I Never San for My Father
Essay by review • February 5, 2011 • Essay • 351 Words (2 Pages) • 1,156 Views
Joseph Stalin was born in 21 December 1879. He was the second man in the Soviet Union leadership. During his ascension of power he suppressed and physically liquidated his political opponents for the least suspicions. He transformed the Soviet Union from a rural society into an industrial one and this enabled the Soviet Union to achieve triumph over the Axis countries in the World War II.
Stalin was born in the city of "Gori" at Georgia Republic. His father was a shoemaker called Biso and his mother was a peasant called Ikatina. Beating children was a common disciplinary action adopted by parents during this period and so his father used to beat him brutally and cruelly. Later on his father abandoned his family and left. His mother found herself alone facing the struggle of life without the family bread winner. When Stalin reached the age of 11 years old his mother sent him to the Christian Roman Orthodox School where he was taught until the age of 20. Stalin's joining the socialist Movement dated back to the days of his study at the Orthodox School which dismissed him in the year 1899 because of not attending tests as scheduled. Since he has regularly attended secret political work for 10 years and consequently from 1902 to 1917, he was exposed to arrest, and even to exile to "Siberia". Stalin believed in the same political ideology of Philadmire leinin. In the year 1912 he was qualified to hold a high political post as a member in the central committee of Bolshevik party. In the year 1913 he had the nickname of Stalin which means the "iron man".
During the Russian civil War Stalin held the post of the political commissioner of the Soviet army and he also held high ranking posts at the ruling communist party and its affiliated branches during the Polish Russian War, In the year 1922 Stalin was promoted to the communis
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