Stalin was starving

In 1936, the young American doctor Harry Timbres went to the Soviet Union, then in the grip of Josef Stalin, to help cure malaria, which was rampant in parts of the countryside,jordan pas cher. Shortly thereafter,Doudoune Moncler Pas Cher, his wife Rebecca and their children followed,jordan. They eventually ended up in the village of Marbumstroy, not far from the Ural Mountains that divide Europe from Asia. There, Harry contracted malaria himself and died.
"We Didn't Ask Uto
pia: A Quaker Family in Soviet Russia,",Air Jordan; published in 1939, records the writings of both Harry and Rebecca regarding the time they spent in the Soviet Union. It is a little known example of the pro-Soviet writing that could sometimes be found in both England and America,doudoune moncler soldes, where socialism had plenty of sympathizers,Doudoune Moncler, especially during the Great Depression,doudoune moncler.
Part of their affection, however, was based on pure ignorance,Doudounes Moncler. Though at this very time, Stalin was starving, imprisoning and murdering millions of his countrymen,Jordan Pas Cher, the Timbres had nothing but good feeling for country,air jordan pas cher. Their book is a testament to how some in the West were entirely fooled by the veneer of the "workers' paradise."











