STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 342, sig. 109-4/87 Page 4 · 4 of 5
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 342, sig. 109-4/87
English Translation
f.6 Secretary of State! On the German-Czech problem, the Czechs allow themselves to submit the following contribution: there is no doubt that the Czech nation can live in the midst of the great German people, because it has lived here for over a millennium and the people's peculiarity of one people does not need to be a hindrance to the nature of the other. It would, however, be precisely impossible, in the midst of the National Socialist state, to have an organization and an internal structure, through and through revolutionary nature, in relation to the world dominated by the Jewish Freemasonry, to exist a firmly enclosed land, which under the same conditions would be fundamentally differently organized. As is well known, the current negotiations of the Czechoslovak government with Konrad Henlein on the eighth point of his postulate in Karlovy Vary, that is to say, the demand of the Germans to be able to confess themselves unreservedly to National Socialism within the framework of the Č.S.R.- Just as in the Beneš concept the national socialist idea was unthinkable, any Benešconception within the context of the National Socialist Empire is impossible. There has never been a German-Czech hatred. In the old Austro-Hungarian Empire there was a mixed officer corps and a mixed-language officialship; today there are still thousands of mixed-lingual marriages and statistically it is easy to prove that they are just as unhappy as the purely Czech or purely German ones.If the natural tension, which always exists between two peoples bordering each other, degenerated into the so-called German-Czech hatred, this was the consequence of the division of the world into two fronts: the "left" and "reohten" of the