Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1938 — Page 5

TUESDAY, SEPT. 27, 1938

Hitler's Text Cont'd.

{Continued fr

om Page Four)

promised to divide the state into cantons after the Swiss model because among democratic statesmen there were some who felt some remorse.

TERRORISM CHARGED

We all know how Mr, Benes solved cantonization. He started his system of terrorism. At that time already Germans had attempted to protest against the arbitrary reign of force. They were shot in groups and the war of annihilation started. In these years of the peaceful de-

velopment of Czechoslovakia nearly; were forced to|

600,000 Germans leave Czechoslovakia for the very simple reason that otherwise they

must have starved. The general de-| velopment from 1918 to 1938 shows | quite clearly that Benes was deter-| mined gradually and slowly to root] indeed, to a|

out Germanhood and, certain degree he plunged countless people into deepest misery. He succeeded in making millions |

of people timorous and afraid. |

Through the constant application of | terror he succeeded in making mil-| lions dumb, and at the same time| the clarification of the purposes of]

the state from an international view- | point was attained. | There was no more secretiveness| about saying that this state was] destined, if necessary, against Germany. As French Air Minister Pierre Cot | a few weeks ago said plainly: “That | state we need because from that, state we can easiest destroy by bombs German economic life and | industries.” And this state was utilized by bolshevism as its gate. It is not we who have sought! contact with bolshevism, but bolshevism used this state in order to build a channel to Central Europe and then a shameless practice was] adopted: This state which had only! a minority governing it compels its nationalities to participate in a policy which will force them one day to shoot at their own brothers.

‘PEOPLE WANT PEACE’

Mr. Benes stands up and demands from Reich Germans: When I wage war against Germany you must] shoot Germans. And if you won't! do that I will have you shot, and he makes the same demands on Hungarians and Slovaks. He fully expects them to risk their lives for aims which are a matter of the utmost indifference to the Slovak] nation. i People want peace and no adven- | tures. Benes, however, manages to| represent those people as traitors. | One of two things: Betray your peo- | ple and be ready to shoot them down | or betray them and be shot your-| selves, according to Mr. Benes. | It is the greatest shamelessness which is imaginable to force their people, under certain conditions, to shoot against their own blood brothers simply because a pernicious, cvil and criminal regime so desires. I can assure you here: When we occupied Austria my first order was no Czech need, nay dare, serve in the German Army. I do not want to confront him with a conflict within his own conscience. I do not want to see him ever do it. He must not do it. Now| those who are opposing Benes po-| litically are persecuted and terror-| ized. They face prison and their economic existence is annihilated. And the democratic world apostles cannot wipe this out. In Benes’; state the consequences for nationali- | ties has been terrible, Here again | I speak for Germans. | They have the highest mortality! of all German tribes. They have the least children. Unemployment is most terrible and the number of suicides the highest. The question is how far this can go on. For 20 years the Germans in Czechoslovakia and the German people in the Reich looked on—had to! look on, not because they ever accepted this state of affairs, but because they were defenseless and could not escape these oppressors. |

‘MY FRIEND MUSSOLINP

|

And the world—these world do) mocracies—or anywhere a traitor is imprisoned, when a man who for instance agitates from the pulpit against the state is taken even only in protective custody, then there is an excitement in England and in-! tense indignation in America. Whe, however, hundreds of thou-! sands of people are driven away, when tens of thousands are thrown into prisons, when thousands are slaughtered then these brave world democracies are not touched in the least We have learned during these; years to have a truly deep contempt for them. In this whole time and today—that I must assert—we find only one nation in Europe which is really a great power and at its head one man with understanding for the dire straits of our people. That man is—I may certainly say so—my great friend, Benito Mussolini.

SHARPER TERROR BEGAN

What he has done during that period we will never forget. Nor] shall we forget the attitude adopted by the Italian nation. Should the! hour of similar emergency arrive for| Italy I stand up in the face of the German nation and appeal to it to adopt a similar attitude. Even also it will not be two states| defending themselves but one bloc. On February 22 of this year I therefore declared that this must be altered. Mr. Benes altered it. There was an even more radical suppression. There began a still sharper

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terror and a period of dissolution, prohibitions, confiscations, etc.

and you cannot deny, my German countrymen, it was unending German patience we observed during that period. That May 21 alone was unbearable. At the Party Congress I already laid down the bare history of that month. Elections were to be held in Czechoslovakia. They could no longer be postponed.

This continued until May 21 came]

So Mr. Benes goes and discovers means to cow the Germans there, namely military occupations of the territories. This military occupation, which he still wants to maintain in the hope that as long as his henchmen are there nobody will dare to rise against him.

‘BENES IS CONFIDENT’

It was that bold lie that Germany had mobilized which they were forced to produce to cloak, whitewash and motivate the Czech mobilization. What came then, you know. It was an international infamous

world agitation. Germany did not call up a man. It did not even consider solving this problem in military fashion. I, we all, had the hope that the Czechs in the end, at the last minute, would realize that this tyrannical regime could not be upheld. But Mr. Benes has taken up a standpoint; I can do what I like with Germany, because I have England and France at my back, absolutely nothing can happen and above all, there stands Soviet Russia. Thus was the answer of this man. Shootings, arrests and incarceration of all those who did not suit him. Thus, finally there came my Nuremberg demands. These de-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

if everything else fails!

mands were quite plain. I then announced for the first time that now the right of self-determination finally—20 years after Mr. Wilson— must be inforced and that we did not want to look on any longer. And Mr. Benes again made his reply: More dead, more imprisoned, more arrested. The German element gradually was compelled to flee. Then England came.

these nationalities do not want to live under this Mr. Benes. But I am first the spokesman of the Germans. On behalf of these Germans have I now talked and I have now promised that I no longer am disposed to watch motionless and quietly how this madman here thinks Le can mishandle three and one-half million human beings and I have (Continued on Page Six)

‘PATIENCE AT END’

I unequivocally told Mr. Chamberlain that we now consider only one possibility of solution—it is the most natural one imaginable. I know all

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