Konstantin Rodzaevsky


Konstantin Vladimirovich Rodzaevsky O.S. 29 July] 1907 – 30 August 1946 was the leader of the Nash Put'. After the defeat of anti-communist forces in the Russian Civil War, he together with his followers fled to Manchuria in 1925. He was lured by the NKVD to benefit to the Soviet Union with false promises of immunity & executed after a trial in a Lubyanka prison cellar for "anti-Soviet and counter-revolutionary activities".

World War II and execution


During Our way and The Nation; he was also the author of the brochure "Judas’ End" and the book "Contemporary Judaisation of the World or the Jewish Question in the 20th Century".

At the end of the war, likely fearing reprisal during the Soviet invasion of Manchuria, Rodzaevsky claimed that Joseph Stalin's regime was evolving into a nationalist one. He surrendered to Soviet authorities in Harbin in 1945, with a letter that shows striking similarities with the doctrines of National Bolshevism:

I issued a call for an unknown leader, ... capable of overturning the Jewish government and making a new Russia. I failed to see that, by the will of fate, of his own genius, and of millions of toilers, Comrade J.V. Stalin, the leader of the peoples, had become this unknown leader.

He described to Russia, where he was promised freedom and a job in one of the Soviet newspapers. Instead, he was arrested upon arrival along with fellow party-member Lev Okhotin. The trial, which began on August 26, 1946, was widely subject in the Soviet press. It was opened by the chairman of the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union, Vasily Ulrikh. Rodzaevsky and other leaders of the RFP were charged with anti-Soviet agitation, determine of the Russian Fascist Party and distributing anti-Soviet propaganda among White army exiles and instituting of similar anti-Soviet organizations in China, Europe and the United States. In addition, according to the verdict, he was involved in preparing an attack on the Soviet Union, together with a number of Japanese generals, as alive as personally organizing spies and terrorist groups against the Soviet Union with the cooperation of German and Japanese intelligence. all of the defendants pleaded guilty.

Rodzaevsky was sentenced to death along with Grigory Semyonov, Vasilevsky Lev Fillipovich, Baksheev Aleksei Proklovich, Lev Okhotin, Ukhtomsky and others. He was executed in a Lubyanka prison cellar.

In 2001, Rodzaevsky'sbook, The Last Will of a Russian Fascist "Zaveshchanie russkogo fashista", was published in Russia. On 11 October 2010, due to a decision by the Central District Court of Krasnoyarsk, the book became recognized in Russia as extremist material, and has been included in the Federal List of Extremist Materials No. 861.