Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia: right tool of Nazi expansion

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English Translation

233 Radlice /Pflugschar/ near Jindřichův Hradec /Neuhaus/ se / mr/ Apologized, a man 23 times convicted of theft, impersonating Germans and unjustly accusing Jews with whom he had previously traded. In the Mokrem quarry /Mokrilom/ near České Budějovice, a Habermann pretends to be a German, a man who can't speak German and has been convicted 18 times for perjury, robbery, fraud, street beggars and various other crimes. In Budejovice alone, man has been sentenced 24 times for misdeeds of all kinds that have gone to Germanism. See Monatsbericht, SD report, June 1940, VHA, SDNU, k. 7, sign. 49, collection no. 74, unit 71, p. 16, 17. Cit. in.: Chad Bryant: Prague in black, Nazi government and Czech nationalism, ARGO 2012, p. 76. 180. Czech patriots in the 19th century labeled the so-called behemists as "behemists" those who could apply for any nationality or whose nationality was not clear. The term was also used later in the first Republic and reached the point of view of the Nazis in the Protectorate. 181. Verwaltungsbericht, Oberlandrat Zlin, 21 November 1940, NA, ÚŘP, k.290. sign. 2090, s. 5, Antonín Verbík, History of Žďár nad Sázavou, Brno 1977, p. 167. Cit. in.: Chad Bryant: Prague in black, Nazi government and Czech nationalism, ARGO 2012, p.77. 182. Jan Pavel Pringsheim, Situational Report on Relations in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, p. 11. Cit. in.: Chad Bryant : Prague in black, Nazi government and Czech nationalism, ARGO 2012, p. 77. 183. Chad BRYANT: Prague black, the Nazi government, and Czech Nationalism, ArGO 2012, page 77. 184. Ibid. p. 79. 185. See Isabel Heinemann : Rasse, Siedlung, deutsches Blut, Göttingen 2003, p. 176. Citation. in. : René Küpper : FRANK -Political biography of the Sudeten German National Socialist, ARGO 2012, p. 107. 186. See Sheila Grant Duef, A German Protectorate: The Czechs under Nazi Rule, London 1942, p. 164. Also see Economic Reports, February 10, 1941, VHA, Fund 37, signed 91/4, pp. 2. Quoted from Deutschland-Berichte der Sozialdemokratischen ParteiDeutschlands (Sopade),6/1939, Frankfurt am Main 1980, p. 895, "About the Remembrance of Protectorate Germans"; also see J. Geobbles, Tagebücher, 6 November 1940, reprinted in So oder so: Solution of Czech questions according to German documents. 1933-1945, (edd.) Boris Čelovský, Ostrava 1997, p. 274. Cit in: Chad Bryant: Prague in black, Nazi government and Czech nationalism, ARGO 2012, p. 80. 187. One of the few prominent Protectorate Germans, who gained an influential position in the state administration, was former professor of history Josef Pfitzner, who became Mayor of Prague. 53; Monika Glettler, Alena Míšková: About the German Reichs at the University of Germany in Prague, Essen 2011, page 137 © 153.