THE GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 310, sig. 110-4/156

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English Translation

28 - 2. Other goods, which are urgently needed in agriculture, industry, industry and trade and which almost no one gets in the proper way, are easily obtained in exchange if one has objective countervalues. The insight into álle newspapers provides the best proof of how everything has to be procured today." "The most unreasonable measure from a political point of view was the convening of the whole class of l924 to work in the Old Kingdom. In particular, the involvement of the girls of this year has caused such excitement everywhere that the parents concerned and the broad relatives scold all those who were involved in the implementation of this measure. Impossible things are rumored everywhere about what moral spoilage these girls are exposed to. In desperate letters, not only boys but also madels, how they suffer from hunger, what bad food they are served and what staunch airstrikes they are subjected to. If they finally notice in the letters that they no longer hope to see again in the home country, then the gloomy mood of the population is understandable. In addition, there are two filthy transactions in which Germans, Czechs and some members of the employment office in Iglau and their branch Trebitsch are supposed to be wrapped. All these events have a strong influence not only on the mood of the population, but also on their attitude towards the Great German Reich." "The rural population, whose last labour force has been recruited, is appreciable and has lost all the joy of work." " The moral swamp, which is encroaching everywhere, has the most influence on the atmosphere of all population classes and one can say without exaggeration that the present attitudes compared to those of the First World War have surpassed all the MINID data." "Supplying the population with managed means of life is also still smooth, flowing and without any complaints. The vegetables are nowhere to be seen." Strange and exaggerated formulations, however in the opposite sense, used Jura already in its management report for the l. In the first quarter of 1983, as is evident from a letter sent here by the Department I of the German Ministry of State from lo.V.l943, it was intended to replace it: "In the course of the greatest historical events, which pass us like a huge film, all other events, especially those within political, as far as they are not in harmony with the front, go far back into the background. In the period in which the axes and armies are leading the toughest and most heroic struggle to save the West, the whole of Europe and the whole human culture from Bolshevism, the home front cannot, of course, do anything to counter this goat.