What Happened to Joseph Stalin’s children?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии •

  • @Ntombi_Red
    @Ntombi_Red Год назад +1840

    You were fighting for your life pronouncing those names😅

    • @Georges_IV
      @Georges_IV Год назад +114

      Not mentioning the borders and where he placed stalingrad

    • @AnneEloiseOfCNY
      @AnneEloiseOfCNY Год назад +52

      Yes, poor guy! He bravely achieved good pronunciation, good for an American that is. ❤

    • @allenhanford
      @allenhanford Год назад +55

      He deserves to go to the GOO-LAHG ( I don't dare let him pronounce it).

    • @melissaclark4676
      @melissaclark4676 Год назад +6

      Right!! Lmbo

    • @MabDarogan2
      @MabDarogan2 Год назад +63

      He can't even pronounce Yakov correctly

  • @TexasTimeLord
    @TexasTimeLord Год назад +475

    Svetlana Peters lived near Richland Center Wisconsin. I worked in the main library there and I checked out books to her often. For 3 years I had NO clue who she really was until after she died.

    • @bigfootjinxthecat8696
      @bigfootjinxthecat8696 Год назад +48

      “Hey aren’t you stalins son?”
      Her: *flashbacks*

    • @MIMALECKIPL
      @MIMALECKIPL Год назад +41

      @@bigfootjinxthecat8696 DAUGHTER

    • @azumishimizu1880
      @azumishimizu1880 Год назад +20

      Never realising it was her father who took down 80% of the most powerful military force during WW II. The Germans.

    • @alanfike
      @alanfike Год назад

      @@azumishimizu1880 Considering that her father also helped enable the illegal manufacturing of Nazi armaments and that literally no one in the world outside of Japan wanted to repeat WWI, including Italy it turned out, sure, I'd say he broke even. Plus he was invaded, so he wasn't given any choice. The Nazis were a criminal regime whose advancements were blunted by the much greater advancements of the United Kingdom and the United States.
      Keep your overrated Tiger tank that can be disabled by a single molotov cocktail over the area behind the main turret. The Allies came up with radar, the atomic bomb and the modern computer.
      "The Germans" only got as far as they did by invading much, much weaker and even friendly countries.

    • @GrandMasterKai
      @GrandMasterKai Год назад

      got any proof or making shit up for youtube likes?

  • @lehuynguyen8400
    @lehuynguyen8400 Год назад +201

    Svetlana did another thing that would make her father exploded with anger.
    She embraced the Christian faith & converted to Roman Catholicism in the end.

    • @ElCid48
      @ElCid48 Год назад +22

      I heard that she was there when he died and the expression on his face of great fear opened up her eyes to the concept of a GOD ALMIGHTY

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Год назад

      Luckily, Stalin was far too dead to care.

    • @Don-mu2qh
      @Don-mu2qh Год назад +8

      @@ElCid48 Stalin died alone. Everyone waited outside the door afraid to go insider.

    • @SuperCatacata
      @SuperCatacata Год назад +1

      ​@@Don-mu2qhWell someone had to eventually go in and see the expression on the corpse.

    • @steveshapiro326
      @steveshapiro326 Год назад

      Never knew that.

  • @Соряныч
    @Соряныч Год назад +544

    As Russian, I almost died hearing this pronunciation

    • @GeorgeSemel
      @GeorgeSemel Год назад +34

      I am an American, its cringe worth to say the least. I am teaching myself the Russian Language. I do have my days. Not an easy thing.

    • @TheOpinionatedElectrician
      @TheOpinionatedElectrician Год назад +9

      ​@@GeorgeSemel Same here. A lot of it sticks with you, but the nuances go in one ear and out the other. I briefly dated someone from Russia a lot of years ago and picked up some basic conversation, but the language itself is difficult. Anyone can tell you that the pronunciation in the video was cringeworthy.

    • @RendallRen
      @RendallRen Год назад +26

      Non-Russian speaker here, and I agree. Not sure how *Svanidze* becomes "Svandiz"

    • @Valathia
      @Valathia Год назад +32

      I'm not Russian, and I almost died. He skipped whole syllables. He couldn't even pronounce Ekaterine and decided to name her by her last name the whole time even-thought it's harder to pronounce LOL

    • @ikonographics
      @ikonographics Год назад +38

      You don't even need to be Russian to die listening to the pronunciation...

  • @henriquemachado9941
    @henriquemachado9941 Год назад +463

    Wait... WHAT!? Svetlana survived until 2011!?
    Now that's... _I was born and she was still alive..._
    *Why is that so surprising to me...?*

    • @AnneEloiseOfCNY
      @AnneEloiseOfCNY Год назад +34

      Wow! She died relatively recently! What a surprise!

    • @Simonspacex
      @Simonspacex Год назад +13

      She actually died exactly a month and a day before I was born...

    • @6000.
      @6000. Год назад +7

      “Well she wasn’t alive when I was born”
      *-a mf’ing 👶*

    • @jamellfoster6029
      @jamellfoster6029 Год назад +19

      That's not that surprising. She was 85 in 2011. She was born the year as my grandma who died in 2007 at age 81...

    • @jamellfoster6029
      @jamellfoster6029 Год назад +7

      ​@@Simonspacex wow. You are only a few months older than my youngest who will be 12 in February. (I'm an older lady at age 44)...

  • @Plainview200
    @Plainview200 Год назад +509

    The second wife may very well have had an assisted suicide. I believe poor Yakov died trying to escape prison. Stalin loved his daughter but things began going bad when, as a teenager, she started acting independent, including having unapproved boyfriends. Stalin was great at killing people, but iffy as a parent.

    • @marcbahn5487
      @marcbahn5487 Год назад +3

      It was a German prison.

    • @Plainview200
      @Plainview200 Год назад +26

      @@marcbahn5487 Yes, he was a prisoner of war. Some say he committed suicide, of committed suicide by trying to escape.

    • @Johnconno
      @Johnconno Год назад +8

      Stalin didn't kill anyone who wasn't guilty.

    • @freespiritable
      @freespiritable Год назад

      ​@@Johnconnofor real though? How blind do you have to be to assert that? He killed more than 4% of USSR's population, are you delusional? 4 million alone in Ukrainian Holodomor

    • @2eleven48
      @2eleven48 Год назад +33

      @@Johnconno ...Tell that to the approximately 700,000 people who died during the Great Purge (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Purge).

  • @Hydra2054
    @Hydra2054 Год назад +217

    Nono Germans: "We have captured your son!"
    Stalin: "Do you have any better hostages?"

