STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 2750, sig. 109-14/53 Page 134 · 134 of 190
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 2750, sig. 109-14/53
English Translation
115 - 3 - that through all these atrocity measures, however, you must not become softer but, on the contrary, harder and harder.Grab the names of the murdered and the data into your memory forever!Close your eyes and introduce yourself to those young girls, those boys barely out of childhood or the 73-year-old old woman. Imagine each of these individuals individually as the upfer of those cowardly gangs, who call themselves "German men," and you will understand how they, in their hearts, begin to understand that the punishment for all these atrocities cannot be large enough. And something else. Do you remember how the German propaganda lied to 2g when the news of the attack on Heydrich had to be announced? At first it was said that there was no danger of life at all, that the wounded person would be completely restored in a short time, then an absolute silence followed for a few days, then suddenly and only hesitantly the message that a turn to the worse was not impossible, and finally the message, that Heydrich had succumbed to his wounds. And so it will happen to all Germans, they may change things and change things as they wish. And despite all stuttering, they already feel exactly that a turn to the worse is more than just not excluded. But we tell you that soon the turn will come for good for you and the day of just retribution will be the day." A poem with about the following content will follow: "Stay strong and don't let go of xiskk! It does not matter whether it is an oak cder a trembling poplar, if the big storm destroys the life nerve, is only one important: Did you also live like a man?" A report by a tschsl. pilot, who was involved in the big attack on Cologne, follows. The pilot emphasizes above all how located the tsch sl. Pilots of this attack had come, as this would have been a good opportunity to avenge the crimes committed in the Heinat with the weapon in their hand. Then the attack was described and emphasized, since the angry fires in Cologne would have appeared at a great distance. The fires had turned out to be so powerful that it had been sensible to find out the targets ordered in this sea of flames. Then, however, the highly explosive bombs had been dropped, whereby our pilot felt only one wish that every bomb should take away a German after all least. Finally, the tschsl. pilot emphasized that the attack on Cologne as well as the British attack on Essen meant only the beginning of a waged offensive and that above all the schsl . pilots would try to pay back to the Nazis their crimes with interest. The day was not far to which the schl. Pilots would fly over the borders of a free home again. Moscow (Czech,_21.45_o'clock) The broadcast was almost completely covered by jammers. It was only a place which had a clear reference to the assassination and the events in Protectorate, in which it was said that in the same extent as Hitler's divisions would not have been able to cope with the Red Army on the Eastern Front, the resistance of the Czech people to the executioner Heydrich had also proved itself.