history

Mass murderers in History

The 20th century witnessed death and slaughter on an unprecedented scale. It was the century of the Holocaust and two World Wars; of communist, Nazi, fascist and military dictators who between them killed more than 100 million people.

The casualties of conflicts involving the U.S., the UK and France in Korea, Algeria, Vietnam, the Gulf, Afghanistan and Iraq are excluded on the grounds that, though many would view these as unjust colonial wars by ‘imperialist’ powers, they weren’t fought by dictators.
Indeed, when the wars proved unpopular or unwinnable, they were brought to an end by the pressure of public opinion.

Most popular name in the list mass murderer is Adolf Hitler. But, you will be shocked to know that his name in the world’s mass murderer comes third on the list. Who are the first two people then?

1. MAO ZEDONG

China (1949-76) Regime Communist Victims 60 million
China’s so-called ‘Great Helmsman’ was, in fact, the greatest mass murderer in history. Most of his victims were his fellow Chinese, murdered as ‘landlords’ after the communist takeover, starved in his misnamed ‘Great Leap Forward’ of 1958-61, or killed and tortured in labour camps in the Cultural Revolution of the Sixties. Mao’s rule, with its economic mismanagement and continual political upheavals, also spelled poverty for most of China’s untold millions. The country embraced capitalism long after his death.

2. JOSEPH STALIN

Soviet Union (1929-53) Regime Communist Victims 40 million
Lenin’s paranoid successor was the runner-up to Mao in the mass-murder stakes. Stalin imposed a deliberate famine on Ukraine, killed millions of the wealthier peasants – or ‘kulaks’ – as he forced them off their land, and purged his own party, shooting thousands and sending millions more to work as slaves and perish in the Gulag.

3. ADOLF HITLER

Germany (1933-45) Regime Nazi dictatorship Victims 30 million
The horror of Adolf Hitler’s dictatorship lies in the uniqueness of his most notorious crime, the Holocaust, which stands alone in the annals of inhuman cruelty. It was carried out under the cover of World War II, a conflict Hitler pursued with the goal of obtaining ‘Lebensraum’. The war ended up costing millions of lives, leaving Europe devastated and his Third Reich in ruins.

Co-incidence

“Am at the right place at the right time and doing things for my highest good”

Yesterday, somebody recommended me to read Amish Tripathi’s trilogy. I was hesitant about it as am very picky about reading. There are very few books which capture my attention and am eager to complete that book. I thought let me consider buying his books. And before buying, I started reading about Amish Tripathi on internet and review about his books. I read various internet articles on it… and to a surprise… am eager to read his books now. I don’t know what it is!! But would like to share some points that really asked me to go for reading these books.

1. 20 publishers rejected his 1st book and after that he stopped counting. And it was surprisingly hit.
2. He is from the field of finance before he became a writer.
3. He always wanted to be a historian, and never thought of being in the field of finance.

And somewhere in these 3 points i could connect myself to his world. Am very keen to write books. In fact, I have already completed first few chapters of one book, which is a fiction. Already have 2 more ideas to write a book. I am from the IT field, even i always wanted to be a historian and never thought i would ever be in IT. For me history is the most interesting thing in life. When i say history, its not just knowing what happened in the past in the “X” part of the world. It’s understanding people then, understanding the culture then, how each culture is different today then what it was earlier and with different other cultures… To me its like understanding one (human / culture / circumstances / situation, etc) at completely different level and in depth!

For eg:

In India, we typically call our gods ‘devas,’ and demons ‘asuras,’ a fact any Hindi-speaking native would be well aware of. Zoroastrian Persians refer to their gods as ‘ahuras’ and demons as ‘daevas,’ the opposite of the Indian pantheon.
What if the ancient Indians and the ancient Persians had met? Perhaps they would be calling one another evil because one civilization’s god would be the other’s demon, and vice-versa. Who would be right?’
The answer is, neither. They’re just two different ways of life.

Isn’t this part of history amazing? Does this change the meaning of history for you.

Currently, am reading “Talibanization of Pakistan” and it gives me complete different picture of the terror than what is being telecasted in the news channel.

History is such an amazing subject to understand. Coz it deals with real people, real situations and real episodes in each part of the world. Today will become history tomorrow.

I still remember, when i was in jr. college, my history teacher would tell our group, “you all should go for history debate”!!

Am so glad: “Am at the right place at the right time and doing things for my highest good”

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