
Bella Dodd is simply a actual American hero, the equivalent of Jean D'Arc in France.
You'll never see a movie about her, due to the fact that the US has been communist for a long time.
Most Jews are communists. Masonic Jews regulation the United States and a large part of the world.
Judaism is CommunismAs Rabbi Stephen Wise preached. The intent of Judaism is to monopolise all wealth, power and thought, and enslave all who reject their tyranny, Including assimilated Jews like me. That's what CBDC is all about.
The judaic God is Satan. (God would never "choose" 1 nation over another.) Judaism defined by cabalism It's a Satanic cult impersonating religion.. This is the real origin of anti-Semitism.
Zionist Jews specified as Trump are anti-communist, but this is simply a farce left-right: a conflict between 2 branches of judaic masonry utilized to control discourse and events. Demonratas and GOPs work together to sow chaos and overthrow the West.
The leaders of the United States, Israel, Russia and Iran are all freemulators engaged in falsifying planet war to depopulate and degrade humanity.
Publishthis review to look at our current difficulties from a different perspective. Judaism is simply a satanic cult pretending to be religion. We can't see it due to the fact that we're part of it. We're possessed by the devil.
"As head of organization operations in fresh York City, Bella Dodd organized mass infiltration campaigns, placing communist sympathizers in trade unions, government agencies, schools, Hollywood, and – most controversial – in Catholic priesthood. Dodd later admitted to implanting more than 1,000 "plants" into American seminars to undermine the Church from the inside, which she considered to be part of the war of communism with religion."
author: GROK 4
The Devil and Bella Dodd: 1 Woman's conflict Against Communist and Her Redemption, written by Mary Nicholas with the preface of Paul Kengor and published by TAN Books in 2022, is simply a biography telling the dramatic life of Bella Visono Dodd (1904-1969), an Italian-American intellectual and a high-ranking associate of the Communist organization of the USA (CPUSA).
Drawing powerfully from Dodd's own 1954 memories, School of Darkness, the book presents her communicative as an epic spiritual and ideological struggle: descending into a "satanistic plague" of atheistic communism — described by Dodd as a "school of darkness" and a "school of hate" — followed by her bold disfavor, conversion to Catholicism and a long-standing mission to uncover communist infiltration in America.
Key storyline and themes
The communicative is developed in 3 main acts:
Growth in the Communist Underworld (years 20–40): Born in a household of immigrants in Italy and raised in poorness in fresh York City, Dodd, a prominent student with a PhD in economics at Columbia University, was attracted to socialism during the large Depression.
She joined the CPUSA in the 1930s, rapidly advancing to executive positions as a propagandist, organizer and legal advisor.

As head of the party's operation in fresh York City, she organized mass infiltration campaigns, placing Communist sympathizers in trade unions, government agencies, schools, Hollywood, and — most controversially — in the Catholic priesthood. Dodd later admitted to introducing more than 1000 "plants" to American seminars to undermine the Church from the inside, which she considered to be part of the war of communism with religion.
The book vividly shows her a moral compromise, quoting heartwarming considerations Dodda: "Step by step I withdrew from God and went out to meet the world, body and devil... I'd join the devil... There is no uncertainty that I was traveling with him by my side and that he forced a advanced price for his company."
This phase highlights the themes of ideological seduction, the dehumanizing effect of totalitarianism and the deliberate strategy of communism aimed at undermining religion and freedom.
Defence and persecution (end of the 1940s): Disappointed by Stalin's purgatory, interior betrayals of the organization and his own tragedies (including failed matrimony and kid loss), Dodd broke up with CPUSA in 1948. Her evidence to the Anti-American home of Representatives (HUAC) Commission of Activities in 1952 revealed organization networks, which brought her death threats and slander from erstwhile allies who called her a "fascist" and "racist" – slander as book footnotes repeat in contemporary political discourse.
In this isolation, Dodd struggled with deep spiritual emptiness, preparing the ground for her redemption.

Redemption and penance (years 50–1969): The breakthrough came thanks to the service of Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, a charismatic Catholic teleevangelist, whose series Life Is Worth Living It reached millions of viewers. Sheen led Dodd during her conversion to Catholicism in 1952, baptizing her and becoming her spiritual counselor throughout her life.
Changed, Dodd accepted "special penance": he taught throughout the United States, advised anti-communist action, and warned against the ongoing threat of ideology. She has collaborated with specified characters as J. Edgar Hoover and has testified repeatedly about the infiltration tactics.
The book shows her fresh years as a triumph of grace over evil, and Dodd died in 1969 as a zealous Catholic, and her communicative is simply a evidence to the redeeming power of the Church.
Style and meaning
Nicholas, retired doctor and longtime friend Dodd, who conducted extended interviews with people who knew her, combines Dodd's accounts with archival investigation and historical analysis of Kengor. The consequence is an addictive, faith-filled communicative resembling thriller, intertwined with theological reflections on sin, conversion, and spiritual struggle. Reviews praise his actuality in the face of resurgent socialism: historian Sebastian Gorka calls Dodd a "breaking figure of the Cold War", which "should not be forgotten", while author Carrie Gress describes it as "a beautiful proof of peace and love that was offered... by Christ and His Church."
Ultimately, the book argues that in the rivalry "between the devil and Bella Dodd won Bella and her Church", giving hope that even the deepest darkness could yield to divine light. It is recommended to readers curious in the past of the Cold War, stories of Catholic conversion or spiritual dimensions of political evil.
- I'm sorry.
Related – Review Schools of Darkness
Translated by Google Translator
source:henrymakow.com












