NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 1001, sig. 110-10/3 Page 20 · 20 of 22
Germany's MINISTRY for Chechnya and Moravia, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 1001, sig. 110-10/3
English Translation
10 19 -- Moravec has listed the corresponding figures in an article in the newspaper "Lidové Noving" on 7 January 1984. They show that the Czech people lost 200,000 people in the First World War as a fallen person and had booked 200,000 as a loss by the non-profits, resulting in a total loss of 400,000 persons. Instead, the population statistics of the years 1939 to 1943 show that the population number has not only not decreased, but has even increased because of the regeneration and the surplus of births. The birth surplus in these four years is totaling around 95,000 people, i.e. the loss of the four years l9l4 to l9L8.400,000 people in the four war years now stands against a profit of almost Lo0.000 people. It is no wonder that the Czech Minister himself is linking up the ranks, as the corresponding population numbers are likely to extend in the countries that are rushing from England and its allies into the war against the Empire, as they may look like, for example, with the marquis Yugoslavs and Poles. It is precisely these findings that justify the conclusion that the President Dr. Hácha has achieved everything by putting himself under the protection of the leader with his nation, instead of leading his people to the safe end with a struggle and a rebellion against the kingdom. Now just a few words that shed light on the current situation: we were able to say today that the year l943, which the enemy, in its well-known equation with the year I9i8, had started in very special hopes, was the quietest year ever in the development of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. This year l943 has run out of sabotage and in complete order as one year of most important work in the rehabilitation of the entire German war economy, despite a constantly rising agitation from abroad and despite the journey Beneš to Washington and Moscow. The last step, Beneš, to conclude a pact with Bolshevism, has also led to the reflection of those who are still interested. In particular, the fates of Poland and of the past Yugoslavia, the emigrants of Greece and the Bolshevik influence in North Africa and southern Italy have made men and women think that one thing has been achieved - and that is politically decisive. Today, the Czechs know that only the German Wehrmacht in the Lnge