    • @lightyagami3492
      @lightyagami3492 Год назад +10

      💀💀💀

    • @mongoliandeathworm2994
      @mongoliandeathworm2994 Год назад +30

      Afraid to say Nazi?

    • @Hydra2054
      @Hydra2054 Год назад +1

      @@mongoliandeathworm2994 no I can say Nazi just fine. Saying Nono is funnier.

    • @mereassassinates550
      @mereassassinates550 Год назад +20

      Gotta love Joseph Stalin 😂😂😂😂 Nazi’s are ruthless until Joseph Stalin is in the room then they almost look innocent

    • @Thomas20Smith
      @Thomas20Smith Год назад +1

      @@Hydra2054I gotta good out of it 😂

  • @Dinoeel
    @Dinoeel Год назад +278

    Anybody else feel bad for Stalin’s first son?

    • @tristan583
      @tristan583 Год назад +22

      No

    • @dadwholeftyou
      @dadwholeftyou Год назад +10

      ​@@tristan583😅

    • @mereassassinates550
      @mereassassinates550 Год назад +41

      Yeah just a little but I respect Stalin for not making that deal…Any western leader would of made it to save members of they family despite betraying the country to do soo but Stalin put country first (or his ego) but it benefited his country whatever his reasons

    • @victorhorvat1386
      @victorhorvat1386 Год назад +3

      No

    • @eugeneczerwinskyj3354
      @eugeneczerwinskyj3354 Год назад +1

      You say stalin was good for his country like killing millions of people in the USSR ? ​@@mereassassinates550

  • @bajancherry2407
    @bajancherry2407 Год назад +73

    He fathered a child before the revolution when he was exiled in Siberia. I came to this video to find out whatever happened to that child. But this video doesn’t cover that child, everything else is freely available on Wikipedia. And yes, not just the Russian names are butchered but also Kunwar Brijesh Singh, husband or not of Svetlana.

    • @flowerdolphin5648
      @flowerdolphin5648 Год назад +12

      Sachsenhausen was also terribly butchered. He even said military wrong at one point.

    • @flowerdolphin5648
      @flowerdolphin5648 Год назад +1

      @AwesomeWrench seriously? It sounds like a real person. I swear, AI tech needs to just not appear on the internet. And if, make it sound like it's not a human. It's getting impossible to distinguish

    • @SuperCatacata
      @SuperCatacata Год назад +1

      ​@@flowerdolphin5648IDK if this vid is AI. But it's certainly the future, so we'd better learn to recognize it

    • @ole340
      @ole340 Год назад +1

      @@flowerdolphin5648 It's based on human voice, but the words are registered separately, so there's no fluctuation in the sentence, that way you recognize it.

    • @Frank-Lee-Speeking
      @Frank-Lee-Speeking 6 дней назад

      I was also disappointed that there was no attempt to report on his "unofficial" children. He apparently had some affairs, including the one you mentioned and one with his housekeeper that produced children but information on those children is hard to find. I heard a rumour a few decades back that Stalin had a grandson that looks very much like him but I don't know if that individual is still alive, assuming he ever existed.

  • @maoyang9226
    @maoyang9226 2 года назад +111

    I'm not surprised by how he treated his children!

    • @johnsch1988
      @johnsch1988 Год назад +11

      None of his children have ever said that he treats them badly. Don 't write nonsense .

    • @brulsmurf
      @brulsmurf Год назад +17

      @@johnsch1988 have you seen the video?

    • @johnsch1988
      @johnsch1988 Год назад +13

      @@brulsmurf
      Here is a letter from Stalin to one of his son's teachers, who gave him a deuce and for this the school director wanted to fire him. After receiving news of this story , no one fired the teacher , and Stalin thanked him for such treatment of his son . Well , a tyrant is a tyrant
      To the teacher T. Martyshinu.
      I have received your letter about the works of Vasily Stalin. Thank you for the letter.
      I am responding with a long delay due to work overload. I apologize.
      Vasily is a spoiled young man of average abilities, a savage (a type of Skiff!), not always truthful, likes to blackmail weak “leaders”, often impudent, with a weak or - rather - disorganized will.
      He was spoiled by all sorts of “godmothers” and “gossips” who constantly emphasize that he is “the son of Stalin.”
      I am glad that in your person there was at least one self-respecting teacher who treats Vasily like everyone else and demands from the impudent submission to the general regime at school. Vasily is spoiled by the directors, like the one you mentioned, people are rags who have no place in school, and if the impudent Vasily has not had time to ruin himself yet, it's because there are some teachers in our country who do not let down a capricious barchuk.
      My advice is to demand stricter from Vasily and not be afraid of fake, blackmail threats
      I. STALIN
      8.VI.38

    • @brulsmurf
      @brulsmurf Год назад +25

      @@johnsch1988 "I do not trade field marshals for lieutenants". And let his son die n captivity. Thats definitly not card on fathersday 😁

    • @johnsch1988
      @johnsch1988 Год назад +16

      Everyone then lost sons, husbands, fathers, brothers in the war, many lost even 10 children. My 2 great-grandfathers died in the war with the Nazis, one went missing, and the other died liberating Poland. Stalin acted like a real man, the father of the people, the leader. A difficult choice in a difficult time. Therefore , Stalin 's popularity today is more than 70 % . All the lies that were said about him went to the trash of history along with such propaganda

  • @OneOfThoseTypes
    @OneOfThoseTypes Год назад +79

    Dude I don't speak russian but I think you mispronounced every single word in this video. Even the English ones!

    • @pierrem7188
      @pierrem7188 Год назад +2

      This is not a real voice lol

    • @OneOfThoseTypes
      @OneOfThoseTypes Год назад +6

      @@pierrem7188 Then it's the worst software ever.

    • @pierrem7188
      @pierrem7188 Год назад +3

      @@OneOfThoseTypes I guess they all use the same, that's why you find the same voice across different channels

    • @Olliethesnowman
      @Olliethesnowman 8 месяцев назад +1

      Hahahahhahaha

    • @robertklose2140
      @robertklose2140 Месяц назад

      You got that right. I think this was a high school project. Even Google Translate could have given the narrator a fairly good pronunciation guide for these names.

  • @tomasluko7124
    @tomasluko7124 Год назад +51

    investing 20 minutes to learn how to pronounce Russian names correctly would have made a world of difference to this video

    • @Mo_Mudabber
      @Mo_Mudabber Год назад +2

      Just read the names are you blind💀

    • @philipmulville8218
      @philipmulville8218 Год назад +1

      Yes, really not that difficult. The content was very good apart from the butchered pronunciation.

