NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 398, sig. 110-4/245 Page 76 · 76 of 85
THE GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 398, sig. 110-4/245
English Translation
89 The pach sections associated with the internal administration are faced with almost insurmountable difficulties. If, for example, only 6 pach officers are available to the entire German veterinary administration, it is understandable that the fight against the disease risk can only be carried out urgently to avoid the most unpleasant consequences for the food situation. 2.) Whereas in the school administration it has been necessary to avoid school closures by merging school classes; increasing the teaching obligations and shortening the teaching process, the current confiscation campaign must already be overcome with the closure of German schools. In view of the excellent expansion of the Tachechian school system, these measures represent a political danger not to be underestimated in every respect, because school closures - carried out before the eyes of the tacheches - strengthen the sense of victory and even the absence of any doubt has been considered to have the teaching given by technical teachers at the German schools in technical schools (mathematics, physics, chemistry). In addition, it was difficult to prevent the third largest library of the Greßdeutsche Reiehe from coming under purely Czech leadership. Exceptionally worrying conditions have continued to arise in the area of judicial obsolescence. 73 Riohter, civil servants and employees of the German judicial authorities had to be released, although the business burden in the main area of criminal justice was constantly increasing. In prison, which alone 32 forces were desicated, the nine-hour working hours of the civil servants had to increase to 1 2 hours if the previous free days and the holiday were to be eliminated. (The occupation of the cultural policy units has also shrunk to a minimum, after only 4 participants 2 have moved in at the same time. A thorough, deep-seated work can no longer be carried out. The Ebsata forces employed represent only an inadequate relief, because they lack sufficient political knowledge and familiarity with the local area. It is clear that