Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia: right tool of Nazi expansion

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English Translation

271 564. Vojtěch Kyncl, No regrets...Genocida of Bohemia after the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, Historical Institute, Prague 2012, p. 286. 565. SOA Zámrsk, MLS Hradec Králové, LS 33/47 Albert Hardke, s.144. Citation in : Vojtech Kyncl, No remorse....Genocide of Bohemians after the attack on Reinard Heydrich, Historical Constitution, Prague 2012 p. 97. 566. Vojtěch Kyncl, No remorse...Genocida of Bohemia after the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, Historical Institute, Prague 2012, p.99-100, 288. 567. Čeněk Klapal, Unreliable Crimes, Union of anti-fascist fighters, Our army (edd.) sv.191, Prague 1980, p. 127. 568. There is a record of May 30, 1942 of Daluege's order to execute a person by covering up a person for "approval of the assassination," or which "of the a bombing take a positive attitude" or "in a way hostile to the Reich" and publish the names of the executions on the posters. The command also lists the names for four Czechs (3 men and women) who would be suitable for this punishment. See Vojtěch Šustek, Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich and second martial law on the territory of the so-called Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, (edd.), Volume 1, SCRIPTORIUM, Prague 2012, doc. No. I/44, p. 191-192. 569. It was Rudolf Šváb, who was arrested on 28 May at Pilsen Railway Station and shot on 3 June 1942. The unlucky man had to get a blow out of grace, for after execution at the shooting range in Vejprnice u Plzně he was not immediately dead. NA, ÚŘP, 114-10-2, s. 96. Cit in: Vojtěch Kyncl, No remorse....Genocida of Bohemia after the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, Historical Institute, Prague 2012, str.171. 570. Marián Konečný, Táborská cesty, ČSPB, Praha 1985, p. 45-48, Cit. in: Vojtěch Kyncl, No remorse....Genocida of Bohemia after the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, Historical Institute, Prague 2012, p. 140. 571. ABS, 325-3-1, p. 18-25. Cit in : Výtěk Kyncl, No regrets....Genocide of Bohemians after the attack on Reinhrad Heyddrich, Historic Institute, Praha 2012, pp. 105. 572. The reason for Czernin's arrest was his loyalty to the Czechoslovak government, his hostile attitude towards the Germans and his great influence on the political orientation of the Czech nobility. Together with Czernín, his employee J.Dvořák, otherwise the confidant of the Gestapo, whose testimony to Czernýn, made it difficult. The whole proceedings lasted 45 minutes at most and both men were sentenced to death. The head of the Prague Gestapo Geschke then praised the fact that it went well. ©After many requests of a desperate family, who even received the hearing of the head of Berlin's party office NSDAP Dr. Hans Lamers, Czernin was moved to a concentration camp in Brandenburg. Even his family could visit him in the summer of 1943. While Czernin did not survive the war due to the infection of the pulmonary tuberculosis, Dvořák was only cleaned up to Terezín. After a few months he returned to Cologne, where he was accepted among the unofficial members of the local Gestapo club. See Federal Commissioner for State Security Documents (BStU), MfS HA IX-11 ZUV Nr. 16, Bd. 12, p. 12. Cit in: Vojtěch Kyncl, No remorse...Genocida of Bohemia after the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, Historical Institute, Prague 2012,