    • @marcusantoniusAfterDark
      @marcusantoniusAfterDark Год назад

      Nope. Pronouncing names of Russians wrong is a good way of trolling them and behave like they do. They are not important at all.

  • @Americanpatriot-zo2tk
    @Americanpatriot-zo2tk Год назад +46

    He spent on his time protecting his own position as a dictator. He had no intention of doing anything for his family, at least, in my opinion.

  • @dasprowhite
    @dasprowhite Год назад +85

    Imagine being a german soldier and asked a soviet POW “Hey who is your father” and he said “Stalin.”

    • @greekwarrior5373
      @greekwarrior5373 Год назад +1

      Well Stalin is my Grandfather

    • @jonashassel5404
      @jonashassel5404 Год назад +2

      THE GOSPEL OF THE WORD OF ALMIGHTY GOD "is a great last age (age of the word) that He will save man so accept the new and last work by done the Lord Jesus Christ"
      "Utterances of Christ's in the Beginning chapter 103". ... (The disasters in the world are intensifying every day, and in My home, the dire disasters are intensifying. Since the change is now taking place, people do not know where they will step next. It will be it is only revealed after My judgment. Remember! These are the steps in My work, and this is the way I work. I speak to My firstborn children in tones of comfort, compassion, and love (because always If I enlighten these people and I will not leave them, because I have appointed them), while I subject people apart from My first-born children to severe judgment, to threats, and to intimidation, making them always afraid until point they are always nervous. Sons of the great red dragon, listen to Me! I came from Zion and incarnated on earth to gain My firstborn sons, to shame your father (these words are addressed to the descendants of the great red dragon), to help My first-born children, and correct the wrongs done to My first-born children. In the past, My children were intimidated and oppressed, and since the Father holds power for the children, My children will return to My loving embrace, never to be intimidated and oppressed again. More importantly, this is the only way that will allow My first born children to reign with Me in power.)
      Almighty God said
      Disasters in the WORLD ARE INTENSIFYING EVERY DAY, and in My HOME, severe disasters are intensifying. People have REALLY NOTHING to HIDE, NO PLACE they can hide THEMSELVES. Because the CHANGE is HAPPENING NOW, PEOPLE DO NOT KNOW WHERE they will step NEXT. It will only be revealed after My judgment. Remember! 😪
      These are the steps in My work, and this is the way I work. For ALL My FIRSTBORN CHILDREN, I will comfort them one by one, I will RAISE them step by step; as for the servants, I will remove and abandon them one by one. 🙏 ☀️
      This is a part of My management plan. After all the servants have been revealed, My firstborn children will also be revealed. (For Me, this is very easy. AFTER THEY HEAR My WORDS, ALL the SERVANTS will gradually retreat BEFORE THE JUDGMENT and threat of My WORDS, and ONLY My FIRSTBORN CHILDREN will be left. 🙏
      It is not a voluntary thing nor can it be changed by human will; rather, it is My Spirit personally working.)
      This is not a distant event, and you should somehow and must infer it from within this phase of My work and My words. Why I will speak so much and the unpredictability of My expressions is beyond people's understanding. I SPEAK to My FIRST CHILDREN in a TONE of COMFORT, COMPASSION, and LOVE (Because I ALWAYS ILLUMINATE these PEOPLE and NEVER FORSAKE THEM, because I CONSIGNED THEM), as I subject people apart from My firstborn children in severe judgment, in threats, and intimidation, which makes them always afraid to the point where they are always nervous. ☀️
      When the situation reaches a certain point, they will escape from this condition (WHEN I DESTROY THE WORLD, these PEOPLE will go to the ETERNAL DEEP), but they will never escape My hand in judgment, and they will never free from this situation. ☀️
      This, then, is their judgment; this is their chastisement. On the DAY the FOREIGNERS COME, I WILL REVEAL these PEOPLE one by one. These are the steps in My work.
      Now, do you understand the purpose behind My previous utterances of those words? In My opinion, something that has not been fulfilled is also something that has been fulfilled, but something that has been fulfilled does not necessarily mean something that has been achieved. This is because I have My wisdom, and I have My way of doing things, which people really cannot understand. When I have achieved results in this step (when I have revealed all those who are evil against Me), I will start the next step, because My will is unstoppable and no one dares to hinder My plan of management and nothing dares to put obstacles - they must get out of the way!
      CHILDREN of the GREAT RED DRAGON, LISTEN TO ME! ☀️
      I CAME from ZION and was INCARNATED on WORLD to GET My FIRSTBORN CHILDREN, to SHAME your FATHER (these words are addressed to the descendants of the great red dragon), to HELP My FIRSTBORN CHILDREN, and RECTIFY THE WRONG DONE to My FIRSTborn CHILDREN. ☀️🙏
      So DON'T BE CRUEL AGAIN; I WILL LET My ELDERLY CHILDREN fix you. IN THE PAST, My CHILDREN HAVE BEEN FEARED and OPPRESSED, and since the FATHER HOLDS POWER for the CHILDREN, My CHILDREN will RETURN to My LOVING EMBRACE, never to be FEARED and OPPRESSED AGAIN. 🙏💐
      I am not unrighteous; It SHOWS My RIGHTEOUSNESS, and it is REALLY "loving what I love and hating what I hate." ☀️
      If you say that I am unrighteous, you should hurry away. Do not be shameless and smoke in My home. You should hurry back to your home so I don't have to see you.
      The ETERNAL DEPTH is your DESTINY and there you WILL STAY. If you are in My home, there will be no place for you, because you are work animals; you are the tools I use.
      When I can no longer use you, I will THROW you into the FIRE to BURN you. These are My administrative assignments; I have to do it this way, and this alone shows how I work and reveal My righteousness and My majesty. MORE IMPORTANTLY, this is the only WAY THAT WILL ALLOW MY FIRSTBORN SONS TO RULE WITH ME IN POWER. 🙏💐
      From "The WORD Appears in the Flesh". holy book
      Fulfilled in "In the beginning He was the Word, the Word was with God, and the Word was God" (John 1:1). ... and "When I looked up, someone handed me a book wrapped in a scroll. I opened it and I read on both sides the prayers, lamentations, and curses." (Ezekiel 2:9-10). ... "His garment was stained with blood. He was called the "Word of God" (Rev. 19:13).
      The kingdom He brought down and set up in the highest in the sky so that it can occupy His creation in the universe and engrave on it the entirety of His Holy name "THE CHURCH OF ALMIGHTY GOD" 💐 fulfillment of (Mat. 16:18) "And I say as for you, you are Peter, on top of this rock I will build my Church, that even the power of death will not prevail over it.". ... and "The Letter to the Church in Philadelphia" (Rev. 3:7-13). ... And fulfillment of "The New Jerusalem" 💫 (Rev. 21:10) "The Spirit enveloped me, and the angel led me to the top of a very high mountain. He showed Me Jerusalem, the Holy City, which coming down from heaven from God."
      (1 Peter 4:17) "For the time has come in the house of God for the beginning of judgment in the house of God."
      📩 Calling and leading the sheep of God to His glorious Throne "THE CHURCH OF ALMIGHTY GOD"💐 to submit again to His authority so that He will continue to teach, guide and protect even in plague, famine and wild animals will not be moved by it and completely win this final battle with the big red dragon!
      "They say with a loud voice, "Salvation comes from the Lamb, and from our God who sits on the Throne!" (Rev. 7:10). ... and it will be fulfilled that will be established above the sky/RUclips in (Isaiah 2: 2 / 9:6) "On the Last Day, the mountain on which Jehovah's temple stands will stand out above all the mountains. All nations will flock there. " . . . "For a baby boy is born to us. The rule will be given to him; and he shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Almighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace." 💌✉️

