NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27 Page 154 · 154 of 188
GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27
English Translation
- 65 - 82 military suitcases on the shoulder, 'like once at home, they pass through the rained streets of the city, accompanied by joyous, fathers, women and children... There were little of them, this boy, but the value of their model will always remain great. Brother Šilený comes to the farthest-place of Aljaschka and leaves his flourishing business there, from an airplane factory comes the Slovak Mistrik and leaves the finished wealth to serve the fatherland for ten cents ... I have to think involuntarily of Slovakia and of the piles of thousands of requests that our citizens addressed to the ministry, that they should be drawn from military duty, against the Hungarian Bolsheviks who flooded the country along the Waag: had,'free. "In the series of expeditions our volunteers from Stamford went to France; to Cognac and Jarmak, off, .our regiments fought in Alsace-Lorraine, near Terron and Vouziers, From there they went to Slovakia and to Teschen, as their heart commanded them. And when they had fulfilled their task, they returned to the United Se s d dd. Their example aroused much admiration and respect in the American circles. Yes, there aroused a lot more awareness among the Anglo-Saxon people of the New World, more understanding and effectiveness for their pain and needs than they found in the homeland for which they had so gladly left the Egyptian pots and were bleeding and dying. That they did not die in vain, that they also did not fight useless, we convinced ourselves of this in America already in the first days of January 19l8. While in the liberated homeland today and soon excellent individuals will claim that the whole foreign revival was a useless companion of the time, without which the 28th century did not. The world press published a commentary by the "New Free Press" in January 1978, with which it published the formation of the - 66 ~