NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27 Page 169 · 169 of 188
GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27
English Translation
-3- 91 Almost in the same Zoit, the influence of the mad jars on the overall policy of the Habsburgs also increased, because in April as successor to the foreign minister Berchtöld of the Madjare, Burian became the head of this policy, when the war began to come to an end, the government also sought to conjure up Czech politicians for itself. Many of these did not approve of the previous perfect passivity. For this passivity the broad strata of the Czech people and the majority of the major politicians with Kramář and Rašin were instinctively at the top. The Tendonts of the Vienna government had the majority of the Katholic party under Hruban and a large part of the social democrats untor Šmeral for themselves, Also in other parties there were those who did not believe that the war would bring about a break in the Austrian state community and the liberation of the Czechs, Diose Politik found a verteidigor in the "Hlas národa", where in the spring of 1915 cinc recommended a series of articles entitled "Ven z přítmí" (Hinaus from the twilight) that the politics of passivity should be given up and that the Czech people should clearly and uncompromisingly profess the Habs- burgischon dynasty and Austria, provisional bliob this advertisement crfogglos, Dic czech politics conzontriorte themselves at that time in This is the case in the United Kingdom, where the number of persons employed is very high, and the number is very low. The young Chechnya circle organized around the people Kramář and Rašin; his hopes were mainly directed towards Russia, He had also linked to Bulgaria by negation of Vladimir Sís and Ugo Dadonc, Dio state-lawed progressives had already sent Sychrava to Switzerland in the Soptomber, where he was to become an important member of Masaryks; their tendencies and efforts were mainly orionated to the west, the same conditions prevailed with don Roalists, where Masaryk's mistrust to Russia was already known from his pre-war publications. During the war, the bald groups already had much in common, and, thanks to Wion's policies, they were subjugated by engo Bezichungen, bringing together the Jungo Gencration.