    • @mereassassinates550
      @mereassassinates550 Год назад +6

      Imagine being that same German soldier thinking he won the jackpot just for Stalin to say “Who the fuck is that”

    • @gregorygagua7455
      @gregorygagua7455 Год назад +2

      The Nacis knew whos son he was

    • @incomitatus
      @incomitatus Год назад +3

      The story I heard was that the Germans had assembled a group of Russian POWs & were separating them into work details. One German guard looked at Stalin's son, pointed at him & said, "you, you look Jewish, are you?" The man next to him laughed & said, "he's no Jew, he's a Georgian, that's Stalin's son". The German guard was flabbergasted. In the few photos I've seen of the time he was captured, he seems to be surrounded by Luftwaffe officers.

  • @alexandermikhailov2481
    @alexandermikhailov2481 Год назад +54

    Each and every name in this video is pronounced totally wrong. It's a very rare and alternative talent.

  • @rileysteve
    @rileysteve Год назад +31

    Svetlana and I were pen-pals back in the mid to late 1960's. I don't recall the specifics, however, it had something to do with one of my high school classes. I believe she lived in New Jersey at the time. I do not remember much other then she was always kind to me. I do not think I had the capacity to appreciate the importance of our relationship.

    • @HenryReardon-i2x
      @HenryReardon-i2x Год назад +3

      I had no idea that she corresponded with people like that. It makes me wish I had known this 40 years ago when I first started reading about the Soviet Union. There are MANY questions I would have liked to ask....
      I think my first question would have been to confirm something attributed to one of her books where she said her father said something VERY troubling after the Germans invaded the Soviet Union. She quoted him as saying "It's too bad Hitler decided to invade us. TOGETHER, WE COULD REALLY HAVE DONE SOME THINGS." That is probably the single most chilling thing I've ever read.

    • @SuperCatacata
      @SuperCatacata Год назад +4

      She changed her name for a reason.
      She wanted her relationships to be authentic because of who she was, not what she was named.
      I can respect that greatly.

  • @IIJOSEPHXII
    @IIJOSEPHXII Год назад +259

    It must be difficult to pronounce every foreign word wrong. Some of the words are even pronounced inconsistently wrong. There's two different mispronuciations of Sachsenhausen at least.

    • @IIJOSEPHXII
      @IIJOSEPHXII Год назад +5

      Well I'm not sure about this one. Continuing the video you pronounced the word military "miliskerry"

    • @austria-hungary4981
      @austria-hungary4981 Год назад +39

      Well this guy pronounced every name wrong like tf. Even an average American would pronounce foreign names better than this person. It's like he's met with Stalin's family for the first time.

    • @nickskybart5342
      @nickskybart5342 Год назад +23

      @@austria-hungary4981 Came here to comment on this as well. Unwatchable for me just for the appalling pronunciation.

    • @austria-hungary4981
      @austria-hungary4981 Год назад +1

      @@nickskybart5342 Like is this dude even from America because his English is like cringeworthy.

    • @TheBigFatPoop
      @TheBigFatPoop Год назад +13

      also the maps were completely inaccurate. He placed Stalingrad in the middle of Kazakhstan

  • @NguyenTran-eq3yt
    @NguyenTran-eq3yt 2 года назад +79

    This is an amazing video about the unknown stories of Stalin's Children, I have studied a lot about Stalin but don't know much about this one, thanks a lot 🎉

    • @HenryReardon-i2x
      @HenryReardon-i2x Год назад +2

      This video only covers his acknowledged children. I've seen claims that he had several mistresses over and above the two women named in the video and had children with some of these mistresses. As far as I know, none of those children were ever acknowledged to be his but I've heard a claim that he has (or at least had; he might have died by now) a grandson that looked just like him resulting from his time with one of these mistresses. Apparently, the housekeeper who tended one of his dachas was one of these mistresses and she was the one who actually found him after he'd had the massive stroke that killed him a few days later. She was the only person who dared to enter his room when he didn't come out on his own; everyone else fearted for their jobs (or lives) if they entered his room without him summoning them first.

  • @paulgardner5079
    @paulgardner5079 Год назад +56

    I saw an interesting clip about Vasily the other day. His drunkeness and so on are well known but I didnt realize he was a very skilled and brave pilot

    • @johnsch1988
      @johnsch1988 Год назад +12

      Vasily was destroyed by Khrushchev, who came to power at that time. His drunkenness is a consequence of this situation

  • @thomaszanzal7846
    @thomaszanzal7846 Год назад +17

    He was handsome as a young man , and his first wife was a beauty.

  • @ulanbaialiev2129
    @ulanbaialiev2129 Год назад +7

    You understand - his children fought at the front like everyone else! The fact that he, like all ordinary citizens, sacrificed his son in order not to give up the general already speaks of his personality. Which leader can do that now?

  • @writtenplague
    @writtenplague Год назад +56

    I’ve been to Svetlana’s daughter’s antique shop in Portland, Or. it was amazing to meet stalins grand daughter

    • @Mega-zi7ys
      @Mega-zi7ys Год назад +5

      It would be more Amazing to meet the grand daughter of Stalin's victims. He was a mass murderer

    • @writtenplague
      @writtenplague Год назад

      @@Mega-zi7ys so his daughter is guilty of what, and then his grand daughter is guilty too how many generations should they be punished? They have western ideology you dumbass, they are not like Stalin and that’s precisely what’s cool.

