Konstantin Vladimirovich Rodzaevsky was the leader of the Russian Fascist Party, which he led in exile from Manchuria. Rodzaevsky was also the chief editor of the RFP paper Nash Put'. After the defeat of anti-communist forces in the Russian Civil War, he fled to Manchuria in 1925 and eventually became the leading figure of the Russian Fascist movement. He was lured by the NKVD to return to the Soviet Union with false promises of immunity and executed in a Lubyanka prison cellar after a trial for "anti-Soviet and counter-revolutionary activities".
Rodzaevsky in 1934
Russian Club in Manzhouli.
Rodzaevsky (seated second from left), L. F. Vlasyevsky (seated fourth from right), and to the right of him, Akiko Toshi. Banquet in Harbin on the occasion of the establishment of the Bureau for Russian Emigrants in the Manchu Empire. December 1934.
The Russian Fascist Party (RFP), sometimes called the All-Russian Fascist Party, was a minor Russian émigré movement that was based in Manchukuo during the 1930s and 1940s.
Banquet in Harbin on the occasion of the establishment of Bureau Russian Emigrants in Manchuria, December 1934
RFP (Russian Fascist Party) Blackshirts at Harbin Station, 1934, waiting for arrival of their leader Konstantin Rodzaevsky
Illuminated swastika at RFP Manzhouli headquarters, 1934