NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 705, sig. 110-4/556 Page 68 · 68 of 78
GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 705, sig. 110-4/556
English Translation
- 19 - 58 was already visible politically in the fact that Germany preferred Italian ports over its own one-on-one. The final paragraph of the brochure is significant: "On the Mediterranean, which in a near future will return to the divine and sore purity of those times in which its wisdom and beauty are fused at its ery-staden Rome and Athens, and the new culture shines like a shining sign." 2. According to one of the reports before me, the Italian messenger in Enkara, Guanglia, has recently stressed in a Vortreg that the awareness of the Community of Europe and Africa is fully trained among the Italians who truly think of "EurAfrican", almost the same with the French and Spanish. The Germans, however, would have underestimated and neglected a too continental view and therefore the African battlefield. The lecture took place before the Tunisian disaster. He also stressed, among other things, that one must certainly beware of the dangers of the East, but the actual decision would not fall there, but in the central area of Eurafrikas. The strong east orientation of Germany is not harmless /Nuova Antologia 1.3.43/. From this basic attitude it becomes understandable, degs the Italians always hide themselves against hegemony denzen turn. For them there is only one hegemonia: that of the Roman primacy. Since this view cannot yet be fully expressed politically, it is stressed that Europe cannot be politically and hegemologically agreed, but only in an ideal way. The life rights of the other Velkers therefore find loving support, especially against allegedly assimilation-replacement or subjugation intentions, which are read out from the German term "life-reum". For the Mediterranean basin of the Central African Eur African region, this crundsatz hardly applies, but here the hierarchy of the Velker order with the Italians at the head is quite self-evidently extended. I would like to cancel my report on this point, which could only be fregmentary. It did not serve the preparation of a polemic, but was mere information. In my reward hangs a saying of Chesterton: "We steal our friends, we create our enemies, but God created us deo neighbors." I hold myself to this objective-neutral concept of the "rachbarn".