Whether his final fate was that of Admiral Kolchak is not known."
The American editor of Sergius Nilus's book containing the "Protocols"
is hiding behind anonymity. The name of the traveller from Siberia who
was so positive in his statement that Nilus was in Irkutsk is also
concealed. And Serge Nilus to whom Saint Sergei "appeared twice in a
vision" "is said to have written articles in the Russian press" of which
nobody has knowledge.
In Germany, Nilus is described as follows:
"Sergius Nilus was an employee of the Russian secret police department,
of the _okhrana_, connected with the Church, especially relating to
'foreign religions.' He lived for some time at the Optina Pustina
monastery. In 1901 he published a book entitled 'The Great in the Small
and the Anti-Christ.' According to the Lutsch Sveta, Nilus claims to
have received in 1901 a copy of the text of the Protocols from the
secret archives of the Main Zionist organization in France, but he
published the 'protocols' only in 1905. A second edition appeared in
1911, and finally another edition was brought out in the beginning of
1917, but all copies are said to have been destroyed."
"The Cause of the World Unrest," an anonymous book published in England
and reprinted in this country, speaks of Nilus and the "Protocols" as
follows:
"In the year 1903 a Russian, Serge Nilus, published a book entitled _The
Great in Little_. The second edition, which was published at Tsarskoye
Selo in 1905, had an additional chapter, the twelfth, under the heading
'Anti-Christ as a Near Political Possibility.
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