Protokoly Sīonskikh Mudret︠s︡ov"
published in a work by S. A. Nilus
to be a work by U. Ginzberg].
by Leslie Fry; Thedor Viktorovich Vinberg Berlin, 1922.
OCLC: 84780936
  • Krestny Put (Via Dolorosa)- 1921

[edit] References

  • L'Apocalypse de notre temps; les dessous de la propagande allemande d'après des documents inédits by Henri Rollin (Paris: Gallimard, 1939) pp. 153 seq.
  • Russia and Germany, A Century of Conflict by Walter Laqueur (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1965) pp.109 seq.
  • Warrant for Genocide by Norman Cohn (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1967) pp. 90, 139-140, 155-156, 184.

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