NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27 Page 71 · 71 of 188
GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27
English Translation
34a 5 -- -24 ~ and the hungarian ideologię in their conservative foundations prevented the intelligence and, above all, the leaders of St. Martin and the editors of the "National Newspaper" from rising to a democratic position that would have made it possible in practice to penetrate more successfully into the broad masses of the people. It would be unfair, St. Martin was responsible for the failure of the Slöwakian intelligence in the political and social fields. Martin is only backward, that is understandable and understandable from the sociological point of view, By too much applause for the Russian Panslavism, "IAVO the rejection of a successful cooperation with the Czechs and an insufficient care of the idea of economic, social and political small-scale work in the people was a certain one. The gap between the people and the Intelligenz. Those who carefully observe the public debate have certainly noticed that the Slovak intelligence, especially the secular one, had to some extent something aristocratic, mastery about it. We do not want to blame ourselves with this, but only confirm a fact that has proven to be clearer than the sun in the last four Jatren, in which the Slovak public had the opportunity to pursue the life and work of the Czech Intelligence in Slovakia, we inherited this semi-aristocratic and self-confident character before old Hungary and will only gradually get rid of it. A significant number of young students, who were excluded from the Magisaric schools in the eighties to the nineties and who finished their studies at Czech and Arderen schools, learned the world and politics differently from the generation educated in the Magyanic atmosphere. Finally, they did not do so much with the exaggerated Russophilia of Vajansky, but with the fertilizations expressed in the "On Bashnarov's Mountain" and a certain unfeelingness against the Czech language and the Western culture, and with resistance, which increased over time and through the influence of Masaryk's philosophy, a completely new plitic and social worldview emerged, which was rightly a great success.