In the wake of WWII, Eastern Europe came under Soviet domination, as millions lived in the shadow of the Iron Curtain. Through intimate testimonies fr…
1944-45. As the Red Army pushes toward Berlin, Stalin seizes Eastern Europe, exploiting postwar chaos to impose communist regimes. Industries are requisitioned, propaganda expands, and dissent crushed through arrests. Marxism-Leninism becomes the only creed. By the late 1940s, the Iron Curtain has fallen, sealing millions under Soviet rule.
By Stalin's 70th birthday in 1949, Soviet domination of Eastern Europe is complete. Cities bear his name, collectivization uproots families, the Church is persecuted, and youth indoctrinated. Jews face new purges, culminating in Prague's show trials. With fear gripping 80 million people, Stalin's death in 1953 finally sparks a wave of hope for change.
Stalin's death in 1953 unleashes revolt: Berlin workers strike, Hungary rises in 1956, and Khrushchev's denunciation stirs hope. But Soviet tanks crush uprisings, leaving repression harsher than ever. People live double lives-outwardly loyal, privately critical. In 1961, the Berlin Wall seals the Iron Curtain, trapping Eastern Europe in Moscow's grip.