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Lenin was never exiled from Germany. He had been living in exile in Switzerland but it was from Russia not Germany. After the February Russian Revolution, Germany helped Lenin return to Russia from Switzerland through Germany and Finland. Lenin wasn't being exiled from Switzerland or Germany. He was being returned to Russia to foment revolution so as to get Russia out of World War 1.
Lenin entered Russia on April 3, 1917, courtesy of the German High Command, returning from living in exile in Switzerland.
Lenin was exiled by the government to Shushenskoe, Siberia. He was released in 1900 and left Russia in self-imposed exile spending time in various countries including Switzerland, Belgium and England.
Jules, Martov, and Nadezhda Krupskaya, and others who's names are unknown.
The February 1917 Russian Revolution brought Lenin back to Russia. He had been living in Switzerland at the time and the revolution took him by surprise. The German High Command arranged for Lenin to be transported from Switzerland to Russia in a diplomatically sealed train. The Germans wanted Lenin to create more revolutionary disruption in the hope that a new Russian government would get Russia out of World War I.