Protektorát Čechy a Morava: právo nástroj nacistické expanze Page 21 · 21 of 289
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia: right tool of Nazi expansion
English Translation
21 1.3 Protectorate as a future German space However the question of maintaining peace and order in the protectorate for the Nazis was a priority in terms of the occipital background and weapons production, they never stopped addressing questions related to their plans for Germanization of Bohemia and Moravia. The contemporary prudent critic of Emil Sobota's Protectorate in his glosses in October 1939, in connection with Hitler's plans to acquire "a new living space in the East" declared in Mein Kampf, wrote that he stood between these candidates for involuntary displacement......in the first place the Czech nation predicted a very specific plan for our mass displacement somewhere behind Ural. He thus responded to Hitler's speech from October 6, 1939, in which the leader announced a new arrangement of ethnographic conditions in Eastern Europe, the resettlement of nationalities, so that at the end of the development there will be "better dividing lines than today. (26) As early as 1937 Hitler, before then Minister of Foreign Affairs Neurath and the highest military peaks, declared that in order to expand the German life space (Lebenstraum), he intends to dissolve both Austria and Czech countries in Germany. The takeover of Czech countries will mean more food for 5 to 6 million Germans. Two million Czechs will be expelled and vaguely mentioned the removal of Czechs. In his speech on September 26, 1938 Hitler repeated to the world "We do not want any Czechs" ("Wir wollen keine Tschechen.") (27) Alfred Rosenberg and other Nazi experimenters claimed that demographic reality requires Czechs and Poles to be driven east and freed up a place for powerful German peasants, then in 1937, the Nazi agricultural experts prepared secret plans to settle space in Bohemia and Moravia. (28) This topic was also developed by R.Heydrich in a highly secret speech which he gave in October 1941 in the Cernín Palace and February 1942 in the Rudolf Gallery of Prague Castle to representatives of the occupying administration. His political strategy was to be