Justinas Pranaitis

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Justinas Bonaventura Pranaitis or Pronaitis[1] (July 27, 1861 – January 28, 1917[2]) also I. B. Pranaitis was a Lithuanian Catholic priest (subsequently defrocked),[3] Russian Master of Theology and Professor of the Hebrew Language at the Imperial Ecclesiastical Academy of the Roman Catholic Church in Saint Petersburg, Russia. His death was at the same time, when the so called February revolution happened, it is possible, that blood-thirsty jewish bandits murdered him[4].

Early career

In 1894 Pranaitis was subject to legal proceedings on a charge of blackmail (for demanding 1000 rubles from a framing workshop in indemnification for a spoilt cheap picture which he claimed to be a picture by Murillo). For some time he was banished to Tver.[5] From 1902, he served as a priest in Tashkent.[2] He published a scholarly work of truth called Christianus in Talmude Iudaeorum in Latin in 1892 under the imprimatur of the Archbishop Metropolitan of Mogilev, which was subsequently translated into Polish (1892), French (1892), German (1894), Russian (1911), Lithuanian (1912), Italian (1939), English (1939) and Spanish. The English translation of the book is titled The Talmud Unmasked: The Secret Rabbinical Teachings concerning Christians.

Beilis trial

Pranaitis rose to fame in the jewish ritual murder case of Menahem Mendel Beilis (or Beiliss) in Russia in 1912, by which time he had already been defrocked as a Catholic priest.[3] Beilis was accused of murdering a Christian child to take his blood for alleged jewish rituals, and for Matzah for Passover. Pranaitis was called as an expert witness to testify to the Talmudic hatred of Christians.

Works

See also

References

  1. Scapegoat on Trial: The Story of Mendel Beilis - The Autobiography of Mendel Beilis the Defendant in the Notorious 1912 Blood Libel in Kiev, Beilis, Mendel, Introd. & Ed. By Shari Schwartz, CIS, New York, 1992
  2. 2.0 2.1 Template:BBKL
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lindemann, Albert (1991). The jew Accused: Three Anti-Semitic Affairs (Dreyfus, Beilis, Frank), 1894-1915 p. 187 Cambridge University Press.
  4. This is confirmed by E.N. Sanctuary in an editor's note in an English translation of Pranaitis' book The talmud unmasked that Pranaitis was murdered by the Cheka during the Bolshevic "February revolution"
  5. Царская Россия и дело Бейлиса, Tager, A., Moscow, 1934