    • @Mega-zi7ys
      @Mega-zi7ys Год назад

      You're premise was it was "amazing" to meet the grand daughter of a mass murderer. If she weren't the grand daughter of mass murderer would you have said it was so amazing? Sounding very memorable it seems!
      Dumbass! You make it sound special because she's Stalin's Grand daughter.
      So what's special? Mass murderers, megalomaniacs are encouraged to commit such heinous crimes because they know there is
      No shame in it for the descendants.
      Perhaps you would be honored to meet and shake the hands of Hitler's grand daughter if he had one???

    • @Julia-sy3re
      @Julia-sy3re Год назад +1

      ​@@Mega-zi7ys😅

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Год назад +6

      @Mega-zi7ys she definitely had not to do with that. Stalin had long since died by the time his granddaughter was born. Svetlana's siblings were also long gone by then too.

  • @sajithudayanga6503
    @sajithudayanga6503 Год назад +40

    According to the book named" The Red Monarch " Stalin really loved his 2nd wife. He even once wanted to write on her tomb as something like "from your husband that loves you alot" But because of his arrogance and pride. He didn't. Stalin was nothing but a unhappy, unsatisfied person and a prison of his image that he was not enjoying. That is why Stalin deserves to be Hated less than Lavrentiy Beria.

    • @dvnk6971
      @dvnk6971 Год назад +6

      Yes, he hated the cult of personality that was formed around him. Also very paranoid... This resulted in him becoming so notorious...

    • @HenryReardon-i2x
      @HenryReardon-i2x Год назад

      Who do you think HIRED Beria to run the secret police?

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 Год назад +2

      But Stalin was the reason Beria got into the job and remain in power in the first place despite knowing his many horrible crimes and actions.

    • @longwlenguyen4214
      @longwlenguyen4214 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@brandonlyon730Funny enough Stalin even sent his own mother under Beria care and was surprise nothing happened to her, my guess is knowing Stalin horrible past thanks to his parents Beria thought it would be hilarious just to kept her around just to remind Stalin of trauma, Beria maybe surprise of how Stalin so scare of his frail mom and she’s too old anyway. Beria ironically despite a monster he was a good father compare to Stalin, Beria son loved his father so much that he literally fought tooth and nails to prove his father innocence and that kinda messed up.

    • @fabriciogoodchild2659
      @fabriciogoodchild2659 2 месяца назад

      ​@@dvnk6971he created the cult of personality around himself he didn't hate it

  • @centredoorplugsthornton4112
    @centredoorplugsthornton4112 Год назад +34

    Look for the long out of print autobiography by former Soviet actress Kyra Petrovskaya in which she describes acquaintance with Vasily Stalin and briefly meets his father.
    Olga Peters at last report lives in Portland, Oregon and legally changed her name.

    • @Dailymailnewz
      @Dailymailnewz Год назад

      Here is just pure Jo Biden history about Stalin so if you can trust the rolling jo biden then you can call this history...

  • @melindaengstrom9102
    @melindaengstrom9102 Год назад +55

    Excellent video! The only flaw is that the Russian names are incorrectly pronounced. For instance, Stalin’s second wife’s name is pronounced ”Nad-YE-zh-da Alli-LU-ye-va”.

    • @australianjackaroo6660
      @australianjackaroo6660 Год назад +5

      In English we have a habit of pronouncing place names in a way that's easier for us to pronounce

    • @rathersane
      @rathersane Год назад +19

      It’s as if he didn’t even try.

    • @IDT69
      @IDT69 Год назад +1

      Maybe you could give us a link to the video you’ve made on the topic with all the correct pronunciations

    • @crimsoncardinal208
      @crimsoncardinal208 Год назад +18

      Russian names? Georgian names were so butchered that author of this video should be called in Hague to answer for his crimes against humanity.

    • @AnneEloiseOfCNY
      @AnneEloiseOfCNY Год назад +3

      I don't know Russian. So I was perfectly fine with his pronunciation. And anyway, the information was far more important for me than quibbles about sounds.

  • @austria-hungary4981
    @austria-hungary4981 Год назад +15

    The sound effects were too loud and the name pronunciation was *hilarious*

  • @petezereeeah
    @petezereeeah Год назад +22

    Stalin's son was captured by the Germans in WW2. The Soviets captured Hitler's nephew. Hitler was seriously pissed off his nephew was on the eastern front and was captured. He wanted to do a swap with Stalin for his son. Stalin said no. Both Hitler's nephew and Stalin's son both died in captivity under dubious circumstances. These two war lords must have really hated each other.

    • @petezereeeah
      @petezereeeah Год назад

      @@gladiuspax2390 Hitler cared. He tried to do a swap for his nephew. Stalin said no.

    • @petezereeeah
      @petezereeeah Год назад

      @@gladiuspax2390 Hitler was a strange guy in these situations. If it were the lives of people on a piece of paper he couldn't have cared less about the deaths of millions. But when his decisions touched the lives of people he was close to he reacted highly emotionally. Stalin wasn't like that.

    • @petezereeeah
      @petezereeeah Год назад

      @@gladiuspax2390 Hitler had close working relationships with his generals. When they displeased him he fired them, but ensured they kept full miliary pensions for their families, and he often re hired them. Stalin had his generals shot. People were nothing to him.

    • @coh2conscript851
      @coh2conscript851 Год назад +3

      ​@@gladiuspax2390I did NOT know of the brother part.
      Terrible fathers really do impact more than just their children.

    • @petezereeeah
      @petezereeeah Год назад +3

      @@coh2conscript851 Hitler had a half brother named Alois. He did not run away. He worked in, or operated and small bar/restaurant in Berlin. He was very hesitant to talk about his famous half brother. He was fearful.

  • @nicolethompson8613
    @nicolethompson8613 Год назад +34

    Please learn how to pronounce the names, places and events that are the subject of the video. I can't finish watching, it is just excruciating.

    • @Suite_annamite
      @Suite_annamite Год назад +7

      Indeed, *they at least need to try to find a narrator who isn't dyslexic!*

    • @MrChopsticktech
      @MrChopsticktech Год назад +5

      Agreed! I know some of the names are difficult, he should be able to get Yakov and brigade correct at the very least!

  • @australianjackaroo6660
    @australianjackaroo6660 Год назад +9

    Thanks for that, that was quite informative and entertaining

    • @tedmccarron
      @tedmccarron Год назад +1

      It was but the pronunciations were horrible!

