STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 2603, sig. 109-12/251

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English Translation

2 IV/3 Lektorat /G. E C C d České Slovo: The virility against legends. The origin of the former Czecho-Slovakia was very long surrounded by an eheimnis. Only a few initiates were aware of how the strange state image of the Czecho-Slovakia came to be founded, and these initiates remained silent because they were mostly involved in Masaryk's and Benesch's machinations themselves, or again because they could not speak when they faced these two "libriers" in opposition. The book Walter Jacobi's "The Promised Land", published these days by the Orbis publishing house, has pulled away the veil of all these puzzles. According to Dr. Urban's book "The Secret Funds of the Third Section", Jacobi ́s work is a new and significant act that opens the eyes of the Czech reader and reveals what has been completely unknown to the largest majority of the people so far. From all the chapters of the book one thing is clear: Czech Slovakia has not been established for the Czechs and Slovaks as their own state, but only and exclusively as a Promised Land for the Jewish immigrants of the whole world. Every single chapter of the book is in itself a significant document, which characterizes well, as Masaryk and Benesh from 2000 were from the beginning only obedient slaves of the Jews and enforcers of their orders. One of the most interesting parts is the one about Masaryk, from which such uninformed members of our staff see that MasaryK was indeed a Jewish servant of love who did nothing else from the beginning of his fiefing but to dance as his masters from the ranks of the world Jewry waved. Just this essay should every Czech read and think well about it. No different from Nasaryk, Benesch behaved himself. Jacobi's book brings a tremendous amount of new revelations. The so-called "Czech Maffia" was also thoroughly interspersed by the Jews: even with a fleeting examination one can say that Jacobi ́s work is one of the most interesting publications of the present time (Frant. Peiger).