Eds: This story was supplied by The Conversation for AP customers. The Associated Press does not guarantee the content.
Wendy Z. Goldman , Carnegie Mellon University
(THE CONVERSATION) Many Americans know of Josef Stalin’s Terror of the late 1930s , during which more than 1 million people were arrested for political crimes, and over 680,000 executed .
Fewer know about the repressions that began after World War II and ended with Stalin’s death in 1953. Much like the repressions of the 1930s, they involved fabricated plots, arrests, coerced confessions and purges. Unlike the Terror of the 1930s, they were accompanied by a wave of state-sponsored antisemitism – including the purge of Jews from multiple occupations and unwritten quotas that limited their professional and education

WISC-TV Channel 3000

The Atlantic
Detroit Free Press
9&10 News
NBC News
The Fashion Spot
Gossip Cop
AlterNet
The Hill
POPSUGAR
The Intercept