  • @tedmccarron
    @tedmccarron Год назад +12

    Omg these pronunciations are PAINFUL! The story itself is interesting but the narrator really needed to learn the pronunciation of the names of people and places before narrating.

  • @maxthecharacter1296
    @maxthecharacter1296 Год назад +3

    His first son sounds like a person any good father would've been proud of.
    Even though Stalin neglected him, he still found a way to live his life without relying on his parentage. Too bad he died in WW2. He was more competent than the son whom Stalin acknowledged to keep his last name.
    But then again, the fate of his three sons are Stalin's fault. Even with the war's end, he was too focused on being a tyrant than being a good father.
    What did that bring him in the end? Nothing. He died with a terrible legacy, and nothing from his vast riches and power came with him in death.

  • @aldosigmann419
    @aldosigmann419 Год назад +6

    I'm glad Svetlana made some sort of life for herself despite all...

  • @mrruswarp
    @mrruswarp Год назад +11

    Forced his wife and child (Yakov) TO FLY TO BAKU with him after bank robbery????? That wife died in 1907! Aeroflot was not founded until 1923 and it is unlikely other passenger service existed before then. What other 'facts' are also suspicious?

    • @HenryReardon-i2x
      @HenryReardon-i2x Год назад +1

      The only way to defend his phrasing is if he meant "to fly" in the old sense of "run away very fast" which I've seen in books that predate aviation.

    • @colonelfustercluck486
      @colonelfustercluck486 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@HenryReardon-i2x....possibly to 'take flight'....meaning to flee. There's probably a translation mix-up somewhere. The term 'lost in the translation' springs to mind.

  • @baronessvondengler
    @baronessvondengler Год назад +6

    Sounds like Svetlana had a happy life, contrary to what you said. Good for her.

  • @cuthbertjolly4859
    @cuthbertjolly4859 Год назад +13

    When a man devotes his entire life to his country his family inevitably suffers.

    • @planderlinde1969
      @planderlinde1969 Год назад

      Not that Stalin truly cared about the Russian people. He only really cared for himself, his position of power, and the survival of the communist party and system.

    • @DovahFett
      @DovahFett Год назад +5

      If only that were true. He devoted his life to no higher ideal, just the safeguarding and expansion of his own personal power. That’s why the Soviets immediately started attacking his legacy and cult of personality after his death. They couldn’t be happier to get rid of that paranoid psychopath. The revolution succeeded in spite of him, and the Soviet Union survived WW2 in spite of him.

    • @coh2conscript851
      @coh2conscript851 Год назад

      @@DovahFett he had the sense to preserve the union during ww2 at least. Harsh as it was

  • @ruturajshiralkar5566
    @ruturajshiralkar5566 Год назад +6

    Vasily shot down 2 Nazi Aircrafts in WW2

  • @piotr9246
    @piotr9246 Год назад +10

    Interesting, but the names are butchered. It would not take a lot of effort to learn to pronounce them approximately correctly.

  • @gerhard-jx4rn
    @gerhard-jx4rn Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @holyhang7835
    @holyhang7835 Год назад +9

    Yet most people think Stalin as Russian not 'Geogian'.

    • @colonelfustercluck486
      @colonelfustercluck486 8 месяцев назад +1

      yeah but that's for most non Russian Federation people. Everyone outside the Federation just calls everything 'Russian', when there are many countries within the Federation. It's just mental laziness from us outsiders.

  • @kellymoses8566
    @kellymoses8566 Год назад +2

    As a Wisconsinite I love that Stalin's daughter died in Wisconsin.

  • @lupcodimovski2497
    @lupcodimovski2497 Год назад +14

    Put all that effort into this video but totally killed the pronunciation of their names

  • @whateverman2674
    @whateverman2674 Год назад +2

    '' the apple of his eyes''
    ❤father-daughter relationship ❤

  • @jamesdellaneve9005
    @jamesdellaneve9005 Год назад +4

    I had an older buddy from Poland. He’d be in his 80’s today. He used to say to me with his thick Polish accent, “Russians……they luff to soffer”.

    • @kevinmorrice
      @kevinmorrice Год назад

      ive distant relatives in poland, and one was an auschwitz survivor, and all she said about the russians was "they should have killed more germans"

  • @paplokimerankutem
    @paplokimerankutem Год назад +1

    this is so funny:D ALLIUJUuEVA, that pronouncing:DDDDDDDD

  • @panospolyzoidis7227
    @panospolyzoidis7227 Год назад +12

    Pity that you didn’t get a single name right.

  • @debrakleid5752
    @debrakleid5752 2 месяца назад +1

    Stalin only flew once because he was terrified of flying and it wasn’t to Baku to avoid an arrest in 1907. He flew during WW2 and refused to fly in a Soviet plane due to frequent crashes. He flew in 1943 to Tehran and back after the Tehran conference in Iran during WW2.

  • @SamPashmi
    @SamPashmi Год назад +5

    4:03 that's not where Stalingrad is

  • @Olliethesnowman
    @Olliethesnowman 8 месяцев назад

    What an amazing video

  • @Ruvkalo
    @Ruvkalo Год назад +13

    Damn! The way you butchered those names is impressive!

  • @lukephm.
    @lukephm. Год назад +1

    I enjoyed the video please dont listen to people critcising your pronunciation

  • @lelandunruh7896
    @lelandunruh7896 Год назад +4

    Look man, I know Russian and Georgian are both tough languages. But what you did to those names must be a straight-up violation of the Geneva Conventions.

  • @VictorChoxo
    @VictorChoxo 3 дня назад

    Thanks for content ❤ Subscribed💪
    Just one thing. I am from Tbeti the neighbouring village of Baji and it is not Kutaisi it is Ambrolauri ❤
    You gonna break you tongue 😂❤
    Once again thanks for so accurate facts,nobody ever mentioned this little village and the fact that you did made me happy.
    By the way from that village you can clearly see river Rioni, usually if Tsarist soldiers were coming to get stalin on boats, only way was to cross Rioni river, so Stalin could see them from miles away even without binoculars,thats why they couldn't get him.

  • @tobllord3291
    @tobllord3291 Год назад +6

    4:00 I'm pretty sure it's not Stalingrad

  • @BaliesStories
    @BaliesStories Год назад +2

    Savva Podkopov (Berezovsky) is a great grandson of Svetlana Stalina. He lives in the UK.

