STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 1604, sig. 109-4/1359 (poškozeno) Page 68 · 68 of 87
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 1604, sig. 109-4/1359 (damaged)
English Translation
The establishment of an independent soil authority requires the creation of a new legal land code, since the existing soil laws are inadequate and no longer applicable to the future soil policy. The predominant task of an independent land authority would be to recline on the rural soil in order to achieve a politically oriented distribution of the confiscated land and the correct determination of the farm sizes. The total size of the agricultural and forestry area of the protectorate is around 4,400,000 ha. Of this area, around 1.500.000 ha, i.e. 34%, have been covered by the Czech land reform, with the economic revenues of more than 1.50 ha and almost 250 ha of land almost without exception. This large-scale property will always be in the foreground in every question of land and settlement policy, and therefore the question of the connections of a particular land with the almost fateful course of the land reform will continue to be decisive for decades to come. For the solution of these tasks alone, for technical reasons alone, only the Land Office with the personnel, technical and written credit organization available to it can be considered. The demand for uniform coverage, management and care of the entire agricultural and forestry area in the Protectorate must be raised all the more because the present state of affairs is completely inadequate and unsatisfactory. Use of agricultural land the secret state police, the commissioner of the Reichskommissar for the enemy property and the commander of the security police, emigration fund for Bohemia and Moravia.