Atheist Tyrant Inspired by Slaughter of Christian Families in French Revolution
Vladimir Lenin intentionally imitated the French genocide of the Vendée. In his journal, regions in Russia where he exterminated populations are called his "Vendées"
Vladimir Lenin, atheist ringleader of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, was influenced by the state-sponsored genocide of innocent Christians which took place over a century earlier in western France, in a region known as the Vendée.
By direct order of the French government, hundreds of thousands of men, women, and young children were slaughtered at the hands of the military. They wanted to remain simple Christian farmers, but they were put to death because they dared to resist the excesses of the Revolution.
A stunning film has been released, uncovering unpleasant truths about the French Revolution, highlighting the genocide of many innocent Christians. The documentary is titled, “The Hidden Rebellion”. These two trailers provide a helpful overview:
The extreme level of government-sponsored cruelty was appalling. Priests were hunted, men were butchered, pregnant mothers were drowned, innocent women were trampled under the feet of horses, and small children were impaled and shot.
These atrocities were not “excesses of war”, secretly perpetrated by rogue military leaders. On the contrary, these exterminations were carried out according to direct orders from the state, via written orders from Paris. The brutality continued for many months, until the French government determined that they had successfully eradicated a specific group of Christians in western France.
The following quotes gleaned from the documentary reveal the sheer extent of carnage that was exacted on men, women, children, and entire families:
“You government officials must prescribe my conduct in Vendée toward people and property. I am well intent on burning everything. But you must say what will happen of women and children. If I must put the sword through them, I will do so only if I get a written order from you, so that I am not solely responsible for this.” — General Turreau
“We received some pretty sad orders from the convention in Paris. We must go through Vendée and slaughter everyone we find - men, women, or children.” — Lieutenant Henri
“You ordered me to kill and burn everything.” — General Dusquesnoy
“The farmers have left 50 men and plenty of women in the hamlet. I will burn and kill anything I find there.” — General Turreau
“Mothers clutched their children against their breasts to die together.” — Beaudesson, Carriage Driver
“The army brought 500 children of both sexes to the same place, to be shot. The oldest were 14 years old. Never have you seen such a touching and appalling spectacle. The smallest children were so short that the gunfire flew over their heads. Many had loosened their bonds. The children embraced their executioners and looked up at them with innocence and terror. They were calling aloud to their fathers and mothers. But nothing could touch the hearts of those exterminators. They slaughtered them at their feet.” — Prudhomme - Plaine des Mauves 1794
“I was assigned to look after the women in the warehouse of Nantes. Thirty women were pregnant, up to eight months. I went back several days later to check on them, because their condition should have saved their life, but they had all been drowned.” — Pierre Chaux, Merchant
“I am exhausted. I have just shipped off eight hundred of them in one day. When I give them ‘the bath’, I strip men and women naked, I attach them two-by-two. I bring them on the banks of the Loire. Two of my men push them into the water headfirst. That's what we call 'Civil Marriage'.” — Ferryman Perdreau at Bouffay
The following passages are quoted from the documentary, revealing connections between the genocide of Christians in 18th century France, and the Communist extermination of Christians in the 20th century U.S.S.R.:
The Vendée is to Robespierre what Auschwitz was to the Nazis, what the gulags are to Stalin.
The three most influential thinkers of the first part of the nineteenth century were Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. They come right after Kant. When these three see the French revolution, and that reason — in the person of Robespierre — is determining how people will live, and is engineering the "new man", they think this is the greatest thing possible. And do you know who Hegel's most famous student was? Marx!
In communist Russia, Stalin was preceded by Lenin. Lenin, in 1910, came to a little French city called Pornic, which is not far from Vendée. And it would seem that Lenin studied the Vendée extermination, because later, in his journal, the words he uses are words from the war of Vendée. The Russian river Volga, where Lenin had his opponents drowned, is called his "Loire River". Regions in Russia where Lenin is going to exterminate populations are called "Vendées".
To Lenin, the war on Vendée showed that when a people resist revolution it must be destroyed, that there's no other way. That's why they made the Cossacks disappear. That's why the Soviets annihilated the best Ukrainian farmers.
They will systematically exterminate those populations that they judge "genetically unrevolutionary". It's in their power and their nature. With all of that, if one adds up all the deaths that occurred in the communist countries, one reaches a total of 100 to 200 million deaths.
There are certain things that are politically correct to say, and certain things that are not. One thing that is politically correct to say, is that Hitler is terrible, terrible, terrible. It's not [politically] correct to say that Stalin was worse, worse, worse. But those same mistakes that were made by Hitler were made also by Stalin, also by Pol Pot, also by the various communist regimes that still exist in the world today. And I'm thinking of North Korea. I'm also thinking of Cuba. Think of all of the systems where the individual has to conform to a standard in order to be able to live.
But it doesn't seem to bother some people. They say, "Oh, well, those were failed experimentations. It didn't work then, but let's try again!" And what is baffling, is that we still have people today who want to build the "new man". They believe in the gender theory, for example. They use a lot of theories — theories that are time after time proven false, but they are always the latest chatter in the media, and even in the government.
For additional information, watch The Hidden Rebellion documentary, and read Dr. Reynald Secher’s book, A French Genocide: The Vendée. Drawing upon previously unavailable sources, he describes the civil war in the Vendée region of western France, which lasted for much of the 1790s. He shows that the massacres resulting from the conflict between revolutionary forces and those of the counter-revolution were not the inevitable result of fierce battles, but rather were premeditated, committed in cold blood, massive and systematic, and undertaken with the conscious and proclaimed will to destroy a well-defined region, and to exterminate an entire people. This book is also available online.