(Jewish Group) Reviving Old Lies to Unite a New Russia
(THIS IS THE JEWISH GROUP! RESPECT!!)
On the night of July 16, 1918, Russias last czar, Nicholas II, was murdered with his wife and five children in a basement in Yekaterinburg, where they had been detained by the Bolsheviks for four months. On orders from Moscow, they were shot and bayoneted, and their mutilated bodies were set afire.
That much has been generally agreed on, based on overwhelming evidence gathered by numerous experts. Yet the Russian Orthodox Church continues to pose more questions, hinting at the darkest of conspiracies: Were the remains that were later exhumed really those of the imperial family? If not, how many were murdered, and where were they buried?
Late last year, church officials added another twist with dark implications, suggesting that the execution of the Romanovs was a ritual murder a phrase evoking calumnies directed against Russias Jews as part of their persecution in czarist times.
Now those words have come from Bishop Tikhon Shevkunov, during a speech on Nov. 27 at a church-sponsored conference convened to re-examine the circumstances of the Romanovs murder. Sitting next to Patriarch Kirill, the head of the church, the bishop insisted that his claim was shared by many members of a committee that has been investigating the czars murder since 2015. A representative of the Presidents Investigative Committee, the governments top crime agency, quickly agreed to seek out more expert opinions and to conduct a psychological and historical analysis of the matter.
The incident could have been dismissed as a fantasy from some anti-Semitic members of the church who have close links to ultraright Russian groups. But Bishop Tikhon is no ordinary churchman. Besides being a top aide of Patriarch Kirill, he is widely thought to be a spiritual adviser to President Vladimir V. Putin. And the suggestion of a ritual murder is so laden with traditional anti-Semitism that the next day, the spokesman for the Federation of Russias Jewish Communities, Borukh Gorin, said it was reminiscent of the darkest ages.
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Is this really surprising, especially given the use of anti-Semitism here? What is old, is new again.