  • @AnabolicSaagAloo
    @AnabolicSaagAloo Год назад +5

    It’s funny how you pronounced Dzhugashvili different like three different times

  • @lupcodimovski2497
    @lupcodimovski2497 Год назад

    Did all the research and such a good job...The names?? Awesome

  • @zigak.1902
    @zigak.1902 Год назад +4

    I've never heard someone mispronouncing every single Russian name...

  • @andrewcarlson3486
    @andrewcarlson3486 Год назад +3

    Well his son died of alcohol poisoning and his daughter left russia and lived in the u.s later died in 2011

  • @wasukoysiripong9738
    @wasukoysiripong9738 Год назад +2

    It's interesting that they all adopted the family name Stalin instead of Jugashvili.

  • @rameshtalewar8535
    @rameshtalewar8535 Год назад +3

    Stop lying ! Yakov (a son of Stalin Great Bolshevik leader ) SOVIET russian POW IN WW II was captured by Nazi SS from eastern front while fighting invasion by German Whermascht BARBOROSA operation. Finally he was tortured and killed by Nazi. Nazi offered his release in lieu of Field Marshal Frederic Poulus who was defeated and surrendred along hundreds German Generals and high ranking Nazi SS at Battle of Stalingrad But Stalin refused the offer of Nazies to release by saying we will not realease a Field Marshal with a ordinary russian soldier his own son Yakub Zugeshvili a russian POW died a Heroic Death, Yakub was suffered a horrific torture by Nazi thugs in custody interrogation and finally shot in this Great Patiotic War on the Eastern front. Stop misleading falsifying History for insinuation of a Great leader Stalin. !!

  • @alinaboyarchuk8177
    @alinaboyarchuk8177 Год назад +1

    The fact that she died 2 months after 9/11 makes WW2 really seem not that long ago, but it was almost 100 years ago.

  • @krisclarence5424
    @krisclarence5424 Год назад +11

    at 6:26, wrong pronunciation Corps pronounced /kor/, if plural /korz/ (refers to a military unit or a body of people working together for a common cause.). The word Corpse pronounced /korps/ is a dead body, especially of a human being.

    • @hughmungus1767
      @hughmungus1767 Год назад

      Obama made that exact same mistake when he was president. It's not always easy for even native English speakers to memorize which letters are silent in specific words.

  • @Susspect69
    @Susspect69 21 день назад +2

    Ofcourse an indian married stalins daughter ...The indian rizz is immaculate

    • @gmrubelro
      @gmrubelro 20 дней назад

      Real ( modi marry him secretly )

  • @cydkriletich6538
    @cydkriletich6538 Год назад +17

    His second wife’s name is pronounced Na-dayzh-da, accent on the second syllable. I had a great aunt with that name. The name Nadia is a common nickname and has become a much more used name than the original. I read his daughter Svetlana’s autobiography. Terrifying. The man was a Sociopath and raging narcissist. A blood thirsty murderer who imprisoned and murdered several family members. Along with Hitler, one of histories greatest monsters.

  • @hilarygodfrey2348
    @hilarygodfrey2348 11 месяцев назад +1

    The 2nd son graduated with excellent marks. Who would dare to give him lower marks 😂😂😂

  • @gaminglife2480
    @gaminglife2480 Год назад +4

    I find it strange how the leaders of the ussr were mainly not from Russia. Usually Georgian or Ukrainian 🤔

    • @dvnk6971
      @dvnk6971 Год назад +1

      Lenin was a Tatar, Trotsky a Jew, Kruschev an Ukrainian, Stalin a Gerogian

    • @gaminglife2480
      @gaminglife2480 Год назад +1

      @@dvnk6971 that’s what I mean! also brezhnev was Ukrainian as well

    • @aMbAtUkAm-69420
      @aMbAtUkAm-69420 Год назад

      Most of Russians were too drunk to do politics

  • @zayedbinimran957
    @zayedbinimran957 Год назад +2

    The worst thing is that he placed stalingrad in Uzbekistan in the video

  • @assafnaor5752
    @assafnaor5752 Год назад +5

    Having to listen to an american pronouncing russian names is worse than a month in Lubyanka prison

  • @michaelramesar5220
    @michaelramesar5220 Год назад +1

    You should ask the same question about the rulers of Egypt, Romans, Alexander, and the Muslim rulers of India. Jgd the yogi Raj

  • @DesertSkies120
    @DesertSkies120 Год назад +5

    I do wish that RUclips content creators would take the time and exert the effort to LEARN TO PRONOUNCE NON-ENGLISH NAMES CORRECTLY!

    • @kenster8270
      @kenster8270 Год назад

      My theory is that the narrator is secretly trolling his viewers by deliberately misreading those exotic names.

  • @susannar8294
    @susannar8294 Год назад

    Olga im no one who you know and im very proud of you and your mom Svetlana
    I used to go to your shop in Portland, OR and thinking how strong you and your mother Svetlana. Just wanted you to know somewhere an american ukranian is proud of you every time stalins name is brought up
    ✌️

  • @kyril9945
    @kyril9945 Год назад +3

    Well done!

  • @lukemcgahern2357
    @lukemcgahern2357 2 года назад +32

    Dam! This Stalin guy sounds like a really bad guy.

    • @kobemop
      @kobemop Год назад +12

      Stalin is actually good.

    • @draftyd1907
      @draftyd1907 Год назад +1

      @@kobemop I don't think so

    • @eloise5527
      @eloise5527 Год назад +2

      Oh no he was such a sweet nice christian man

    • @mediocremaiden8883
      @mediocremaiden8883 Год назад +1

      @@eloise5527 😆 I was just taking a sip of coffee whilst reading the replies and yours made me do a literal 'spit take'

    • @hermano4242
      @hermano4242 Год назад

      As Norm Macdonald would say…this guy is a real jerk. 😂

  • @LeakyFaucett
    @LeakyFaucett Год назад +1

    There is so many inaccuracies in this video it's ridiculous.

  • @FidelTrask
    @FidelTrask Год назад +4

    I love how each time he repeats a name he changes the pronunciation ahahahaha

  • @erikm8372
    @erikm8372 Год назад +1

    I’m confused, “Vasily died two days in 1962…” you mean “…two days INTO 1962”?

  • @UlfhedinnNorsk
    @UlfhedinnNorsk 6 месяцев назад +4

    The reader has to be trolling 😂. No way you can pronounce it this fucked up 😂

  • @Don-mu2qh
    @Don-mu2qh Год назад +2

    A lot of gaps here. Svetlana first married at age 18 to a man who was past 40.

    • @marcbahn5487
      @marcbahn5487 Год назад

      Today's Russia is nothing like the Soviet Union.

