STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 283, sig. 109-4/25 Page 10 · 10 of 29
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 283, sig. 109-4/25
English Translation
8a - 2 - half of a certain benefit limit, which should be thought of for example with the quali=infected worker) V If the intentions described at the beginning should be reached however, then it is essential that such mixed marriages here in the Protectorate itself exert their psychologically loosening effect. By the way, in the case of active officers and civil servants, for example, the honour of standing, the corps spirit. in the latter, the party and its organisations ensure that there are no worrying consequences in mind. The children from such marriages would primarily grow up to the German elite. 2) It would be almost as important to attempt the assimilation of peasant families. This could give rise to the need to evacuate a number of villages, whose grounds are needed for the expansion of military practice sites. The idea emerges to offer this building= a corresponding economy in the Reich, vidleicht im Warthegau. It should be remembered that in recent times, besides the folk Germans from Volhynia or Galicia, numerous Czech families from Czech settlements have been transferred to these areas and settled there. However, it must be borne in mind that there is a considerable danger that those Czechs, as well as the remaining Poles, are Catholic confessions, which they should essentially distinguish from the devout population of those territories. in those areas of the Silesian district of Gross Wartenberg, which was beaten to Poland in 1919, (Kreis Kempen) Ansiedlun to Czech exulants, who at the same time maintain their home consciousness and their Protestant faith in 19999, but during the Po=Lenzeit, together with people's Germans, suffered under Polish rule and became known for their lot in cultural German attitudes. It would be advantageous to give the Czech peasant families to the immediate vicinity of this Czech Protestant villager= fer, as far as they are able to do so. However, it can be assumed that the fact that the Czech villages are to be settled after the existence of the Czech village could help to remove the internal inhibitions of the residents to be resettled. On the other hand, these Czech Protestants, who were proven to be culturally German in their attitude, would be able to take care of and assist them.