STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 2607, sig. 109-12/255 Page 21 · 21 of 37
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 2607, sig. 109-12/255
English Translation
2, the Chief Rabbi White, on the same occasion, brought a hymn of praise to the "humane regime of Masaryk and held a solemn service to the Czech-Jewish congregation in Paris. Such praises for the work of the first president T. G. Masaryk has so far been the constant tenor of pro-Jewish declarations of the Czech emigration leadership and, on the other hand, of a friendly appeal of the world Jewry to them. Let us take a look at the Czech emigration work during the First World War, which is essentially by the people T. G. Masaryc and E. Without financial assistance and practical and political support from the most powerful representatives of the Jewish community all over the world — which is still far too little taken into account today — the so-called Czech foreign revolution would not have been possible. In France, assimilation Jews such as the famous marriage champion from Brandeis an der Elbe and later French senateur Karl Freund-Deschamps or the Paris stockbroker Wedeles, the patrons of the Czech colony in Paris Singer and Wünsch, or the science-semites of the Sorbonne from the stroke of Louis Eisenmann, David Emile Durkheim and Léon Brunschvicg, let us not forget the socialist deputy Salomon Grumbach, the actor of the "Liga for Human Rights" Viktor Basch and the publicist Luise Weiß, notorious for his men's weariness. In France during the World War, the small Che liked to sacrifice his fortune to the supposed cause of the people and homeland or to use his blood and life in the ranks of the Allied forces and later as Czech legionary in France for the archeological ideal images, he was in fact only a follower of a political clique, which gave the after-renters in Rue Cadet in Paris completely different forces and powers. The image of the Parisian confederates of Czech emigration seemed to be externally bourgeois-serious with its manufacturers and bankers, sociologists and politicians, university professors of philosophy and literary history, editors and publicists. In truth, however, these were nothing but the ejection of Budapest and Bohemian ghettos and the Parisian sow of the Franco-Jewish assimilation from Alsace. Also in the other foreign headquarters at that time there was a similar picture. In Holland it was Maffia Jew Lev Borský aka Bondy from Kolin, besides the Allerweltsbummler Jakob Landau, who drew his Jewish press circles also for the Czech cause, and Jud Saudek, the double-faced confident in the diplomatic corps The Hague's. In Russia the ill-lit star from Paris financed the failing mission Dürichs. On the Thames, Masaryk relied on the Zionist central under Chaim Weizmann with the proudly worn Lenin face and his Secretary General Nahum Sokolov, the ban on Mosaic ugliness; not to forget the Anglo-Jewish antipodes such as the donating-joyed Lord Rothschild and the Palestinian changeling