NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 1001, sig. 110-10/3 Page 4 · 4 of 22
Germany's MINISTRY for Chechnya and Moravia, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 1001, sig. 110-10/3
English Translation
2 is reached wordon, Houte cs in Prague is not as much as once, that every better non-stuer may call himself "editor" in order to get a free ride cart on the tram. Nunmchr has been created in this association a strict measure by which the honour and position of the Czech journalist has only been guaranteed, and this regulation was also the prerequisite for Czech journalism to be represented at the Congress of the Union. This happened for the first time, as you know, in the spring of 1942, when Minister Morawec visited Venice, where he was able to make significant statements on the subject of "Europe without England", and a number of important Czech journalists were already present at the Wicner Congress in dicsem. I can assure you that the meeting of Czech journalists with colleagues from other European peoples has proved to be extremely beneficial to us in Rrag in terms of political events. I would like to quote only a few of the violating voices which show how the journalists have gone away from here. "A bereätcs and demonstrative confession of spontaneous belief in the new Europe by the elite of European journalism" Národni Politika of June 29, 1943, announces the second congress in Vienna and even more clearly under the heading "We are not alone", said the main author Werner of the "Veerni cské Slovo" on June 29,43: "I participated with the Czech delegation in the Congress of the Union of National Journalists' Associations in Vienna ....... What made the most powerful impression on me were the following concluding words of the chairman of Congress Sinner-mann: "Europe is not only a geographical or just political term, not only history or past, the new Europe is program and broadcast! ......... In all European countries, among peoples, cs already has many people who are forming the new Europe, who consecrate their work and their faith to it. It unites us all the common enemy: in the East it is Bolsehcvism, in the West it is the exploitative plutocracy, on both Eoitar but the Jew .. . . . This is my most beautiful and greatest impression of the Vienna Congress: the so-called tscheckizchen activists are not alone!"