Russia Launches Investigation - Jewish Ritual Murder

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Russia launches investigation into whether the last tsar Nicholas II was killed with his family as part of a 'Jewish ritual murder', at behest of Putin’s ‘confessor’ The country's final emperor was shot with his wife and five children in 1918, In THE DARK NIGHT OF JULY 16 1918, Tzar Nicholas II and his pious Christian family were shot and bayoneted in cold blood by these Cheka Jews:

1. Jacob Yurovksy, a Jewish Czech
2.
Sergei Medvedjev
3. Lev Nikulin, a Jewish Czech
4.
Peter Yermakov
5. Fyodor Vaganov, a New York Jew
6.
Jacob Sverdlov, (Yankel Solomon), the first President of the Soviet Union. He gave the order to murder the Royal Family. Sverdlov began his Anti Christian career when he joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1902.

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Lines adapted from the German-Jewish poet Heinrich Heine (1797-1856) were found written on the wall, by the window, in the basement of the Ipatiev House, where the Romanovs were shot and bayoneted.

In addition to traces of bullets and blood found in the cellar room of the Ipatiev house, where the murder of the Romanov family took place, the investigators discovered various graffities on the wallpaper. Some of them were insults against the Romanov family and obviously written before the murder, when the room hosted red guards of the Ipatiev house. Others were drawings showing Rasputin and the Tsarina in obscene postures.

The following words were also found on a wall of the cellar room:

“Belsatzar ward in selbiger Nacht / Von seinen Kuechter umgebracht”
translated in English: “Balthazar was, on the same night, killed by his slaves”.

These are lines adapted from the poem “Balthazar,” by the German-Jewish poet Heinrich Heine (1797-1856). The poem, which has a biblical inspiration, evokes the story of the last king of Babylon: Balthazar. The latter had shown his profanity during a dinner by using holy vessels from Jerusalem’s temple. Then, the dinner was interrupted by a hand which appeared and wrote on the wall these words: "Mané", "Thécel", "Pharès". Prophet Daniel, called to decipher it, understood these words as the next judgment of king Balthazar and the conquest of his kingdom. In fact, the same night, Balthazar was killed by his own men and the kingdom conquered by Cyrus.

The German rendition of "Balthazar" is "Belsazar" without "t". The addition of this "t" reveals the word "Tzar" (Belsatzar) and, thus, Heine’s poem then takes a strong meaning in this place.

American Jewish postcard depicting Tzar Nicolas II as a rooster in the Kapparot Jewish ritual (USA, early 20th century) - This How they Celebrated after their Conquest.
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