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Description
Comrade Enver Hoxha’s book “The Khrushchevites” is a critical memoir for understanding the events of the 50s, after the death of Stalin, through the 20th Congress, up to the Moscow 1960 Conference and the unilateral expulsion of Albania from the socialist camp by Khrushchev and his gang in 1961. It is a fact that at moment, it was the Party of Labour of Albania that exposed the revisionist plot of Khrushchev, who in taking the hand of the ultra-revisionists Tito and Togliatti, betrayed Marxism-Leninism. This path of betrayal culminated in the famous fall of the Soviets in 1989-91 and the blackest reaction set afoot all across the world. Here, in these memoirs, we see the Khrushchevites collaborating and colluding with imperialism, allowing nazis and fascists to carry out their criminal deeds in counter-revolutions in Hungary and Poland. Here, in these memoirs, we see a profound bureaucratization that had already enraptured the USSR — the type that the great Lenin and Stalin hated; while the Soviet peoples lived in great modesty, the “great leaders” lived like Tsars and drunkards, with copious amounts of consumer goods and servants to fetch them. Here, in these memoirs, we see the beginning of what would become Soviet social-imperialism in the form of its rabid scheming and criminal undertakings to remove all their obstacles in the countries of people’s democracy, and most of all in small, heroic socialist Albania, where they hatched endless plots, but to which they smashed their heads over and over again. The party-people unity, with Comrade Enver Hoxha at the head, was unshakable.
However, if one thing is for certain, the reader of “The Khrushchevites” will come out hating the Soviet revisionist perpetrators of all these crimes — Khrushchev, Mikoyan, Suslov, Pospelov, Brezhnev, Ponomarev, Andropov, and others — these enemies of Marxism-Leninism, these incorrigible renegades, with whom you can feel their sliminess oozing from the pages.