  • @Kosiaka_Gaming
    @Kosiaka_Gaming Год назад +8

    Interestning video, but are slavic names that hard for ponunciation, like come on

    • @ColKorn1965
      @ColKorn1965 Год назад +1

      No

    • @nikasamwkusvili9345
      @nikasamwkusvili9345 Год назад

      what slavic names hes a gergian

    • @Kosiaka_Gaming
      @Kosiaka_Gaming Год назад

      @@nikasamwkusvili9345 Georgians are not slavic, but that doesn't stop them to use slavic names.

  • @chriscolton6329
    @chriscolton6329 Год назад +1

    Stalin warned his daughter about Beria, obviously knowing the man was a monster...

  • @alibekperdebaev9654
    @alibekperdebaev9654 Год назад +11

    Damn, Svetlana literally betrayad her country

    • @johnsch1988
      @johnsch1988 Год назад

      Svetlana simply fled the country because Khrushchev and his henchmen could make her life unbearable, as they did with Stalin's son

    • @Elyseon
      @Elyseon Год назад +6

      She owed them nothing.

    • @alibekperdebaev9654
      @alibekperdebaev9654 Год назад +2

      @@Elyseon everyone must be loyal to their motherland

    • @Elyseon
      @Elyseon Год назад

      @@alibekperdebaev9654 To hell with the motherland. A brutal dictatorship deserves no loyalty.

    • @KyleAdams-lx6tq
      @KyleAdams-lx6tq Год назад +2

      @@alibekperdebaev9654 was Stalin loyal to his family?

  • @draganastojadinovic1303
    @draganastojadinovic1303 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @TheGhostofCarlSchmitt
    @TheGhostofCarlSchmitt Год назад +3

    you could at least check how those names are pronounced and not just assume you know

  • @andrewtomko5545
    @andrewtomko5545 7 месяцев назад +1

    Stalin was a brutal dictator that ruled with fear, imprisonment and murder. His obsession for power was only exceeded by his paranoia. 😢

  • @kenster8270
    @kenster8270 Год назад +5

    My theory is that the narrator is secretly trolling his viewers by deliberately misreading those exotic names. 😏 Either that, or he's just dyslexic, causing his eyes to "unsee" certain letters and to reshuffle the rest. I once worked with a guy who was moderately dyslexic, but still functionally literate, meaning that he had trained himself to more or less guess his way through an email through clues and context.

  • @iangreen180
    @iangreen180 Год назад +1

    Why are so many RUclips narrators consistently unable to read properly?

  • @nightowlmystic9387
    @nightowlmystic9387 Год назад +2

    Buddy put the pin on the battle of Stalingrad in the wrong location lol.

  • @chrisinhotwater1582
    @chrisinhotwater1582 6 месяцев назад +2

    I am not sure they flew to Baku in 1906ish.

  • @bobbymoore8
    @bobbymoore8 Год назад +4

    I’ll like to listen to a documentary made by a Russian.

  • @kiandrah8517
    @kiandrah8517 Год назад +1

    "I wouldnt be Stalin's son if I took the cyanide pill"

  • @monicajoseph3910
    @monicajoseph3910 2 года назад +63

    Didn't expect him to be a good father, given his brutal dictatorship!

    • @Suite_annamite
      @Suite_annamite Год назад +11

      It's common sense that *good parents make bad leaders* , while *good leaders make bad parents.*

    • @johnsch1988
      @johnsch1988 Год назад +6

      None of his children ever said a bad word about their father. It's just that he was often away from home for a long time because of work and that's it. This is the maximum that they wrote bad .

    • @writerconsidered
      @writerconsidered Год назад

      @@Suite_annamite He wasn't a good leader. He was a psychopath who killed millions of his own people.

    • @Go4Broke247
      @Go4Broke247 Год назад +1

      And He was a Georgian

    • @triadwarfare
      @triadwarfare Год назад +13

      @@johnsch1988 where you watching the same video? Stalin's daughter denounced him, but this was after his death and after leaving the USSR. Had she denounced him while he was alive, she would have been sent to the gulag along with her father's political opponents.

  • @heikkijhautanen4576
    @heikkijhautanen4576 Год назад +6

    Yeah it must suck when your dad is a real life supervillain!! who cauzed the death and suffering of milions of people!!! :(

  • @a.p.sarkar3967
    @a.p.sarkar3967 Год назад

    Good . Pl speak at slower speed followed by display on screen for proper listening by foreigners .

  • @kingdomofgarvin3432
    @kingdomofgarvin3432 Год назад +5

    Do one about Trinidad and Tobago 🇹🇹

    • @kanestalin7246
      @kanestalin7246 Год назад

      Oh no😂

    • @kingdomofgarvin3432
      @kingdomofgarvin3432 Год назад

      @Sasen91 that thing you talking about is a country and I care about it

    • @kingdomofgarvin3432
      @kingdomofgarvin3432 Год назад

      @Sasen91 and if I want to bring it up I'll bring it up so the question is why you worrying about it

  • @sadiqali41
    @sadiqali41 Год назад

    Very interesting and useful information

  • @georgepetrow479
    @georgepetrow479 Год назад +15

    It’s scary to know that this man has descendants that live among us even now.

    • @archiebutaya3465
      @archiebutaya3465 Год назад +4

      WHAT DID YOU SAYYYY????!!!!!!!!!

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Год назад +36

      Why? What on earth have his descendants done to deserve a comment like that? THEy are NOT him. Jesus.

    • @thefrozongamer5071
      @thefrozongamer5071 Год назад +31

      His descendants have done nothing to deserve this comment

    • @kalkhalinzhui1753
      @kalkhalinzhui1753 Год назад +8

      One of his descendants looks like a comic book character. A far cry from the image of Joseph Stalin that we know.

    • @m.reshmareddy2711
      @m.reshmareddy2711 Год назад

      Seriously…are you out of ur mind …wht the hell is wrong with you ppl ?

  • @robertsanders7060
    @robertsanders7060 Год назад +1

    Did Stalin have a choice? Could he really have traded Paulus for his son without being deposed?

  • @MrDMIDOV
    @MrDMIDOV Год назад +4

    The pronunciation wasn’t just inaccurate, this mofo changed pronunciation everytime lol! It’s quite entertaining.

  • @motherdear3733
    @motherdear3733 7 месяцев назад +2

    smo-lensk also: the apple of his EYES?

  • @tadukas4
    @tadukas4 Год назад +5

    Are the mispronunciations a joke or something? Never heard it this bad.