Nikolai Yezhov: Stalin’s “Bloody Dwarf” and the Great Purge
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16m
The 1930s, the Soviet Union. As Joseph Stalin consolidates power, fear spreads through the Communist Party. Convinced that enemies and conspirators surround him, Stalin launches the Great Purge – a campaign of arrests, torture, and executions that will engulf the entire Soviet state.
At the center of this terror stands Nikolai Yezhov, the head of the NKVD, the Soviet secret police. Small in stature but ruthless in ambition, Yezhov becomes Stalin’s most loyal executioner. Under his command, fabricated conspiracies lead to show trials, forced confessions, and mass executions that devastate the Communist Party, the Red Army, and Soviet society.
Between 1937 and 1938 alone, more than a million people are arrested and hundreds of thousands are executed in what becomes known as “Yezhovshchina” – the time of Yezhov. Entire groups are targeted, including ethnic minorities, political rivals, and ordinary citizens caught in the machinery of terror.
Yet the architect of this brutal system ultimately falls victim to it himself. As Stalin’s paranoia shifts and new allies rise, the once-powerful NKVD chief finds his position rapidly collapsing. The man who oversaw the darkest chapter of Stalin’s purges soon faces the same fate as many of his victims.
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